Showing posts with label Middle East. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Middle East. Show all posts

Saturday, September 7, 2013

Video---Bachmann, King and Gohmert in Egypt



GUYS LEARN THE TRUTH PLEASE!!!! link


Speech from Michelle Bachmann, Steve King and Louis Gohmert

NY Times article here
Washington Post article here 

Wait your from the United States Congress, in the United States of America?? I would have never guessed that!!!


Nothing like deregulation to get an economy going am I right??

Or

Laws are bad for the economy!!

No we did not go through this together……shame on you for even implying that



NO!!! muslim brotherhood DID NOT attack us in 9/11 and no, there is no muslim brotherhood in US government!!!

(A clarification for those who are interested---Ayman Al-Zawahri is Egyptian, and he is a terrorist, he was part of the group that assassinated Anwar Al Sadat in 1981 for signing the peace treaty with Israel in 1979----he later formed Al Qaeda with Bin Laden who is Saudi Arabian, and 9/11 was attacking the US—Saudi alliance---15 of the 19 hijackers were Saudi, and Mohamed Atta was Egyptian)

Ayman al-Zawahiri participated in Youth activism as a student. He became both quite pious and political, under the influence of his uncle Mahfouz Azzam, and lecturer Mostafa Kamel Wasfi.[18] Sayyid Qutb preached that to restore Islam and free Muslims, a vanguard of true Muslims modeling itself after the original Companions of the Prophet had to be developed.[19]
By the age of 14, al-Zawahiri had joined the Muslim Brotherhood. The following year the Egyptian government executed Qutb for conspiracy, and al-Zawahiri, along with four other secondary school students, helped form an "underground cell devoted to overthrowing the government and establishing an Islamist state." It was at this early age that al-Zawahiri developed a mission in life, "to put Qutb's vision into action."[20] His cell eventually merged with others to form al-Jihad or Egyptian Islamic Jihad.[14]


In 1998, al-Zawahiri formally merged the Egyptian Islamic Jihad into al-Qaeda. According to reports by a former al-Qaeda member, he has worked in the al-Qaeda organization since its inception and was a senior member of the group's shura council. He was often described as a "lieutenant" to Osama bin Laden, though bin Laden's chosen biographer has referred to him as the "real brains" of al-Qaeda.[48]
On February 23, 1998, al-Zawahiri issued a joint fatwa with Osama bin Laden under the title "World Islamic Front Against Jews and Crusaders". Zawahiri, not bin Laden, is thought to have been the actual author of the fatwa.[51]



After coming to Hamburg in 1992, Atta became more religious, frequently attending the mosque.[33] Atta's friends in Germany described him as an intelligent man with religious beliefs, along with political motivations, including anger at U.S. policy toward the Middle East, particularly the Oslo Accords and the Gulf War.[34][35] Atta was also enraged by Egypt's ruling elite, and the Egyptian government's crackdown on Muslim Brotherhood members.   (BUT NOTE that it doesnt say Atta was ever member of Muslim Brotherhood)

The people Do NOT want military support from US!!!

Menace on the border?? Its internal to Egypt!!! Muslim brotherhood is not outside Egypt

3,000 Americans did not die, they were citizens of many countries not all Americans

I guess you guys aren’t the ones pressuring obama to call this a coup are you???

Muslim brotherhood are the oppressed!!! Its not the other guys taking their country back!!! THEY were in power for 80 years!!!

We stand for democracy!!! We don’t stand against muslim brotherhood!!! Only when Morsi acts like a dictator no better than Mubarak!!!

Numerous leaders = THE ARMY!!!

Yes Washington led a military----and then we gave military CIVILIAN CONTROL!!!

He was our first president he didn’t resign and go home!!!

No Thomas Paine was not a founder (well technically, he is listed as other founders http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Founding_Fathers_of_the_United_States#Other_founders)

No caliphate that’s Al Qaeda---Muslim Brotherhood is nationalist they want democracy to rule their own country

Muslim Brotherhood Ayman Noor ran in 2006 Muslim Brotherhood is NOT “”rammed through”” they’ve been political party for 80 years, banned and organizing underground

Yes I have a question “”how are you so dumb???””

Yes differences of opinions and some make up their own facts

 It was a coup!!! Yes it was supported by the people, but it was still a military takeover

A COUP IS a sudden, violent (or non-violent), and illegal seizure of power from a government.



Id love to know what the host is saying……. 

Thursday, August 29, 2013

Syria---response to Ramah Kudaimi's great post




Some sources on Syria
Obama PBS Newshour Interview Video

Obama PBS Newshour Interview transcript


Army War College Options for Syria Presentation

Argument against Humanitarian claims for war

FROM Ramah Kudaimi August 26 at 11:12pm  on Facebook  
   
·         ok, here are my do's and don'ts for Syria is u are a progressive/radical anti-war organization/activist in the US, please share any thoughts u have, including critiques because i know it has shortcomings: 

1. DON'T in any way say or imply both sides are wrong and it's not clear who we would be supporting if we get involved militarily. This is an insult to every Syrian who has and continues to go out in the streets and protest both the regime and those forces who are looking to use this time of war to assert their own power over others. It is a shame how many progressive groups in the US just jump on the both sides are bad so we shouldn't get involved. There are 1 million children who are refugees and that is the fault of the regime. It is the regime who is bombing cities with jets, it is the regime that has ruled the country with brutal force for decades. Any statement that doesn't acknowledge this is again an insult to those who have sacrificed so much. 
My Comments----liberals acknowledge the protestors, refugees and martyrs to the cause of democracy, who as part of the Arab Spring simply asked their government to hear their complaints, only to get a response of bombs and bullets and chemical weapons.
We just know from too much experience that war only increases chaos and death. Yes we support democracy and want to end the bloodshed but we know that there will be more bloodshed when we intervene and the conflict will absolutely lead to unforeseen consequences in other regions as well---each war leads to new wars.

2. DON'T over conflate Iraq and Syria. Just as ludicrous those who look to Kosovo as an example of military intervention to support it in Syria are, it is quite pathetic when so many progressives and leftists are just obsessed with supposedly false chemical weapons claims. There are 100,000 Syrians dead, majority killed by conventional weapons. So there are a million and one excuses for the US to intervene and faking chemical weapons attacks is not needed. There is also no basis I believe in claiming al Qaeda has access and uses such weapons. Al Qaeda fought the US for a decade in Iraq and not once deployed such weapons. But all of a sudden they're using them in Syria? And if the rebels had these weapons, the regime would've fallen a long time ago.
We do not conflate iraq and Syria----but we do try to learn from our past experiences, and we now question claims of “”Syria could attack us”” obama in PBS Newshour Interview calls it a choice, claims we don’t stand by when government attacks its own people (Bahrain comes to mind, where we helped the King stay in power as an ally and because of our 5th Naval fleet in port there) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bahraini_uprising_(2011–present)
Obama talks military bases, allies, and “”folks”” (Hezbollah and Hamas and Al Qaeda affiliates are NOT “”folks””)
“”We’ve got allies bordering Syria. Turkey is a NATO ally, Jordan a close friend that we work with a lot. Israel is very close by. We’ve got bases throughout the region. We cannot see a breach of the nonproliferation norm that allows, potentially, chemical weapons to fall into the hands of all kinds of folks.

We have looked at all the evidence, and we do not believe the opposition possessed nuclear weapons on – or chemical weapons of that sort. We do not believe that, given the delivery systems, using rockets, that the opposition could have carried out these attacks. We have concluded that the Syrian government in fact carried these out.

Judy Woodruff asks “” If it’s not going to do that much harm to the Assad regime, what have you accomplished?””

Obama answers “”doesn’t solve all the problems inside of Syria, and, you know, it doesn’t, obviously end the death of innocent civilians inside of Syria. “”

---Essentially it is a punishment for use of chemical weapons.

Obama says “”and I think if the idea is that what we should have done is done more to shore up autocratic governments, that we should have stood by while governments that we had relationships with killed their own people – peaceful, innocent protesters – then I suspect you’d have a different set of questions for me.”” Yes Mr President I would ask specifically about Bahrain.
3. DON'T obsess over al-Qaeda, Islamist extremists, jihadists, etc. Since 9/11 progressives have shunned the use of all these labels when it comes to the US War on Terror, yet we now use them freely when it comes to Syria and actually believe it. The overwhelming majority of Syrians, both those who have taken arms and those who continue to resist through nonviolent means, have nothing to do with the extremist groups and are rising up against all forces who are destroying their country, whether they be regime or supposed "opposition" groups. It is also important to understand that the Free Syria Army is not a central command army with orders given from the top. It is a loosely affiliated group of different battalions and anyone can claim to be part of it. 
MOST know difference between THE Al Qaeda of bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahri compared to any islamist terrorist group claiming affiliation and allegiance to Al Qaeda in attacking US and US interests such as AQ in iraq, yemen, libya, etc.


4. DO point out all the US failures toward Syria and how dropping bombs on the country is not what is needed. I personally don't believe that US is going to get militarily involved. They promised weapons to the rebels and have yet to deliver. No way is the US getting in because as has been pointed out by Dempsey and in a NYT opinion piece, it is so much for useful for US "interests" for Syrians to kill each other. I think taking a position of the US should not get involved through a military intervention is fine. DON'T put it as "Hands off Syria" implying this is some kind of American conspiracy. DON'T argue this is about US not having a right to taking sides in a civil war. DON'T make it all about money for home since we do want more humanitarian aid. DO frame it as what will help bring the suffering of Syrians to an end. 

Weapons promise has been suggested was only diplomatic poly to begin negotiations with Russia---not a real promise to rebels, also many generals made comments and statements about iraq beforehand that bush ignored---so Dempsey’s great letter means little unfortunately
5. DO point out US hypocrisy as it judges Russia for sending weapons to the regime. Just last week a story came out that the US is sending $640 million worth of cluster bombs to Saudi. Weapons continues to flow to Egypt, Bahrain, and Israel despite massive human rights violations. DO call for an end to all sales of weapons to all regimes in the region. 

YES YES YES!!! no argument from me here-----hypocrisy of sending weapons to OUR allies while criticizing others from sending weapons to THEIR allies

6. DON'T let genuine concerns with US imperialism, Israel, Saudi, etc make you look at pictures and videos of dead children and think conspiracy. Bashar is a piece of shit and has never once given a shit about any resistance. Just remember he collaborated with the US during the Iraq war, including on renditions. Just because the CIA is training a few fighters in Jordan or some anonymous rebel leader is quoted in some Zionist paper doesn't mean this isn't a legitimate Syrian uprising against a brutal regime.
No need to talk about Zionist papers----but yes Assad is clearly brutal and some know of his father’s attacks during the Lebanese Civil War and uprisings in Syria during that time, Hama, Muslim Brotherhood uprising Hafez Assad murdered thousands and bulldozed the entire city.

7. DO highlight the continued bravery of the Syrian people who take to the streets and protest against the regime, extremists, and all others looking to destroy their struggle for freedom and dignity. As in with everywhere, coverage of violence trumps coverage of continued nonviolent resistance. 

YES YES YES brave courageous people of Syria protesting making their voices heard and risking freedom and life to bring democracy to Syria

8. DO strongly urge people to donate for humanitarian aid. Between deaths, imprisonments, internal displacement, and refugees, I think 30-40 percent of the Syrian population is in one way or another uprooted. 

YES YES YES 7 million refugees 100,000 dead many more homeless, hungry,

9. I have no actual solutions to suggest that you encourage people to support. Perhaps pushing for an actual ceasefire might be an option, which would require pressure on Russia to tell Bashar to back down. I know my not having answers about how to resolve anything is a shortcoming, but sometimes the best course of action is to just be in solidarity with folks in their struggle through simply recognizing it. 

10. Syrians deserve the same respect for their struggle as all other struggles in the region: Tunisia, Egypt, Libya Bahrain, Yemen, and always Palestine.
YES YES YES support democracy and political freedom wherever it is being oppressed

Sunday, August 4, 2013

FBI listens to american citizen's phone calls

***NSA and CIA are foreign intelligence operations and should not be involved in any citizen's data, metadata or spying in any way----but domestically the FBI and local police MUST be able to collect and even listen to citizen's information WHEN THEY HAVE PROBABLE CAUSE, A WARRANT AND CONDUCT A LIMITED SEARCH (no unreasonable search or seizure) ON THAT CITIZEN'S INFORMATION!!!!!

Interview with journalist Lawrence Wright who works on Al Qaeda, Arab terrorism, Muslim Brotherhood and other issues

FULL INTERVIEW HERE              BUSH and Illegal Wiretaps

6. One of the most jarring points in your narrative is an encounter with FBI agents who demand to know why you’ve been calling a number in Britain and ask about your daughter. Tell us what happened and what significance you attach to the incident.
In the movie, I talk about two members of the Joint Terrorism Task Force who came to my office to ask about phone calls that I made to a number in London. It belonged to a solicitor who represented some of the jihadis I had been interviewing. During the course of the conversation, they asked who “Caroline Wright” was. That’s my daughter. She was a university student at the time, not living at home. None of our phones were registered in her name. The only way I could imagine that they got her name was by listening to my phone calls.
There’s another instance that I didn’t mention in the movie. Before this episode, I had been told by a source at the Counter-Terrorism Center that my source had seen a summary of a telephone interview I had with Zawahiri’s cousin in Cairo. At the time, I figured that the Egyptians had covered the conversation and supplied it to the CIA. On December 16, 2005, when the New York Times revealed that the NSA was illegally wiretapping Americans, I thought otherwise.
I’m glad the JTTF came to my house to clear this matter up, but it’s an example of the danger of awarding government such extraordinary powers. A simple misunderstanding such as this could easily have led to having Caroline’s name placed on an FBI link chart, only two steps away from Al Qaeda.
One day, Al Qaeda will fade away, but we will still be left with the swollen security state that we’ve created to fight it. That’s another challenge we haven’t begun to face.

Friday, July 12, 2013

Egypt, Coup

Why Obama administration is reluctant to call a coup a coup---the Harkin Human Rights Amendment to the Foreign Assistance Act


U.S. Human Rights Policy and Foreign Assistance: A Short History


In 1975, the Harkin Amendment (Section 116) was added to the Foreign
Assistance Act. The Harkin Amendment prohibits economic assistance to
any country that commits gross human rights violations unless it can be
shown that the aid will directly benefit the poor and needy. Section 116 of
the Foreign Assistance Act states:
No assistance may be provided under this part to the government of
any country which engages in consistent pattern of gross violations of
internationally recognized human rights, including torture or cruel,
inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment, prolonged detention
without charges, or other flagrant denial of the right to life, liberty,
and the security of person, unless such assistance will directly benefit
the needy people in such country.

Page 59           COMMITTEE ON INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN RELATIONS Legislation on Foreign Relations Through 2002

Sec. 116.75 Human Rights.—(a) No assistance may be provided under this part to the government of any country which engages in a consistent pattern of gross violations of internationally recognized human rights, including torture or cruel, inhuman, or de-grading treatment or punishment, prolonged detention without charges, causing the disappearance of persons by the abduction and clandestine detention of those persons,76 or other flagrant denial of the right to life, liberty, and the security of person, unless such assistance will directly benefit the needy people in such country.
(b) In determining whether this standard is being met with regard to funds allocated under this part, the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate or the Committee on Foreign Affairs 77 of the House of Representatives may require the Administrator primarily responsible for administering part I of this Act to submit in writing information demonstrating that such assistance will directly benefit the needy people in such country, together with a de-tailed explanation of the assistance to be provided (including the dollar amounts of such assistance) and an explanation of how such assistance will directly benefit the needy people in such country. If either committee or either House of Congress disagrees with the Administrator’s justification it may initiate action to terminate assistance to any country by a concurrent resolution under section 617 of this Act.
(b) 78 No assistance may be provided to any government failing to take appropriate and adequate measures, within their means, to protect children from exploitation, abuse or forced conscription into military or paramilitary services.
(c) 79 In determining whether or not a government falls within the provisions of subsection (a) and in formulating development assistance programs under this part, the Administrator shall consider, in consultation with the Assistant Secretary of State for De-
75 22 U.S.C. 2151n. Sec. 116 was added by sec. 310 of Public Law 94–161 (89 Stat. 849). See also in the Foreign Operations, Export Financing, and Related Programs Appropriations Act, 2002: sec. 534, relating to special authorities; and sec. 537, relating to eligibility for assistance.

mocracy, Human Rights, and Labor 80 and in consultation with the Ambassador at Large for International Religious Freedom—81
(1) the extent of cooperation of such government in permit
ting an unimpeded investigation of alleged violations of inter-
nationally recognized human rights by appropriate inter-
national organizations, including the International Committee
of the Red Cross, or groups or persons acting under the author
ity of the United Nations or of the Organization of American
States; 82
(2) specific actions which have been taken by the President or the Congress relating to multilateral or security assistance to a less developed country because of the human rights practices or policies of such country; and 82
(3) 82 whether the government—
(A) has engaged in or tolerated particularly severe viola
tions of religious freedom, as defined in section 3 of the
International Religious Freedom Act of 1998; or
(B) has failed to undertake serious and sustained efforts
to combat particularly severe violations of religious free
dom (as defined in section 3 of the International Religious
Freedom Act of 1998), when such efforts could have been
reasonably undertaken.
(d) 79 The Secretary of State shall transmit to the Speaker of the House of Representatives and the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate, by February 25 83 of each year, a full and complete report regarding—
(1) 84 the status of internationally recognized human rights,
within the meaning of subsection (a)—
(A) in countries that receive assistance under this part,
and
(B) in all other foreign countries which are members of
the United Nations and which are not otherwise the sub
ject of a human rights report under this Act;
(2) 85 wherever applicable, practices regarding coercion in population control, including coerced abortion and involuntary sterilization;
(3) 86 the status of child labor practices in each country, including—
(A) whether such country has adopted policies to protect
children from exploitation in the workplace, including a
prohibition of forced and bonded labor and policies regard
ing acceptable working conditions; and
(B) the extent to which each country enforces such poli
cies, including the adequacy of the resources and oversight
dedicated to such policies;
(4) 85, 86 the votes of each member of the United Nations Commission on Human Rights on all country-specific and thematic resolutions voted on at the Commission’s annual session during the period covered during the preceding year;
(5) 85 the extent to which each country has extended protection to refugees, including the provision of first asylum and re-settlement; 87
(6) 85, 87 the steps the Administrator has taken to alter United States programs under this part in any country because of human rights considerations;
(7) 86, 87 wherever applicable, violations of religious freedom, including particularly severe violations of religious freedom (as defined in section 3 of the International Religious Freedom Act of 1998);
(8) 87 wherever applicable, consolidated information regarding the commission of war crimes, crimes against humanity, and evidence of acts that may constitute genocide (as defined in article 2 of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide and modified by the United States instrument of ratification to that convention and section 2(a) of the Genocide Convention Implementation Act of 1987);
(9) 88 for each country with respect to which the report indicates that extrajudicial killings, torture, or other serious violations of human rights have occurred in the country, the extent to which the United States has taken or will take action to en-courage an end to such practices in the country; and (10) 89 (A) wherever applicable, a description of the nature and extent)—
(i) of the compulsory recruitment and conscription of in
dividuals under the age of 18 by armed forces of the gov
ernment of the country, government-supported
paramilitaries, or other armed groups, and the participa
tion of such individuals in such groups; and
(ii) that such individuals take a direct part in hostilities; (B) what steps, if any, taken by the government of the country to eliminate such practices; and
(C) such other information related to the use by such govern
ment of individuals under the age of 18 as soldiers, as deter-
mined to be appropriate by the Secretary.
(e) 79, 90 The President is authorized and encouraged to use not less than $3,000,000 of the funds made available under this chapter, chapter 10 of this part,91 and chapter 4 of part II for each fiscal year for studies to identify, and for openly carrying out, pro-grams and activities which will encourage or promote increased adherence to civil and political rights, including the right to free religious belief and practice,92 as set forth in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, in countries eligible for assistance under this chapter or under chapter 10 of this part, except that funds made available under chapter 10 of this part may only be used under this subsection with respect to countries in sub-Saharan Africa. None of these funds may be used, directly or indirectly, to influence the outcome of any election in any country.
(f) 93 (1) The report required by subsection (d) shall include the following:
(A) A description of the nature and extent of severe forms of
trafficking in persons, as defined in section 103 of the Traffick
ing Victims Protection Act of 2000, in each foreign country.
(B) With respect to each country that is a country of origin, transit, or destination for victims of severe forms of trafficking in persons, an assessment of the efforts by the government of that country to combat such trafficking. The assessment shall address the following:
(i) Whether government authorities in that country participate in, facilitate, or condone such trafficking.
(ii) Which government authorities in that country are involved in activities to combat such trafficking.
(iii) What steps the government of that country has taken to prohibit government officials from participating in, facilitating, or condoning such trafficking, including the investigation, prosecution, and conviction of such officials.
(iv) What steps the government of that country has taken to prohibit other individuals from participating in such trafficking, including the investigation, prosecution, and conviction of individuals involved in severe forms of trafficking in persons, the criminal and civil penalties for such trafficking, and the efficacy of those penalties in eliminating or reducing such trafficking.
(v) What steps the government of that country has taken to assist victims of such trafficking, including efforts to prevent victims from being further victimized by traffickers, government officials, or others, grants of relief from deportation, and provision of humanitarian relief, including provision of mental and physical health care and shelter.
(vi) Whether the government of that country is cooperating with governments of other countries to extradite traffickers when requested, or, to the extent that such cooperation would be inconsistent with the laws of such country or with extradition treaties to which such country is a party, whether the government of that country is taking all appropriate measures to modify or replace such laws and treaties so as to permit such cooperation.
(vii) Whether the government of that country is assisting in international investigations of transnational trafficking networks and in other cooperative efforts to combat severe forms of trafficking in persons.
(viii) Whether the government of that country refrains from prosecuting victims of severe forms of trafficking in persons due to such victims having been trafficked, and refrains from other discriminatory treatment of such victims.
(ix) Whether the government of that country recognizes
the rights of victims of severe forms of trafficking in per-
sons and ensures their access to justice.
(C) Such other information relating to trafficking in persons
as the Secretary of State considers appropriate.
(2) In compiling data and making assessments for the purposes of paragraph (1), United States diplomatic mission personnel shall consult with human rights organizations and other appropriate nongovernmental organizations.



Sen. Harkin: A Champion of Strengthening American Values | ACS

by U.S. District Court Judge Robert W. Pratt, Southern District of Iowa
   
While a first term member of the United States House of Representatives in 1975 he secured passage of the Harkin amendment to the Foreign Assistance Act which established that foreign states that engaged in a pattern of gross and consistent human rights violations were not eligible for certain forms of assistance from the United States.  This legislation also gave the United States Trade Representative discretion to deny “most favored nations” treatment to countries that abused the rights of workers and unions.  Through his recognition of the plight of child chocolate workers in Africa and child workers in other industries all over the world, he has managed to get both government and private industry involved in eliminating the worst abuses of child labor. Harkin’s work on the Senate Appropriations Committee has resulted in increased funding for the Bureau of International Labor Affairs (IAB). The IAB is in the front line in the fight against child labor, forced labor and human trafficking.  

http://www.thenation.com/blog/172605/what-we-will-lose-when-tom-harkin-leaves-senate#

What We Will Lose When Tom Harkin Leaves the Senate
  
Harkin’s first big fight on Capitol Hill, as a young congressman from a competitive district representing rural Iowa, was to demand that the entire thrust of US foreign policy be altered.

As a young congressional aide in 1970, Harkin had played a critical role in exposing South Vietnam’s abusive treatment of prisoners, who were held in so-called “tiger cages.” Horrified by mounting evidence of US support for right-wing coups, murderous dictators and torture states in southern Asia and Latin America, Harkin in 1975 proposed an amendment to the Foreign Assistance Act that prohibited the United States from providing economic aid to any country determined to be engaged gross human rights violations unless. The only exception was a provision that permitted allocation of US funds if could be proved that the money who directly benefit the most impoverished citizens.

The amendment, which passed with relative ease, became Section 116 of the Foreign Assistance Act, which declared: “No assistance may be provided under this part to the government of any country which engages in consistent pattern of gross violations of internationally recognized human rights, including torture or cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment, prolonged detention without charges, or other flagrant denial of the right to life, liberty, and the security of person, unless such assistance will directly benefit the needy people in such country.”

Presidents and their congressional allies invariably circumvented human rights responsibilities, to Harkin’s great frustration. As a new US senator in the mid-1980s, he joined another new senator, John Kerry of Massachusetts, in seeking to expose and end the Reagan administration’s support for right-wing dictators and death squads in Latin America. Others softened in their stances, but not Harkin. When Bush nominated Negroponte for the Iraqi ambassadorship, the senator from Iowa took to the floor of the chamber and recounted the dark history of the nominee’s “service” as Ronald Reagan’s administration gave lawless support to death squads and paramilitary murderers. Harkin accused the nominee of lying to Congress and the American people about circumstances on the ground in Honduras in the early 1980s—where 184 people, including an American priest, “disappeared” while Negroponte was ambassador to Honduras.

Saturday, June 29, 2013

ARAB world versus MUSLIM world

arab is an ethnicity---islam is a religion---there are muslims in almost every country in the world---but they are not all arabs


ARAB world





MUSLIM world


Friday, June 14, 2013

Israel and America

This is a hypocrisy I will never understand---- #Israel says to America ""Don't you dare interfere with our business or tell us what to do----oh and thanks for all the military and financial support and please continue to help us solve Arab--Israeli conflict""

Friday, February 15, 2013

Books on the Middle East

Some good books for information on the Middle East

A History of the Modern Middle East by William L Cleveland (2004)

A good big book that covers the major events in the Middle East--from the rise of Islam in the 600's to the 20th Century reforms and revolutions

A Portrait of Egypt (A Journey through the world of militant Islam) by Mary Anne Weaver (2000)

A history of the rise of Militant Islam and its roots in Egypt


From Beirut to Jerusalem by Thomas Friedman (1989)

While covering the Civil War in Lebanon--- (about 1975-1982) Friedman describes wonderully the fabric of the Middle East

What Terrorists Want by Louise Richardson (2007)

covers goals and tactics of terrorists from Ireland to Al Qaeda---and juxtaposes President Bush's claims that 9/11 happened because ""they hate us for our freedoms"" with bin Laden quotes about ""getting foreign troops out of Muslim Lands""

Thursday, February 14, 2013

LESSONS LEARNED???


When looking at today’s news there are lessons from the past---about our actions and their consequences----about what to do about the Arab Spring, Syria, Libya, Benghazi, and now Mali, Algeria and even Iran and North Korea

Some examples from the past---Iran Iraq Afghanistan and Libya

1979 lots of things happened—here are a few major ones

1979 Iran--- the US--backed Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi is ousted in protests by supporters of the religious leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.

The Shah was put in charge of Iran by military and government backing from the US UK and Russia from 1941 to 1979---he was even reinstated by US after a democratic election puts Mohammad Mossadegh into power—he wanted to nationalize oil profits and US wouldn’t have that.

The 1979 Iranian Revolution brought the religious and population minority Shi’ia Islamists into power—creating an imbalance to the rest of the Muslim World (Iranians are not Arab but are ethnically European)

In 1979 in Iraq Saddam Hussein took over power—he was a leader in the Baath Party since 1968—but in 1979 took over in a coup

As a response to the Iranian Revolution and to keep his own Shi’ia population in check—Saddam started a war with Iran that lasted from 1980 to 1988----The US backed Saddam in his efforts against our new enemy, the new government in Iran---and Donald Rumsfeld  went to sell Saddam chemical weapons which he later used on his own population after the 1990 Gulf War.
SUMMARY SO FAR  In 1979 Iran has a revolution, Saddam comes to power in Iraq and they start a war, The US backs Iraq against our old friend Iran, who since the Revolution has become our enemy to this day.

The Iraq--Iran War left Sadddam Hussein in debt—so he invaded oil rich Kuwait—trying to annex it as the 19th province of Iraq---as a way to get oil profits to pay his debts----BUT this action made IRAQ as well as IRAN our enemies---interesting huh???

But wait there’s MORE!!!!!!

In 1979 our OTHER enemy, the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan—setting up the now famous war between the Islamic fundamentalists, the Mujahadeen, Pakistan and the US to oust the Soviets armed the rebels, created the Taliban, empowered bin Laden, etc which most of us have learned since 9/11

Bin Laden emerged from the Soviet experience and wanted to offer his services of military to Saudi Arabia, his homeland, in defense of Iraq in the 1990 war where Saddam invaded Kuwait to pay off his debts from the Iraq Iran War---instead Saudi Arabia turns to the US, shunning bin Laden, pissing him off and setting bin laden towards declaring war on America, 9/11 etc

ANOTHER SUMMARY So we respond to 1979 Iran revolution, Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and Iran Iraq war and 20 years later they converge in 9/11 (And NO I am NOT saying 9/11 was our fault---whatever bin Laden’s grievances were---the MINUTE he kills civilians ON PURPOSE to get his points across he IS A TERRORIST and is UNJUSTIFIED in his actions)


Our decision to help Libya in the Arab Spring helped arm terrorists now in Mali and Algeria, and while Bush still thinks Iraq war was a good decision, Iran since 2005 has been a growing nuclear threat because the war that ousted Saddam also made Iran stronger in the region, because it removed Iran’s enemy and put in place the friendly Shi’ia government that looks to Iran as a friend not an enemy. (Saddam led a Sunni minority population in Iraq, which has a Shi’ia majority based on population)

My point is be careful with Syria, Libya, Iran today and other conflicts in the world, we cannot see into the future, but its important to look to the past to make smartest decisions we can.