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QUOTE OF THE DAY
"I just want you to know that, when we talk about war, we're really talking about peace." George W. Bush, June 18, 2002
"War is Peace" - Big Brother in George Orwell's 1984

The Gladiator: John Fitzgerald Kennedy
John F. Kennedy and All Those "isms"
John F. Kennedy, J. Edgar Hoover, Organized Crime and the Global Village
John F. Kennedy and the Psychopathology of Politics
John F. Kennedy and the Pigs of War
John F. Kennedy and the Titans
John F. Kennedy, Oil, and the War on Terror
John F. Kennedy, The Secret Service and Rich, Fascist Texans
The US has plans for nearly two-thirds of Somalia's oil fields to be allocated to the US oil companies Conoco, Amoco, Chevron and Phillips. The US hopes Somalia will line up as an ally alongside Ethiopia and Djibouti, where the US has a military base. This alliance would give America powerful leverage close to the major energy-producing regions. On May 1, the BBC website reported an attack on Somalia with the words:
One might think the BBC's headline would identify the agency responsible for the bombing, but the first few sentences also shed no light:
Only in the fourth sentence, was responsibility ascribed:
English teachers often illustrate use of the passive form with the sentence: 'A man has been arrested.' The passive is preferable, students are told, because the active form, 'The police have arrested a man,' contains a redundancy - the agent is already indicated by the action. There's no need to actually mention 'the police'. Likewise, the BBC takes for granted that the US is the world's policeman; no need to mention it by name. The action of bombing an impoverished Third World country already indicates the agent. This also helps explain why no mention was made of the illegality of this act of aggression. On the rare occasions when the media mention the conflict in Somalia at all, the focus tends to fall on US attempts to hunt down al Qaeda, or on the West's alleged humanitarian motives. Other priorities were indicated in 1992 when the US political weekly The Nation referred to Somalia as "one of the most strategically sensitive spots in the world today: astride the Horn of Africa, where oil, Islamic fundamentalism and Israeli, Iranian and Arab ambitions and arms are apt to crash and collide." (December 21, 1992) In December 2006, the US backed the invasion of Somalia by its close Ethiopian ally to overthrow the Islamist government, the Islamic Courts Union (ICU). Christian Ethiopia is a historic enemy of Somalia, which is made up entirely of Sunni Muslims. On December 4 of that year, General John Abizaid, the commander of US forces from the Middle East through Afghanistan, travelled to Addis Ababa to meet the Ethiopian prime minister, Meles Zenawi. Three weeks later, Ethiopian forces crossed into Somalia and Washington launched a series of supportive air strikes. The Guardian quoted a former intelligence officer familiar with the region:
Political analyst James Petras commented:
USA Today reported in January 2007 that the US had "quietly poured weapons and military advisers into Ethiopia," which had received nearly $20 million in US military aid since late 2002. The report added:
Petras noted that, having driven the last of the warlords from Mogadishu and most of the countryside, the ICU had established a government which was welcomed by the great majority of Somalis and covered over 90% of the population:
Martin Fletcher wrote in the Times of the ICU:
It was clear to many commentators that the Ethiopian invasion would prove disastrous. Three months later, the Daily Telegraph reported:
The Telegraph cited a British aid worker: "They are bombing anything that moves." Catherine Weibel, from the United Nations High Commission for Refugees was also quoted:
The War On Terror... And The Real Concern The preferred media framework for making sense of US actions closely parallels cold war mythology. We are to believe the US is passionately, even blindly, battling ideological enemies in an effort to protect itself and the West. Guardian columnist Jonathan Freedland could be relied upon to paint this picture of events:
If this sounds curiously simplistic, even childish, it is. In fact, the cold war, like the "war on terror", was far less ideological, far more prosaic, than journalists like Freedland claim. Historian Howard Zinn has, for example, commented on the Vietnam war, which the BBC would have us believe "was America's attempt to stop Communists from toppling one country after another in South East Asia" (LINK):
Ethiopia's invasion coincided with the Pentagon's goal of creating a new 'Africa Command' to deal with what the Christian Science Monitor described as: "Strife, oil, and Al Qaeda." Richard Whittle wrote:
As Andy Rowell and James Marriott have noted, the key fact is that "some 30 per cent of America's oil will come from Africa in the next ten years". (Rowell and Marriott, A Game as Old as Empire - The Secret World of Economic Hit Men and the Web of Global Corruption, edited by Steven Hiatt, Berrett-Koehler, 2007, p.118) The US has plans for nearly two-thirds of Somalia's oil fields to be allocated to the US oil companies Conoco, Amoco, Chevron and Phillips. The US hopes Somalia will line up as an ally alongside Ethiopia and Djibouti, where the US has a military base. This alliance would give America powerful leverage close to the major energy-producing regions. Chatham House, a British think tank of the independent Royal Institute of International Affairs, commented on US and Ethiopian intervention last year:
Catastrophic Crisis This 'hijacking' has had truly appalling consequences. More than one million people have been made internal refugees, and the UN food security unit warned last week that 3.5 million people, half of Somalia's population, are facing famine. Fighting has turned Mogadishu into a ghost town. About 700,000 people have fled - out of a population of up to 1.5 million. The International Committee of the Red Cross describes Somalia's crisis as "catastrophic." (LINK) Soaring food prices have driven thousands of protestors onto the streets of the capital, Mogadishu. On May 5, Professor Abdi Samatar, a professor of geography and global studies at the University of Minnesota, told the US website Democracy Now:
A kilo of rice, which previously sold at around seventy US cents, now costs as much as $2.50. The average day's income for anyone fortunate enough to have a job is less than a dollar a day. The gap between incomes and the cost of food primarily imported from overseas means that millions of people cannot afford to eat. Last week, Amnesty International reported that it had obtained scores of accounts of killings by Ethiopian troops that Somalis have described as "slaughtering [Somalis] like goats." In one case, "a young child's throat was slit by Ethiopian soldiers in front of the child's mother." (LINK) Amnesty reported that during sweeps through neighbourhoods, Ethiopian forces placed snipers on roofs, and civilians were unable to move about for fear of being shot:
The British government has consistently downplayed both the gravity of the crisis and the murderous behaviour of Ethiopian forces. In the Foreign Office's latest annual human rights assessment of Somalia there was no mention of Ethiopia, let alone the conduct of its troops. No surprise - Ethiopia is one of the largest recipients of UK aid in Africa and, as discussed, is an important regional ally. The Media Follow The Government Lead Predictably, the government's strategic silence is reflected in press reporting. In the last year, the words 'Somalia' and 'famine' have appeared in a grand total of seven British broadsheet newspaper articles discussing the topic. Of the few references to the latest US attack in the British press over the last week, only the Independent and the Sunday Times made briefs references to Somalia's humanitarian crisis. The Independent noted that life for Somalia's nine million residents has become "unbearable". The Guardian merely quoted Reuters:
The Amnesty report was mentioned in three broadsheet newspapers. Of these, the Guardian failed to mention the US role at all. Ian Black commented:
By contrast, a short Independent piece led with the US role:
Amnesty's Dave Copeman was cited:
This is the sole reference to Copeman's comments in the entire national UK press. Professor Samatar commented on the latest US attack:
The Truth Of 'Our Leaders' With our shared responsibility for the catastrophe in Somalia buried out of sight, the Telegraph reported this week:
The great lie is that we are represented by people like Gordon Brown, described as 'our leaders'. Because they represent us and we are not monsters, we are to believe that 'our leaders' are seeking to resolve problems afflicting humanity in general, while working more specifically to protect us from terrorism and other threats. In other words, we are to believe that 'our leaders', like us, are rational, compassionate and well-intentioned. The truth is very different. In fact we are free to chose from parties and leaders who all represent the same interests of concentrated state-corporate power - the tiny fraction of the population that owns much of the country and runs its business. Crucially, 'our leaders' front a political system that has an overwhelming advantage in high-tech military power. They are all too willing to use this power to convulse countries with bloodshed when doing so supports their lucrative version of economic 'order'. Iraq is the obvious example - Somalia is another. 'Our leaders' rule in the name of democracy, but they act in the interests of a narrow, extremely violent kleptocracy. |
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