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August 2011

Incredible !

Hidden video camera inside Israeli prison

[youtube http://youtu.be/vYRxrYPGZS4?]

13 British people were stopped at Tel Aviv airport in July 2011. Five hours later they and 120 other people were in a high security prison in Israel.One woman managed to smuggle out this hidden recorded video of their six nights locked up in the high security prison in Israel.The video clips shows how the women were forced to scrub the prison floors in exchange for coffee. Life inside the hot cells and tense interactions with the Israeli guards were all captured.
Interested broadcasters please contact http://www.undercurrents.org
For more information on the issue see http://www.swanseapalestine.org/

propaganda on Syria

The propaganda for and against the Syrian regime intensifies at a feverish pitch.  Syrian regime TV is an insult to anyone’s intelligence.  You watch the news and think that Syrian regime is fighting Israel, and not its own civilian population.  They list casualties among the “regime/order preserving forces”, but not the civilians unless they talk about “the criminal gang” that roams the country and shoots at people and Syrian regime forces alike.  AlJazeera continues its propaganda that ignores news: it is now the YouTube channel.  It merely reproduces YouTube clips from the internet.  I also notice that it keeps increasing the estimate of the Hamah massacres week after week: Amnesty International and Syrian Muslim Brothers used to rely on the estimate of 10,000, although it could be more.  Yesterday, Aljazeera increased the estimate to 38,000 (in the previous version of this article, it talked about an “official estimate” of more than 10,000.  

That is a lie because the lousy Syrian regime never ever gave any estimate of the massacre and its never ever talks about the massacre.  See my problem with Aljazeera: it is not about politics, it is about unreliability, unprofessionalism, and fabrications, exaggerations, and lies.

 It has made it easy for supporters of the Syrian regime to discredit it.  New TV, on the other hand, clearly has resolved to support the Syrian bloody campaign of yesterday.  Instead of covering the stories of the victims of the regime, it showed (YouTube again) images of unknown people tossing unidentified dead bodies in the water and said they were protesters tossing bodies of soldiers of the Syrian army.  

Hariri media initially ignored the protests of Syria (in the first few weeks, only As-Safir and Al-Akhbar covered extensively the protests in Syria): they were clearly waiting for orders from Saudi Arabia.  Once the orders from Riyadh came, they went all out against the regime like Saudi media.  Yesterday, mini-Hariri spoke about the right of the Syrian people to “decide on its own choices freely and in the framework of its human rights”.  Mini-Hariri was not asked if he supported such rights in Saudi Arabia.

Syria is on course for destruction

Bashar al-Assad knows his fall from power is inevitable, but seems determined his dominion will self-destruct with him

Syria: Hama protest

A citizen journalism image of Syrian anti-regime protesters in the city of Hama, Syria. Photograph: AP

The night before the Muslim holy month of Ramadan began, the Syrian army was mobilised and deployed, not to the occupied Golan Heights, but to Syrian cities and villages.

The brunt of this campaign of state-sponsored violence was absorbed, yet again, by the defiant city of Hama. In 1982, President Bashar al-Assad’s father brutally crushed an armed insurrection by the Muslim Brotherhood there, killing more than 20,000 Syrian citizens along the way.

Today the Syrian army continues a tradition of fostering instability in the country, first started in 1949 when the eccentric General Husni al-Zaim (with the help of the CIA) used the Syrian army to topple the country’s first democratic government after independence.

Ironically, 1 August is called Armed Forces Day – a day when Syrians can celebrate the institution that is supposed to protect them.

Many analysts argue that the Assad regime has made a desperate attempt to crush the uprising prior to the holy month of Ramadan, when prayers held every evening in mosques throughout the country are expected to increase the frequency and intensity of protests – but I don’t think so.

I think this regime has deliberately and intentionally bloodied the nose of the Syrian people on the eve of this holy month. By now, only the most deluded of Assad’s circle of close advisers would think that the Syrian uprising can ever be crushed. The start of Ramadan should be seen as the beginning of a war of attrition by the regime against the Syrian people, similar to the situation in Libya.

Already there are smatterings about the formation of a “Free Syrian army” which, if it exists, will mean the country is entering an even bloodier stage. Yet the Syrian protesters have, in spite of fantastic stories about saboteurs and Salafist terrorists by the regime’s media, remained overwhelmingly peaceful in their protests.

In the weeks preceding the recent crackdown, Hama witnessed some of the biggest demonstrations in the country with almost no loss of life – attributed to the fact that the Syrian security forces were withdrawn from the city. But it seems that the regime is intent on provoking a violent reaction; the arrest and humiliation of an important tribal chief over the weekend was seen as a deliberate provocation, with one spokesman for the al-Baggara tribe telling al-Jazeera Arabic that “the peaceful nature of the protests will be considered over” if their chieftain is not released immediately. It seems to me that those in Assad’s circle who thought they could defuse the situation with minimal violence (I abhor labelling them as moderates) have been drowned out by the more hardline elements.

In the end, Syria has gone down the road of Libya, not that of Tunisia or Egypt. As with Muammar Gaddafi, Assad seems to have realised that once the Syrian people broke through the fear barrier, his fall from power would be inevitable. As a result, I have no doubt that the regime now intends to pursue a ferocious campaign against the people who dared to rise up against it.

In the meantime, an elaborate and extensive international network of lawyers, lobbyists, statesmen and governments will be probably be utilised to stretch out the regime’s existence for as long as possible.

Whether it was Saddam Hussein or Gaddafi, it seems as if all Arab dictators have spent the decades of their rule, apart from plundering their countries, also ensuring their dominions would self-destruct should they ever be ousted from power, as an additional bolster to their eternal rule – Après moi, le deluge! I fear that when Assad is finally ousted from power, Syria will be left a smouldering wreck.

Belgium: a small country… so GREAT in History

[youtube http://youtu.be/dHFK71FE8s8?]

Six reasons why Americans don’t know a million Iraqis were killed in their name

By John Tirman

July 30, 2011

Why is the fate of people subjected to US invasion and occupation, and the scale of the slaughter inflicted, hidden from Americans?

As the US war in Iraq winds down, we are entering a familiar phase, the season of forgetting—forgetting the harsh realities of the war. Mostly we forget the victims of the war, the Iraqi civilians whose lives and society have been devastated by eight years of armed conflict. The act of forgetting is a social and political act, abetted by the American news media.

Throughout the war, but especially now, the minimal news we get from Iraq consistently devalues the death toll of Iraqi civilians.

Why? A number of reasons are at work in this persistent evasion of reality. But forgetting has consequences, especially as it braces the obstinate right-wing narrative of “victory” in the Iraq war. If we forget, we learn nothing.

I’ve puzzled over this habit of reaching for the lowest possible estimates of the number of Iraqis who died unnecessarily since March 2003. The habit is now deeply entrenched. Over a period of about two weeks in May, I encountered in major news media three separate references to the number of people who had died in the Iraq war. Anderson Cooper, on his CNN show, Steven Lee Myers in the New York Times Magazine and Brian MacQuarrie in the Boston Globe all pegged the number in the tens of thousands, sometimes adding “at least.” But the number that sticks is this “tens of thousands.”

Cooper, Myers and MacQuarrie—all skillful reporters—are scarcely alone. It’s very rare to hear anything approximating the likely death toll, which is well into the hundreds of thousands, possibly more than one million. It’s a textbook case of how opinion gatekeepers reinforce each other’s caution. Because the number of civilians killed in a US war is so morally fraught, the news media, academics and political leaders tend to gravitate toward the figure (if mentioned at all) that is least disturbing.

The “tens of thousands” mantra is peculiar because even the most conservative calculation—that provided by Iraq Body Count, a British NGO—is now more than 100,000, and IBC acknowledges that their number is probably about half correct. They count only civilians killed by violence who are named in English-language news and some morgue counts. Their method is incomplete for a number of reasons—news media coverage is far from comprehensive, most obviously—and many Iraqis who are killed are not labeled by authorities as civilians. The death toll from nonviolent deaths (women dying in childbirth, for example, because the health care system has been devastated by the war) is also very high and is not included in IBC’s tally.

The more accurate figures come from household surveys and other methods, and these have much higher figures. I commissioned one conducted by Johns Hopkins scientists in 2006 that yielded a figure of 650,000, which was hotly disputed, but another around the same time yielded a total of more than 400,000 dead, including all Iraqis from all causes. Both surveys followed state-of-the-art epidemiological practice. And a lot of killing was still to come after those surveys were done.

There is a lively debate among specialists about these figures, but the bottom line is that “hundreds of thousands” rather than “tens of thousands” is the incontrovertible mortality statistic.

So why the devotion to the lower number? And why does it matter?

The latter question is the easier one to answer. Make the rounds of right-wing blogs and think tanks and you’ll find a constant refrain: the war, despite its many difficulties, was worth it to get rid of Saddam Hussein. As Richard Miniter of the Hudson Institute put it last September, “The death tolls in the Saddam years were far higher than in the years following liberation; hundreds of thousands disappeared into mass graves.”

Such a comparison is only possible if mere “tens of thousands” perished in the war. If the human costs are calculated to be relatively low, then the next war is all the easier to start.

But what the right-wing triumphalists assert does not explain why the elite media bury the mortality issue. A half-dozen reasons explain their indifference to accurate reporting.

First, many of these news outlets had endorsed the war and never quite recanted. Even if a newspaper did admit to a mistake in judgment about the war, acknowledging that you’ve been hoodwinked by the Bush administration and then seeing that error magnified by 5 million refugees and perhaps a million dead is a hard pill to swallow.

Second, the Bush White House worked overtime to decry any of the high estimates, and the Murdoch media machine did its part in attempting to discredit the household surveys in particular. The reaction to the Johns Hopkins estimate of 650,000 “excess deaths” came in for savage treatment, trashed as a “political hit” in Murdoch’s Wall Street Journal. This campaign against the scientists had a chilling effect.

Third, journalists have rarely if ever engaged the technical debate about estimating casualties, preferring to report mortality—if at all—as a political story. The science is complicated, to be sure, but accessible. The epidemiologists who are thoroughly conversant with the most advanced techniques of estimating fatalities come down squarely on the side of the household surveys and the higher numbers.

Journalism in the Iraq war tended to focus on the Bush administration’s foibles and the chaotic political wrangling in Baghdad. The attention to civilians and the violence of the war quickly fell into a few reliable tropes: the Shia-Sunni fratricide, spectacular car bombs rather than the quotidian reality of violence, Baghdad-centric reporting (because it was too dangerous to travel), and any glimpse of progress on the ground. While Iraqis were reporting (through blogs and polling) that 80 percent of the violence was due to the US military and the conditions of life were intolerable, this perspective rarely found its way into major news media in the United States.

Fourth, the political establishment, including the Democratic leadership, would not touch this issue, and the news media was left without an opposition voice. The implication of so many deaths, a large fraction by the hands of US soldiers, was politically a third rail. For many reasons—not least the hunger for heroes in the aftermath of 9/11—the troops have been accorded nearly unprecedented adulation, and such heroes cannot be accused of excessive use of force. So politicians have steered clear, and the rare one who did raise a question, such as the late, pro-military congressman John Murtha, were mercilessly attacked.

Fifth is the troubling matter of racism. The major US wars since 1945 have been waged in Asia, and a certain “orientalism”—not unique to Americans, of course—has framed our perceptions of the local populations. How much a factor this is in ignoring the suffering of these populations is very difficult to gauge (about 1.5 million Korean civilians were killed in the Korean war, and between one and two million Vietnamese, and hundreds of thousands of Cambodians, in America’s Indochina war, all largely disregarded). But racism surely accounts for some of the cavalier disrespect the public and press show toward the civilian suffering in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The sixth and last explanation for indifference—and perhaps the most powerful—is a psychological one. We tend to avert our eyes from gruesome spectacle; it disrupts our sense of an orderly, just world. We want to believe that the mayhem is not happening, that in the end everything will be all right, or that the victims are to blame. These kinds of reactions—demonstrated time and again in clinical experiments by social psychologists—are reflected in society and also in the news media.

The Korean war is often called the “forgotten war”; it is not literally forgotten, but avoided. The enormous destruction without a clear and satisfying result for America led rapidly to public indifference. That, I think, is what’s occurred in Iraq—a falsely premised war with enormous devastation leads to a vast carelessness. And the civilians, the real victims, are the most disregarded of all.

Contrast the news coverage of Iraq with the summer 2006 war in Lebanon, when Israel bombed neighborhoods in Beirut that resulted in more than 1,000 Lebanese deaths in the 34-day conflict. However laudable the extensive news interest in that toll, such attention was significantly greater than the coverage of civilian killings in Iraq, which approached that figure in any single day that bloody summer. Why attention to one and not the other? A plausible explanation is that the Lebanon war was not a US operation. We were not responsible (directly), and hence discussing the human toll was not out-of-bounds.

“When the New Republic ran a column by a private that recounted several instances of bad behavior by US soldiers,” media critic Michael Massing recalled, writing about Iraq, “he and the magazine were viciously attacked by conservative bloggers. Most Americans simply do not want to know too much about the acts being carried out in their name, and this serves as a powerful deterrent to editors and producers.”

And there’s the rub. We simply don’t want to know: it’s too upsetting, too much to absorb. This is not behavior limited to journalists; many academics and NGOs who should know better do the same thing. Because they generally sympathize with the downtrodden of the third world, their indifference is all the more disquieting.

But the major news media enjoy influence that few institutions possess, and with that have a responsibility to be more comprehensive, more energetic, in getting and presenting the full scope of war. Missing the WMD story before the war has been the focus of press criticism. But the bigger failure—the more consequential failure—is neglecting the fate of the people subjected to the US occupation. And once all the American troops are withdrawn, the season of forgetting will be in full flower.

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