At approximately 14:30 on Wednesday, 30 August 2006, an Israeli truck intentionally deviated and hit a Palestinian civilian vehicle that was traveling on Nablus-Ramllah road. Four Palestinian civilians, from Kufor al-Labad village east of Tulkarm, were traveling in the vehicle, and they were all injured: Zaid Mousa Jab'eiti, 42, the Mayor of Kufor al-Labad village; Mohammed 'Atiya Nazzal, 80; Mohammed 'Aaboudi, 40; and Ghassan Saleem, 45. The Israeli driver attempted to escape, but an Israeli military jeep that was patrolling in the area stopped him.
Recommendations to the International Community
1. PCHR calls upon the High Contracting Parties to the Fourth Geneva Convention to fulfill their legal and moral obligations under Article 1 of the Convention to ensure Israel's respect for the Convention in the Occupied Palestinian Territory. PCHR believes that the conspiracy of silence practiced by the international community has encouraged Israel to act as if it is above the law and encourages Israel continue to violate international human rights and humanitarian law.
2. PCHR calls upon the High Contracting Parties to the Fourth Geneva Convention to convene a conference to take effective steps to ensure Israel's respect of the Convention in the OPT and to provide immediate protection for Palestinian civilians.
3. PCHR calls upon the High Contracting Parties to the Fourth Geneva Convention to comply with its legal obligations detailed in Article 146 of the Convention to search for and prosecute those responsible for grave breaches, namely war crimes.
4. PCHR recommends international civil society organizations, including human rights organizations, bar associations and NGOs to participate in the process of exposing those accused of grave breaches of international law and to urge their governments to bring these people to justice.
5. PCHR calls upon the European Union to activate Article 2 of the Euro-Israel Association Agreement, which provides that Israel must respect human rights as a precondition for economic cooperation between the EU states and Israel. PCHR further calls upon the EU states to prohibit import of goods produced in illegal Israeli settlements in the OPT.
6. PCHR calls upon the member States of the EU, and all other states, to adopt a voting pattern at the UN bodies, particularly the General Assembly, Security Council and Commission on Human Rights which is keeping with international law.
7. PCHR demands that the International Court of Justice Advisory Opinion be immediately implemented by the international community.
8. PCHR calls on the international community to recognize the Gaza disengagement plan, which was implemented last year, for what it is - not an end to occupation but a compounding of the occupation and the humanitarian crisis in the Gaza Strip.
9. In recognition of ICRC as the guardian of the Fourth Geneva Convention, PCHR calls upon the ICRC to increase its staff and activities in the OPT, including the facilitation of family visitations to Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.
10. PCHR appreciates the efforts of international civil society, including human rights organizations, bar associations, unions and NGOs, and urges them to continue their role in pressuring their governments to secure Israel's respect for human rights in the OPT and to end its attacks on Palestinian civilians.
11. In light of the severe restrictions imposed by the Israeli government and its occupying forces on access for international organizations to the OPT, PCHR calls upon European countries to deal with Israeli citizens in a similar manner.
12. PCHR reiterates that any political settlement not based on international human rights law and humanitarian law cannot lead to a peaceful and just solution of the Palestinian question. Rather, such an arrangement can only lead to further suffering and instability in the region. Any peace agreement or process must be based on respect for international law, including international human rights and humanitarian law.
Footnotes
[1] 1 donum is equal to 1000 square meters.
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All In a Day's Work
12 Year Old Palestinian Boy Shot by Settler While Playing Near His Home
August 31st, 2006
Posted in Press Releases
On August 27, 2006, Hakim Ersan, a 12 year old boy from the village of Beit Fourik near Nablus, was shot by an Israeli colonist from the Aitmar settlement near his home. Hakim was playing with two friends, ages 8-9, when the boys spotted 3 Israeli colonists approaching them. The boys began to run away, and Hakim tripped and fell; when he stood up, the colonist man, aged approximately 40, shot him through his lower back. The bullet exited through his upper groin area, and the younger boys carried him to his home. Hakim is currently in critical condition and awaiting surgery at Raffidia Hospital in Nablus; the extent of damage to his internal organs is yet undetermined.
Colonist violence is nothing new for Beit Fourik; four years ago, an elderly man was farming his land when colonists attacked him and beat him to death with a stone.
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West Bank residents forced to sing in order to pass checkpoint and school bags are inspected
(Qalqilia) Mustafa Sabre
Thursday, 31 August 2006
Palestine News Network
Israeli soldiers enforced a major barrier between Qalqilia and Tulkarem in the northwestern West Bank Thursday.
A Palestinian driver told PNN that he was forced to unload his vehicle of all cargo this morning. He said that his truck was brimming with school bags.
"All of this was donated by the Friends of the United Arab Emirates in Jerusalem for the Directorate of Education in Qalqilia."
Israeli soldiers told the man that he had to unload everything onto the ground for inspection.
Tulkarem residents say they were forced to sing the Hafez Halim song, "Salamat, Salamat" in order to pass. Residents report feeling angry and provoked.
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Israeli Settlers uproot scores of Palestinian olive trees near Hebron
IMEMC & Agencies
Wednesday, 30 August 2006
A group of right wing Jewish settlers from the illegal settlement of Sousa uprooted on Wednesday scores of olive trees that belong to Palestinian farmers from the nearby village of Yatta south of the West Bank city of Hebron.
Local sources reported that settlers uprooted trees located near an Israeli army post just outside the village.
Settlers have repeatedly targeted the residents, their property and farmlands in addition to attacking the international volunteers who comes to the area to help the people.
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Israeli Army takes nine Palestinian civilians prisoner in Hebron area
Ghassan Bannour
IMEMC & Agencies
Thursday, 31 August 2006
The Israeli army took nine residents as prisoners in the West Bank city of Hebron and the nearby towns of Al-Thahria and Sa'eer towns, on Thursday morning.
Troops, backed by dozens of army jeeps, stormed the city and the two towns, and conducted wide scale search campaign to the residents houses.
Soldiers searched and ransacked residents houses in a very rough way, eyewitnesses reported, and added that soldiers found no weapons or explosives in any of the attacked houses.
The detainees were identified as Amjad Al Wreidat, 29, his brother Eyad, 23, Mohamed Wreidat, 24 Ra'ed Al Wreidat, 34, and Anwar Al Wreidat, 25, from Al-Thahria and Mohamed Amro, 30, Sa'ed Al Herbawi, 21 and Ma'mon Al Oweiwi, 27, from Hebron and Osama Abd Al Torwa, 30 from Sa'eer, the Palestinian Prisoners' Ssociety office in Hebron reported.
The Palestinian News Agenecy, WAFA, reported that troops who invaded al-Thahria forced seven family members of Al-Wreidat out of their house and detained them for over an hour while searching their house.
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UN warns of Gaza aid 'time bomb'
BBC News Online
The UN's humanitarian chief has called Gaza a "ticking time bomb" and urged that the Palestinians' plight not be forgotten amid the focus on Lebanon.
Jan Egeland's comments came as foreign donors met in Stockholm to discuss aid to Palestinians living on restricted aid after Hamas's election victory.
The hosts say they are trying to meet a UN appeal target of $330m (£174m).
On Thursday, donors nearly doubled expectations of aid when they pledged $940m of help to rebuild Lebanon.
About 50 of the countries and organisations which attended Thursday's Lebanon aid conference were expected to stay on to discuss the Palestinian situation.
Inadequate water
Earlier this year the US and European Union froze aid to the Palestinian Authority because Hamas has refused to renounce violence and recognise Israel.
A limited flow was later restored, though aid workers say it is not enough.
Since late June, Israel has also been conducting a large-scale military offensive in the coastal Gaza Strip, after Palestinian militants captured an Israeli soldier.
More than 200 Palestinians have died, while 11 Israeli civilians have been wounded by rocket fire from Gaza.
Mr Egeland said the Palestinians needed at least as much aid and money as the Lebanese, adding that 1.4 million Palestinians were "living in a cage".
"The border crossings are really closed. They cannot get anything out, this is crippling their economy," Mr Egeland said.
"There is not enough electricity, there is not enough water. There are social conditions on an intolerable level at the moment.
"So we need more money but we need also a political solution to this war."
'Hatred and bitterness'
Jan Eliasson, Sweden's foreign minister, said the conference aimed to raise more pledges for a UN flash appeal launched earlier this year.
So far, about 39% of the target of $330m has been raised, he said according to Associated Press.
"The humanitarian situation is critical," Mr Eliasson was quoted as saying.
Unemployment is high, and in Gaza, the UN says nearly 80% of people live in poverty.
One aid worker who returned from Gaza 10 days ago warned that malnutrition was widespread and many new mothers were unable to breastfeed their babies, reports the BBC's Alix Kroeger in Stockholm.
Instead, they were making up bottles with a third of the recommended measure of formula and topping them up with starch.
The result, the aid worker said, would be lifelong damage to those children.
Mr Egeland also warned that, in the 25 years he had been visiting the Palestinian territories, "I've never seen so much hatred and bitterness as during my last visit there."
He urged both Israel and Palestinian militants to cease hostilities.
Comment: Genocide is not committed only with guns...
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Israeli troops withdraw from eastern Gaza Having Killed 12 Civilians
Middle East In Crisis
31/08/2006
Gaza - Israeli troops withdrew from Gaza City's eastern outskirts early on Thursday, ending a four-day operation during which 20 Palestinians were killed, witnesses and an Israeli army spokesperson said.
The troops had rolled into eastern Gaza City's Sheja'eya neighbourhood early on Sunday, acting on intelligence information that militants had dug a tunnel with the aim of attacking Israeli soldiers guarding the nearby Karni commercial crossing with Israel, located east of Gaza City.
The troops found the tunnel, which was 13 metres deep and 150 metres long, Sunday and blew it up in a controlled explosion on Wednesday.
Hospital officials said 12 of the 20 dead, among them three children, were civilians. The eight others were militants who had confronted the Israeli troops.
Witnesses said Israeli planes dropped leaflets over Gaza City on Thursday morning, telling residents that militants were responsible for the closure of border crossings between Israel and Gaza and warning them not to "offer any help to terrorists who are making your daily life very difficult."
Palestinian militants, meanwhile, renewed their rocket fire at Israel, with at least seven Gaza-made Qassam rockets landing in and near the southern Israeli town of Sderot. A warehouse was hit and set on fire, but no one was injured.
In the West Bank, Israeli soldiers shot dead a senior member of the al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades early Thursday during an arrest raid in the northern West Bank city of Nablus, medical officials said.
An army unit entered the city in pursuit of militants and engaged some of them in a gunbattle, killing one and injuring several others, some critically, Rafidya hospital in Nablus said.
The dead militant was identified as Fadi Qfeishe, 30, a leader of the military wing of the mainstream Fatah movement, who had been sought by Israel for several years.
Israeli defence officials said Qfeishe was the most senior bomb maker in the West Bank, responsible for assembling the bomb belts of nearly all suicide bombings committed in Israel in the past year.
Also in Gaza City, a group of masked Palestinian gunmen ambushed and shot dead the northern Gaza head of the militant Popular Resistance Committees (PRC) group.
Raed Nakhal, 30, was the northern Gaza commander of the PRC's armed wing, the Salah a-Din Brigades.
The PRC is one of three militant groups, led by the armed wing of the governing Palestinian Hamas movement, behind the abduction of Israeli Corporal Gilad Shalid which triggered Israel's wide-scale offensive in Gaza
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Bitter Sweet Beirut
By Guardian Unlimited
David Orr, a spokesman for the UN World Food Programme, reports from the Lebanese capital. You can read previous blogs by WFP staff here, here and here.
"Sugar, there's no sugar, where's my sugar?" the woman screamed. She seemed pretty angry but there was a hint of a smile she couldn't quite hide. Everyone around her was laughing and she was determined to put on a good performance. "Next time make sure I get some sugar as well," she concluded, wagging her finger at me.
Most of the people who had come to the distribution of WFP rations actually seemed pleased with what they'd received: a gallon of cooking oil, lentils, canned veg, bread and high-energy biscuits. The bread - huge discs of unleavened Lebanese "khibez" - had been baked earlier at a Beirut bakery with flour provided by WFP.
We were in Haret Hreik, one of the areas of south Beirut worst hit by Israeli bombing raids during the recent conflict. Thousands of families in this largely Shia Muslim suburb had fled as huge bombs rained down on their neighbourhoods, turning 10-floor apartment blocks into smouldering piles of rubble. Now, two and a half weeks after the end of the conflict between Israel and Lebanon's Hizbullah militia, people are returning to south Beirut and other affected areas to pick up the pieces of their lives.
They are people like Heyam Safa, an elderly woman whom I met at the distribution in a side street deep inside Haret Hreik.
"My flat was completely destroyed," she said as she sat on a wall, clutching her bag of rations. "I lost everything, even my medicine which I need because I'm sick. Now I sleep in the home of a different neighbour every night."
Given all they've been through, there's a resilience and good humour among these people that's impressive. The first time I visited the suburb, Ali, a local businessman and elected municipal official, took me on a tour of the devastation. After eight years in Boston, buying and selling Levi's, Ali speaks excellent English. He took me to see his drive-in car wash, or what's left of his car wash: twisted metal sheeting and smashed machinery.
When not overseeing the clean-up of his wrecked business, Ali is helping organise food distributions and other municipal enterprises. He seems to be in constant motion, talking to four people at once: to his left, a woman who wants her ration package now - "Now, do you hear? I can't come back tomorrow" - and, to his right, three irate Palestinian residents who don't have the necessary documents to qualify for rations.
The back street where the distribution is going on is a haven of peace compared to the main thoroughfare, which is jammed with slowly moving cars and dump trucks full of rubble. Some areas are intact but, in others, dozens of buildings seem to have been targeted.
Bulldozers and power drills are hard at work among huge mounds of broken concrete. Poking from between the slabs are bits of broken furniture, smashed washing machines and other household items. Amidst all the dust and noise, people can be seen picking through the debris, trying to salvage a few personal belongings.
At the former perfume shop in the side street where the distribution is taking place, the last packages are being handed out. More food will be distributed tomorrow. The authorities of the four municipalities in south Beirut reckon they'll be giving WFP rations to more than 100,000 people during coming weeks.
"We've got a tough time ahead," says Ali. "But we're also tough. We'll make it."
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Rabbis: Israel Too Worried Over Civilian Deaths
Fri. August 25, 2006
Jewish Daily Forward
As international human rights organizations decry the high toll of civilian deaths suffered in the Lebanon war, America's main organization of Modern Orthodox rabbis is calling on the Israeli military to be less concerned with avoiding civilian casualties on the opposing side when carrying out future operations.
Following a solidarity mission to Israel last week, leaders of the Rabbinical Council of America issued a statement prodding the Israeli military to review its policy of taking pains to spare the lives of innocent civilians, in light of Hezbollah's tactic of hiding its fighters and weaponry among Lebanese civilians. Because Hezbollah "puts Israeli men and women at extraordinary risk of life and limb through unconscionably using their own civilians, hospitals, ambulances, mosques... as human shields, cannon fodder, and weapons of asymmetric warfare," the rabbinical council said in a statement, "we believe that Judaism would neither require nor permit a Jewish soldier to sacrifice himself in order to save deliberately endangered enemy civilians."
The directive from the Orthodox rabbi comes at a time when both Israel and Hezbollah have been subjected to intense scrutiny from the media and from international human rights organizations about the Lebanon war's grueling impact on civilians. Israel has taken the brunt of the criticism, with the number of Lebanese civilians killed in the month-long conflict put at about 1,000.
Civilian deaths on the Israeli side, which totaled 43, were markedly lighter despite Hezbollah's steady rain of rockets over heavily populated towns and cities in Israel's northern region. Defenders of the Jewish state say that Israel has been unfairly blamed for Lebanese civilian deaths, which, they contend, are largely unavoidable given Hezbollah's practice of hiding in innocent people's homes.
Condemnation of Israel by international groups for inadvertently killing civilians when targeting terrorists "has happened in all of the Israeli-Palestinian conflicts, but this has brought it front and center in very clear ways that everybody now sees," said Marc Stern, general counsel of the American Jewish Congress.
"You can't conduct a war in Lebanon without killing civilians," he said. Stern added that Hezbollah is part of a cadre of groups, including Hamas and the Sri Lankan rebel group Tamil Tigers, which live within the general population, making it impossible to wage war on them without attacking civilians.
At the United Nations, the Lebanon war has sparked renewed debate over the enforcement and usefulness of international humanitarian law, which governs wartime conduct. The newly assembled United Nations Human Rights Council, which replaced the U.N. High Commission on Human Rights after years of allegations that the body was ineffective and anti-Israel, recently authorized an investigation of alleged Israeli war crimes in Lebanon. The 47-member council opted not to look into war crimes on the part of Hezbollah - a decision that has prompted accusations that the council is dominated by its Islamic member states.
Kofi Annan, the U.N. secretary general, has condemned civilian deaths on both sides of the conflict, and is considering opening a "commission of inquiry" under the auspices of his office that would investigate possible war crimes by both parties.
Some Jewish organizations have criticized the U.N., saying that the 192-nation group and the cohort of charities that carry out humanitarian work on a global scale place too much emphasis on laws protecting civilians. Among the aid groups criticized has been the International Committee of the Red Cross, which is charged with promoting adherence to international law.
The AJCongress sent a letter August 7 to the president of the Red Cross, Jakob Kellenberger, assailing the international organization for its "selective reading" of international law. According to Stern, both the U.N. and the Red Cross have failed to address Hezbollah's commingling with civilians as a violation of the Fourth Geneva Convention, while both international bodies continue to castigate Israel for a disproportionate military response.
At the same time, the AJCongress is waging a campaign to amend international law, which it views as out of step with fighting terrorism. In a letter sent in mid-August to the Senate Armed Service's Subcommittee on Emerging Threats and Capabilities, Stern wrote that "international law, as it is currently applied by the United Nations, the Red Cross and unofficial international human rights groups, enhances the military capability of irregular forces at the direct expense of states and thus exacerbates the difficulties of nations engaged in asymmetrical warfare." In an interview with the Forward, Stern said that given the stipulations of Additional Protocol 1 - a 1977 amendment to the Fourth Geneva Convention that, among other caveats, excuses "irregular" fighters from wearing military attire - Western nations are at a distinct disadvantage in waging wars.
As Jewish groups rush to defend Israel's conduct in Lebanon, a feud has erupted in recent weeks between Human Rights Watch, an international organization that monitors human rights abuses, and a handful of Jewish leaders who have countered the international watchdog group's assessment of Israel's behavior throughout the conflict. That debate was sparked by the release in early August of "Fatal Strikes: Israel's Indiscriminate Attacks Against Civilians in Lebanon," a report by Human Rights Watch detailing more than 20 instances of Israel's killing of civilians - including an attack on Qana, which claimed the lives of at least 28 Lebanese, among them 16 children - as the war raged during the last two weeks of July. Despite Israel's insistence that it limited its targets to areas where Hezbollah fighters were known to be operating, the rights organization says that in the cases of civilian deaths that it investigated, no evidence emerged to suggest a Hezbollah presence.
The controversy over the Human Rights Watch report has largely played out in the editorial pages of The New York Sun, a neoconservative daily established by Seth Lipsky, the Forward's founding editor. Abraham Foxman, national director of the Anti-Defamation League, published an opinion article in the Sun chiding the human rights group for failing to consider the existential threat that Hezbollah, as an agent of Iran and Syria, poses to the Jewish state. A heated back-and-forth ensued between Kenneth Roth, the rights group's executive director, and the newspaper, which published its own series of editorials accusing Roth of anti-Israel bias. Roth and the Sun's managing editor, Ira Stoll, debated the issue on an episode of the television program "The O'Reilly Factor."
Alan Dershowitz, a professor at Harvard Law School and the author of "The Case for Israel," issued harsh rebukes to Human Rights Watch in opinion pieces that appeared in the Sun and on the left-leaning blog the Huffington Post. Dershowitz, who along with many Jewish communal leaders has long maintained that Human Rights Watch disproportionately singles out Israel for human rights abuses, cited examples of reporting that illustrated Hezbollah's hiding behind civilian targets. In an interview with the Forward, Dershowitz said that Human Rights Watch has lost all credibility as a neutral organization. "Human Rights Watch has become part of the problem, not part of the solution," he said.
Roth shot back that his critics, including Dershowitz, have mischaracterized the report. "There is a shocking lack of factual engagement by the reflexive defenders of Israel. They will focus on irrelevancies, they will twist what we said, but nobody takes on what we actually said." According to Roth, his organization has never denied that Hezbollah places its weapons in civilian areas. "What we found was that the Israeli government's cover story was to blame all civilian deaths on Hezbollah hiding between civilians, but it didn't explain these deaths," he said. Meanwhile, Roth may find support for his stance among some college and high school students affiliated with the Union for Reform Judaism, American Jewry's largest synagogue movement. A loose coalition of 48 Reform Jews, culled from universities across the nation, earlier this month sent a letter to the president of the Union for Reform Judaism, Rabbi Eric Yoffie, calling on the movement to condemn the Israeli military's "killing of unarmed Lebanese and Palestinian civilians, as well as its premeditated targeting of civilian infrastructures, which has put additional lives at risk and hampered relief efforts."
Matt Adler, the Washington University in St. Louis liaison for Kesher, the college branch of the Reform movement, said that he circulated the letter because he felt that his views were not being voiced in his movement's policies and public statements on the Lebanon war. "While we certainly agree with condemning Hamas and Hezbollah's attacks, we didn't see more of a pro-peace statement reflected," Adler said. Adler, 20, also said that he was "thrilled" by the Reform union's swift response. The same day that Yoffie received the students' plea via email, he wrote a letter, saying: "No side is completely blameless in a war, but I am confident that the government of Israel has taken all reasonable precautions to avoid civilian casualties."
In an effort to continue the dialogue, Adler said, the Union for Reform Judaism has scheduled an August 28 conference call between the signatories to his letter and the leadership of Arza, the Reform movement's Zionist arm. "I think we're going to see what comes out of that call for what our next steps are going to be," he said.
Comment: Of course, all of the allegations made by the good Rabbis are entirely false.
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Back in the USA
Bush escalates war-on-terror rhetoric
By Linda Feldmann
The Christian Science Monitor
September 1, 2006
WASHINGTON - As the nation fights wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and seeks to keep the American homeland safe, another sort of conflict is heating up: a war of rhetoric.
Thursday, President Bush launched a series of speeches aimed at building support for efforts to combat terrorism and for the Iraq war. His address before the American Legion in Salt Lake City followed tough speeches this week by other top administration officials that characterized Iraq war opponents as "defeatists" and "appeasers," likening the threat of Islamic fundamentalist-driven terrorism to "fascism."
With the death toll mounting in Iraq, Mr. Bush has moved away from trying to portray a sense of progress there to warning of the consequences of pulling out. On the eve of the fifth anniversary of the 9/11 attacks - and a little more than two months before crucial congressional elections - Bush appears intent on framing all the wars as part of the larger war on terrorism.
"They're playing to [an issue] that's one of the few things they've got going for them," says John Mueller, an expert on war and public opinion at Ohio State University.
Bush and the Republicans made terrorism a winning electoral issue in 2002 and 2004, but it's not clear that strategy will work for them again. A majority of Americans no longer see the Iraq war as part of the larger war on terror, according to a CBS-New York Times poll released last week.
Bush: 'They dream to destroy'
In his speech Thursday, the president pushed his message on terrorism hard. He laid out differences between the Sunni Muslims of Al Qaeda and the Shiite Muslims adhering to groups like Hizbullah, noting the state sponsorship of Syria and Iran. "Still others are homegrown terrorists, fanatics who live quietly in free societies. They dream to destroy," he continued.
Despite their differences, "these groups form the outlines of a single movement: the worldwide network of radicals that use terror to kill those who stand in the way of their totalitarian ideology," the president said.
On Wednesday, Bush maintained that his series of speeches, which will culminate in an address to the United Nations General Assembly on Sept. 19, are not political. But Democrats did not buy that argument, and have come out with their own rhetorical guns blazing, denying accusations that they are "appeasers" and rejecting GOP inferences that they would vote to cut off funding to the troops when Congress comes back. The Democrats' stated plan is to leave no charge unanswered, with party leaders at the ready to respond.
It's hard to reverse public opinion
Furthering the GOP's challenge, it remains an open question whether many Americans who now oppose the administration's foreign policy are listening to the arguments and are willing to change their minds. History has shown that once public opinion turns sour on a war, such as Vietnam, it is impossible to win it back.
"If he really wants to improve public support for the war, speeches alone won't do it," says Christopher Gelpi, a political scientist at Duke University who is studying this issue. "He has to improve conditions on the ground in Iraq."
Given the steepness of that task, he adds, perhaps the best Bush can hope for from his speeches - and from his surrogates' suggestions that Democrats would weaken the nation's defenses - is to keep the Republican base from getting discouraged in November and failing to vote.
"A key point in getting people to vote Republican is getting them to believe that fighting this war is the right thing to do - not so much focusing on success, but focusing on what's the reason for the mission," says Mr. Gelpi. "Shifting his rhetoric to that may help to support Republican candidates. Certainly, he wants to avoid losing control of one of the houses of Congress this fall."
Probably the most politically pungent speech of the week came from Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, who spoke of "moral and intellectual confusion" over the Iraq war and the larger war on terror as he criticized Bush's critics and the news media.
On Tuesday, Vice President Cheney spoke at Offutt Air Force Base in Nebraska, where Bush came on 9/11, right after the attacks. He sounded a familiar theme: "We have only two options in Iraq - victory or defeat."
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Burns Says Terrorists Drive Taxis by Day
By MATT GOURAS
Associated Press
Aug 31, 2006
Summary: Republican Sen. Conrad Burns, whose recent comments have stirred controversy, says the United States is up against a faceless enemy of terrorists who "drive taxi cabs in the daytime and kill at night."
"The point is there are terrorists that live amongst us. Not only here, but in Britain and the entire world," said spokesman Jason Klindt. "Whether they are taxi drivers or investment bankers, the fact remains that this is a new type of enemy."
BELGRADE, Mont. - Republican Sen. Conrad Burns, whose recent comments have stirred controversy, says the United States is up against a faceless enemy of terrorists who "drive taxi cabs in the daytime and kill at night."
During a fundraiser Wednesday with first lady Laura Bush, the three-term Montana senator talked about terrorism, tax cuts and the money he has brought to his state. Burns is one of the more vulnerable Senate incumbents, facing a tough challenge from Democrat Jon Tester.
He has drawn criticism in recent weeks for calling his house painter a "nice little Guatemalan man" during a June speech. Burns, whose re- election campaign is pressing for tighter immigration controls, also suggested that the man might be an illegal immigrant. The campaign later said the worker is legal.
Burns, 71, also had to apologize after confronting members of a firefighting team at the Billings airport and telling them they had done a "piss-poor job," according to a state report. In July, the Hotshot crew had traveled 2,000 miles from Staunton, Va., to help dig fire lines for about a week around a 143-square-mile wildfire east of Billings.
At the campaign event with Bush, Burns talked about the war on terrorism, saying a "faceless enemy" of terrorists "drive taxi cabs in the daytime and kill at night."
The campaign said Thursday that the senator was simply pointing out terrorists can be anywhere.
"The point is there are terrorists that live amongst us. Not only here, but in Britain and the entire world," said spokesman Jason Klindt. "Whether they are taxi drivers or investment bankers, the fact remains that this is a new type of enemy."
Responding to Democratic complaints about Burns' verbal gaffes, Republicans argued that a Tester comment earlier this week was derogatory toward American Indians.
In an interview with The Seattle Times, Tester talked about the faith he has in his staff, and said, "Nobody has done anything to make me think they're trying to tomahawk me."
Brock Lowrance, spokesman for the Montana Republican Party, said American Indians have long found "tomahawk" a derogatory term. American Indians are the state's largest minority group.
At the fundraiser, Bush described Burns as a strong advocate for Montana farmers and families.
"In Washington, Senator Burns is a respected voice on the issues facing rural communities in Montana and across the nation," Bush said.
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U.S. Muslims Warn of Threat From Within
By RACHEL ZOLL
AP Religion Writer
Aug 31, 2006
After the Sept. 11 suicide hijackings, distraught U.S. Muslim leaders feared the next casualty would be their religion.
Islam teaches peace, they told anyone who would listen in news conferences, at interfaith services and, most famously, standing in a mosque with President Bush.
But five years later, the target audience for their pleas has shifted. Now the faith's American leaders are starting to warn fellow Muslims about a threat from within.
The 2005 subway attacks in London that investigators say were committed by British-born and -raised Muslims, and the relentless Muslim-engineered sectarian assaults on Iraqi civilians, are among the events that have convinced some U.S. Muslims to change focus.
"This sentiment of denial, that sort of came as a fever to the Muslim community after 9-11, is fading away," said Muqtedar Khan, a political scientist at the University of Delaware and author of "American Muslims." "They realize that there are Muslims who use terrorism, and the community is beginning to stand up to this."
Muslim leaders point to two stark examples of the new mind-set:
- A Canadian-born Muslim man worked with police for months investigating a group of Islamic men and youths accused in June of plotting terrorist attacks in Ontario. Mubin Shaikh said he feared any violence would ultimately hurt Islam and Canadian Muslims.
- In England, it's been widely reported that a tip from a British Muslim helped lead investigators to uncover what they said was a plan by homegrown extremists to use liquid explosives to destroy U.S.-bound planes.
Cooperation isn't emotionally easy, as Western governments enact security policies that critics say have criminalized Islam itself.
Safiyyah Ally, a graduate student in political science at the University of Toronto, wrote recently on altmuslim.com that Shaikh, the Canadian informer, went too far.
She said the North American Muslim community "is fragile enough as is" without members "spying" on each other. Leaders should counsel Muslims against violence and report suspicious activity to police - but nothing more, she argued.
"We cannot have communities wherein individuals are paranoid of each other and turned against one another," Ally wrote.
Yet some leaders say keeping watch for extremists protects all Muslims and their civil rights.
Salam al-Marayati, executive director of Muslim Public Affairs Council, an advocacy group based in Los Angeles, says working closely with authorities underscores that Muslims are not outsiders to be feared. It also gives Muslims a way to directly air their concerns about how they're treated by the government.
"We're not on opposite teams," al-Marayati said. "We're all trying to protect our country from another terrorist attack."
In 2004, his group started the "National Anti-Terrorism Campaign," urging Muslims to monitor their own communities, speak out more boldly against violence and work with law enforcement. Hundreds of U.S. mosques have signed on, al-Marayati said.
The Council on American-Islamic Relations, a civil rights group, ran a TV ad campaign and a petition-drive called "Not in the Name of Islam," which repudiates terrorism. Hundreds of thousands of people have endorsed it, according to Ibrahim Hooper, the group's spokesman.
After the London subway bombings, the Fiqh Council of North America, which advises Muslims on Islamic law, issued a fatwa - or edict - declaring that nothing in Islam justifies terrorism. The council said Muslims were obligated to help law enforcement protect civilians from attacks.
"I think everyone now agrees that silence isn't an option," Hooper said. "You have to speak out in defense of civil liberties, but you also have to speak out against any kind of extremism or violence that's carried out in the name of Islam."
But many Muslims say they're being asked to look out for something that even the U.S. government struggles to define: What constitutes an imminent threat?
Khan said he has heard of cases in American mosques where imams have expressed extreme views in sermons and worshippers have confronted the prayer leaders about it.
"But beyond that what else can we do?" Khan said. "Do we need to hire a private detective to put on this guy? If five guys came to me and said, 'Muqtedar, let's get together. Let's blow up this and that,' then I would call the police. But the community does not understand surveillance."
Imam Muhammad Musri, head of the Islamic Society of Central Florida, said he has tried to address this problem in the eight mosques he oversees in the Orlando area.
He regularly invites law enforcement officials to speak with local Muslims and encourages mosque members to come to him with any suspicions, even if they overhear something said in jest. Musri says he also speaks regularly with local FBI and police to establish a relationship in case a real threat emerges.
"Here in Central Florida, talking to most people, they are literally upset by the actions of Muslims - or so-called Muslims - overseas in Europe and the Middle East, because they say, 'We wish they would come and see how we're doing here,'" Musri said. "We know who the real enemy is - someone who might come from the outside and try to infiltrate us. Everybody is on the lookout."
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Pentagon moves toward monitoring media
MATTHEW PERRONE
AP Business Writer
Thu Aug 31, 2006
WASHINGTON - The U.S. command in Baghdad is seeking bidders for a two-year, $20 million public relations contract that calls for monitoring the tone of Iraq news stories filed by U.S. and foreign media.
Proposals, due Sept. 6, ask companies to show how they'll "provide continuous monitoring and near-real time reporting of Iraqi, pan-Arabic, international, and U.S. media," according to the solicitation issued last week.
Contractors also will be evaluated on how they will provide analytical reports and customized briefings to the military, "including, but not limited to tone (positive, neutral, negative) and scope of media coverage."
The winner of the contract will likely also be required to develop an Arabic version of the multinational force's web site.
Attempts by The Associated Press to contact officials connected to the project via telephone and e-mail were not successful Thursday night.
The program comes during what has appeared to be a White House effort, before the fifth anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks, to take the offensive against critics at a time of doubt about the future of Iraq.
President Bush addressed the American Legion's national convention in Salt Lake City on the issue Thursday, stressing that a U.S. pullout from iraq would lead to its conquest by America's worst enemies.
He continued a theme set by both Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice when they spoke to the administration-friendly group earlier in the week.
The military last year was criticized for a public relations program in Iraq that included hiring a consulting firm that paid Iraqi news media to carry news stories written by American troops.
Pentagon officials have defended the program as a necessary tool in the war on terror. But critics have said it contradicts American values of freedom of the press.
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Killing in the Name of Democracy
by James Bovard
August 30, 2006
President George W. Bush perpetually invokes the goal of spreading democracy to sanctify his foreign policy. Unfortunately, he is only the latest in a string of presidents who cloaked aggression in idealistic rhetoric. Killing in the name of democracy has a long and sordid history.
The U.S. government's first experience with forcibly spreading democracy came in the wake of the Spanish-American War. When the U.S. government declared war on Spain in 1898, it pledged it would not annex foreign territory. But after a swift victory, the United States annexed all of the Philippines. As Tony Smith, author of America's Mission, noted,
Ultimately, the democratization of the Philippines came to be the principal reason the Americans were there; now the United States had a moral purpose to its imperialism and could rest more easily.
William McKinley proclaimed that in the Philippines the U.S. occupation would "assure the residents in every possible way [of the] full measure of individual rights and liberties which is the heritage of a free people, substituting the mild sway of justice and right for arbitrary rule." He also promised to "Christianize" the Filipinos, as if he did not consider the large number of Filipino Catholics to be Christians. McKinley was devoted to forcibly spreading American values abroad at the same time that he championed high tariffs to stop Americans from buying foreign products.
The "mild sway of justice" worked out very well for Filipino undertakers. The United States Christianized and civilized the Filipinos by authorizing American troops to kill any Filipino male 10 years old and older and by burning down and massacring entire villages. (Filipino resistance fighters also committed atrocities against American soldiers.) Hundreds of thousands of Filipinos died as the United States struggled to crush resistance to its rule in a conflict that dragged on for a decade and cost the lives of 4,000 American troops.
Despite the brutal U.S. suppression of the Filipino independence movement, President Bush, in a 2003 speech in Manila, claimed credit for the United States's having brought democracy to the Philippines:
America is proud of its part in the great story of the Filipino people. Together our soldiers liberated the Philippines from colonial rule.
Perhaps Bush believes that subservience to the U.S. government is the highest freedom that any foreign people can attain. His comments illustrated the continual "1984"-style rewriting of American history.
Latin American interventions
Woodrow Wilson raised tub-thumping for democracy to new levels. As soon as he took office, he began saber-rattling against the Mexican government, outraged that the Mexican president, Victoriano Huerta, had come to power by military force (during the Mexican civil war that broke out in 1910). Wilson announced in May 1914,
They say the Mexicans are not fitted for self-government; and to this I reply that, when properly directed, there is no people not fitted for self-government.
This is almost verbatim what Bush has said about Iraqis and other Arabs. And as long as a president praises self-government, many Americans seem oblivious when he oppresses foreigners.
Wilson summarized his Mexican policy: "I am going to teach the South American republics to elect good men!" U.S. Ambassador to Great Britain Walter Hines Page explained the U.S. government's attitude toward Latin America:
The United States will be here 200 years and it can continue to shoot men for that little space until they learn to vote and rule themselves.
In order to cut off the Mexican government's tariff revenue, Wilson sent U.S. forces to seize the city of Veracruz, one of the most important Mexican ports. U.S. soldiers killed hundreds of Mexicans (while suffering 19 dead) and briefly rallied the Mexican opposition around the Mexican leader.
In 1916, U.S. Marines seized Santo Domingo, the capital of the Dominican Republic. After the United States could not find any Dominican politicians who would accept orders from Washington, it installed its own military government to run the country for eight years. The previous year, the U.S. military had seized control of Haiti and dictated terms to that nation's president. When local residents rebelled against U.S. rule in 1918, thousands of Haitians were killed. Tony Smith observes,
What makes Wilson's [Latin American] policy even more annoying is that its primary motive seems to have been to reinforce the self-righteous vanity of the president.
World War I and II
After Wilson took the nation into World War I "to make the world safe for democracy," he acted as if fanning intolerance was the key to spreading democracy. He increasingly demonized all those who did not support the war and his crusade to shape the postwar world. He denounced Irish-Americans, German-Americans, and others, declaring, "Any man who carries a hyphen about him carries a dagger which he is ready to plunge into the vitals of the Republic." Wilson urged Americans to see military might as a supreme force for goodness, appealing in May 1918 for "force, force to the utmost, force without stint or limit, the righteous and triumphant force which shall make Right the law of the world." As Harvard professor Irving Babbitt commented,
Wilson, in the pursuit of his scheme for world service, was led to make light of the constitutional checks on his authority and to reach out almost automatically for unlimited power.
Again, the parallels with Bush are almost uncanny. And many of the same intellectuals who currently praise Wilson for his abuses in the name of idealism also heap accolades on Bush's head.
The deaths of more than 100,000 Americans in World War I did nothing to bring Wilson's lofty visions to Earth. The 1919 Paris peace talks became a slaughter pen of Wilson's pretensions. One of his top aides, Henry White, later commented, "We had such high hopes of this adventure; we believed God called us and now we are doing hell's dirtiest work." Thomas Fleming, the author of The Illusion of Victory, noted, "The British and French exploited the war to forcibly expand their empires and place millions more people under their thumbs." Fleming concluded that one lesson of World War I is that "idealism is not synonymous with sainthood or virtue. It only sounds that way." But it did not take long for idealism to recover its capacity to induce political delusions.
During the 1920s and 1930s, U.S. military interventions in Latin America were routinely portrayed as "missions to establish democracy." The U.S. military sometimes served as a collection agency for American corporations or banks that had made unwise investments or loans in politically unstable foreign lands. Marine Corps Maj. Gen. Smedley Butler bitterly lamented of his 33 years of active service,
I spent most of my time being a high class muscle-man for Big Business, for Wall Street and for the Bankers. In short, I was a racketeer, a gangster for capitalism.... I helped in the raping of half a dozen Central American republics for the benefit of Wall Street.
Franklin Roosevelt painted World War II as a crusade for democracy — hailing Joseph Stalin as a partner in liberation. Roosevelt praised Stalin as "truly representative of the heart and soul of Russia" — as if the lack of bona fide elections in Russia was a mere technicality, since Stalin was the nation's favorite. Roosevelt praised Soviet Russia as one of the "freedom-loving Nations" and stressed that Stalin was "thoroughly conversant with the provisions of our Constitution." Harold Ickes, one of Roosevelt's top aides, proclaimed that communism was "the antithesis of Nazism" because it was based on "belief in the control of the government, including the economic system, by the people themselves." The fact that the Soviet regime had been the most oppressive government in the world in the 1930s was irrelevant, as far as Roosevelt was concerned. If Stalin's regime was "close enough" to democracy, it is difficult to understand why Roosevelt is venerated as an idealist.
Cold War interventions
Dwight Eisenhower was no slacker in invoking democracy. In 1957, he declared,
We as a nation ... have a job to do, a mission as the champion of human freedom. To conduct ourselves in all our international relations that we never compromise the fundamental principle that all peoples have a right to an independent government of their own full, free choice.
He was perfectly in tune with the Republican Party platform of 1952, which proclaimed,
We shall again make liberty into a beacon light of hope that will penetrate the dark places.... The policies we espouse will revive the contagious, liberating influences which are inherent in freedom.
But Eisenhower's idealism did not deter the CIA, dreading communist takeovers, from toppling at least two democratically elected regimes. In 1953, the CIA engineered a coup that put the shah in charge of Iran. In 1954, it aided a military coup in Guatemala that crushed that nation's first constitutionally based government.
The elected Guatemalan government and the United Fruit Company could not agree on the value of 400,000 acres that the Guatemalan government wanted to expropriate to distribute to small farmers. The Guatemalan government offered $1.2 million as compensation based on the "taxed value of the land; Washington insisted on behalf of United Fruit that the value was $15.9 million, that the company be reimbursed immediately and in full, and that [President Jacobo] Arbenz's insistence on taking the land was clear proof of his communist proclivities," as America's Mission noted.
Yet, at the same time, the federal government in the United States was confiscating huge swaths of private land throughout American inner cities for urban renewal and highway projects, often paying owners pittances for their homes. There was no foreign government to intervene to protect poor Americans from federal redevelopment schemes. The fact that the U.S. government got miffed over a 1954 Guatemalan government buyout offer helped produce decades of repressive rule and the killing of hundreds of thousands of Guatemalan civilians.
Since the Eisenhower era, U.S. government bogus efforts to spread democracy have sprouted like mushrooms. Especially with the creation of the National Endowment for Democracy in 1983, all limits were lifted on how many democratic cons that the U.S. government could bankroll abroad. The U.S. government is currently spending more than a billion dollars a year for democracy efforts abroad. But Thomas Carothers, the director of the Carnegie Endowment's Democracy and Rule of Law Project, warns that Bush policies are creating a "democracy backlash" around the globe.
The greatest gift the United States could give the world is an example that serves as a shining city on a hill. As University of Pennsylvania professor Walter McDougall observed, "The best way to promote our institutions and values abroad is to strengthen them at home." But there is scant glory for politicians in restraining their urge to "save humanity." The ignorance of the average American has provided no check on "run amok" politicians and bureaucrats.
James Bovard is the author of Attention Deficit Democracy [2006] as well as The Bush Betrayal [2004], Lost Rights [1994] and Terrorism and Tyranny: Trampling Freedom, Justice and Peace to Rid the World of Evil (Palgrave-Macmillan, September 2003) and serves as a policy advisor for The Future of Freedom Foundation. Send him email.
This article originally appeared in the June 2006 edition of Freedom Daily.
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Intel exec to lead CIA capital arm
By Joris Evers
CNET News.com
August 29, 2006
Intel executive and security industry veteran Christopher Darby has signed on to become the next chief executive officer at In-Q-Tel, the CIA's venture capital arm, In-Q-Tel said in a statement Tuesday. Darby was vice president of Intel's middleware products division and has held senior positions at security companies Sarvega, which was bought by Intel, and @stake, which was acquired by Symantec. He will take the helm at In-Q-Tel on Sept. 18, according to the statement.
In-Q-Tel had been looking for a new chief executive since April, when former U.S. cybersecurity chief Amit Yoran resigned only four months after his appointment. In-Q-Tel is charged with funding and developing new technologies for the intelligence community. Yoran resigned for personal reasons. For its CEO search, In-Q-Tel retained the services of the executive search firm Heidrick and Struggles.
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Senate puts Tomlinson nomination on hold
By BARRY SCHWEID
AP
Thu Aug 31, 2006
WASHINGTON - The Senate Foreign Relations Committee does not plan to act on President Bush's re-nomination of an agency head accused of misusing government money.
A summary of a report by the State Department's inspector general, released Tuesday, said Kenneth Tomlinson misused government funds for two years as chairman of the Broadcasting Board of Governors. That's the agency which oversees the Voice of America, Radio Free Europe and other U.S. government broadcasting abroad.
Tomlinson is accused of overbilling for his time and hiring a friend as a consultant.
On Wednesday, Andy Fisher, a spokesman for the Foreign Relations Committee, said the panel had taken no action on the January 2005 nomination while the investigation was under way "and does not intend to now."
Under the 1994 law that created the board, Tomlinson, who has denied the allegations, can remain at his post until a successor is confirmed.
Tish King, a spokesperson, had no immediate reaction to the committee's move.
Reps. Howar