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Read Cockburn and St. Clair's Whiteout: the CIA, Drugs and the Press and discover how the CIA gave a helping hand to the opium lords who took over Afghanistan, thus ushering the Taliban into power.


CounterPunch: Complete Coverage of 9/11 and the War on Afghanistan

New Print Edition of CounterPunch Available Exclusively to Subscribers: Under the White Robe: Bush's Judges; Trent Lott and the Segregationists Frat Boys; From Bluster to Bombs: Will Bush Whack Iraq?; The Lord's Avenger: When Billy Graham Wanted to Kill One Million People; A Holiday in Aruba? Best Go Elsewhere; Air Force Censors Heavy Metal Grunts. Subscribe Now!

March 21, 2002

David Vest
Hail to the Chaff

March 20, 2002

Kay Lee
Censorship at Angelfire

Robert Jensen
The Politics of Pain
and Pleasure

Sheperd Bliss
Notes from Hawai'i:
Trouble in Paradise

Rick Giambetti
Prozac and Suicide:
an Interview with
Dr. David Healy

Philip Farruggio
Bullies

Lori Allen
Live from Ramallah:
The Madness of Occupation

March 19, 2002

Tariq Ali
Nuke Iraq?

Phyllis Pollack
Roger Daltrey's LA Surprise

Amir Ahmadi
War-Mongering Academics:
The New Tartuffe

Ben White
Bomber Blair

Fran Shor
Child-Murderers and Madmen

March 18, 2002

Tom Turnipseed
Crazy is Cool

Dave Marsh
DeskScan:
What's Playing At My House

Armen Khanbabyan
The Pentagon in the Caucasus:
Georgia Is Only the Beginning

Gabriel Ash
Abdullah v. Osama

Bernard Weiner
Middle East for Dummies

Alexander Cockburn
Tipping in America

March 17, 2002

David Vest
The Politics of Packaging

Tariq Ali
The Left's New Empire Loyalists

March 16, 2002

Chris Floyd
Ashcroft's Secret Snatches

March 15, 2002

Doron Rosenblum
Israel's Settler Warlords

Alex Lynch
Rhetorical Attacks On Iraq

Norman Madarasz
Neo-Con Propaganda
and the National Review

Paul-Marie de La Gorce
Making Enemies

March 14, 2002

Dr. Susan Block
RIP Danny Pearl

Francis Boyle
Bush Nuke Plan Violates International Law, Again

Wayne Saunders
Memo to Paul McCartney:
There Are Two Kinds
of Freedom, Sir

H.P. Albarelli
Anthrax Cover-up?

March 13, 2002

Amira Hass
Are the Occupied Protecting the Occupier?

CounterPunch Wire
National Review Editors Suggest Nuking Mecca

Mokhiber / Weissman
Personal Responsibility
for Corporate Elites?

Robert Fisk
Arabs Don't Want US
to Strike Iraq

Alexander Cockburn
When Billy Graham Wanted
to Kill One Million People

March 12, 2002

Kay Lee
Dangerous Changes in
California's Prisons

John Patrick Leary
The Return of Otto Reich

Wole Akande
US is Being Discredited
in the Eyes of Africa

March 11, 2002

Hani Shukrallah
This is the Way the World Ends

Tommy Ates
Bush's New Nuke Policy:
Target Allies and Enemies

Lidia Andrusenko
The Great Chicken War:
Bush v. Putin

Dave Marsh
10 CDs Playing On My Desk

John Chuckman
Footprints in the Dust

Norman Madarasz
Max Steel in a Time of Chaos

Resources:
100s of Links About 9/11


CounterPunch:
Complete Coverage of 9/11 and Its Aftermath


Five Days That
Shook The World:
Seattle and Beyond

By Alexander Cockburn
and Jeffrey St. Clair
Photos by Allan Sekula

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Published Oct. 15, 2001

8-Page Special Issue

War Diary

CIA's Assassination Plan a History of Torture in US Prisons

bin Laden and Bush Business Connections

Aisha Ikramuddin on the Hidden Hype of US Food Bombs

Peter Linebaugh on Pakistan

Christopher Hitchens' Love for Mrs. Thatcher

Jiang Zemin Tells Bush:
Nuke 'Em


Search CounterPunch

Read Whiteout and Find Out How the CIA's Backing of the Mujahideen Created the World's Most Robust Heroin Market and Helped to Finance the Rise of the Taliban and Osama bin Laden

Whiteout:
CIA, Drugs & the Press

by Alexander Cockburn
and Jeffrey St. Clair

The New Crusade:
America's War on Terrorism

By Rahul Mahajan

The Memphis Blues Again:
Six Decades of Memphis Music Photographs
Photos by Ernest Withers
Text by Daniel Wolff

The New Intifada:
Resisting Israel's Apartheid

Edited by Roane Carey

 

A Pocket Guide to
Environmental Bad Guys
by James Ridgeway
and Jeffrey St. Clair

The Phoenix Program
by Douglas Valentine

Al Gore:
A User's Manual
by Cockburn
and St. Clair

Buy This Explosive
New Book at an
Amazing Discount!
 

Reviews of Gore:
a User's Manual


Private Warriors
by Ken Silverstein

CounterPunch's Booktalk

March 21, 2002

The Stars & Stripes:
Killing for the Flag

By Jason McQuinn, Chuck Munson
and Tom Wheeler

The U.S. is the only nation-state to have been condemned by the World Court for international terrorism. The U.S. vetoed a UN Security Council resolution calling on governments to observe international law. After deliberately targeting the civilian public health infrastructure, the U.S. military imposes a continuing economic blockade on Iraq which has directly resulted in the deaths of hundreds upon hundreds of thousands of children. The U.S. government is the primary financier and arms supplier for the decades-long Israeli war against the entire Palestinian people. The U.S. armed forces and U.S. organized and/or financed ally or proxy forces have killed millions upon millions of civilians since the end of World War II. This is the not-so-hidden meaning of the Stars and Stripes as the vast majority of people around the world understand it.

Now the U.S. government has begun what it bills as an open-ended "War on Terrorism," which conveniently ignores the fact that in the late Twentieth Century and the beginning of the Twenty-first Century it is the United States of America that, by its own definition, is the most prolific terrorist force in the world. While at the same time U.S. leaders are choosing to target whichever individuals, organizations, regimes and/or nation-states--among the wide array of opponents of U.S. policies--are deemed most convenient this week, leaving the rest for next week, next year or the next decade. This is, of course, a recipe for perpetual war, which is as well understood by President Bush and the other architects of the "New World Order," as it was by the architects of a similar project of world empire that was proudly proclaimed the Third Reich, under a flag with a similarly not-so-hidden meaning.

Perpetual war serves a number of purposes for the present administration. It is under wartime conditions that the U.S. state will, at least initially, face the least resistance as it finishes the now over two century-long process of gutting the Bill of Rights and voiding the inconvenient parts of the U.S. Constitution. It is under conditions of war that the campaign to defeat the anti-globalization movement can be fought with increasingly militant and dirty tactics. It is under wartime conditions that all opponents of U.S. policies anywhere in the world, including within the U.S. itself, can be most easily labeled "terrorist," at the same time that the mass media can be most easily mobilized as a total propaganda machine. And it is under conditions of war that the arms production, oil production and military technology corporations that funded President Bush's election by the Supreme Court will be most handsomely rewarded without too many questions ever being asked. And best of all, wartime conditions lend themselves to the easy mobilization of xenophobic, politically reactionary, flag-waving patriotism. The kind where a complete and utter absence of popular intelligence is made up for by the cathartic release of long pent-up anger at being forced to live under frustrating conditions in an alienating world with no real hope for any beneficial social change in sight.

However, while conditions of perpetual war may be fortuitous for the fortunes of the current regime and its backers right now, there is little reason to believe that the game won't end a lot earlier than they think. In fact, there are already clouds on the horizon that will only grow more threatening: the unhappy reactions of regimes the world over that are disquieted by an American rogue state increasingly out of control, the pleas of would-be allies that will continue to be destabilized by their bullying, rapacious "friend," the glaring failure to derail the anti-globalization movement around the world (with only a partial exception within the U.S. itself, where it has been slowed more effectively), the meltdown of the Argentinean economy under the conditions imposed by the IMF (with the threat of others always looming), the failure of the current Israeli strategy of an accelerating campaign of war crimes, and the growing wave of international opinion condemning the American project of empire-which the massive, ongoing covert and overt propaganda war has so-far failed to dent. Waving a hundred million flags all around the country won't make these problems for empire go away.

And even within the U.S., it's only a matter of time before the population tires of a war without any foreseeable resolution against enemies that must be continually manufactured. The longer the war on terrorism continues, the less enthusiastic will be the flag-waving and cheering for more bombing campaigns, the mass starvation now in full-swing in Afghanistan, and the continuing delays and frustrations demanded for internal security. Even with the full complicity of the mainstream U.S. media in its efforts to promote perpetual war, dissatisfaction and dissension will once again arise, until even the biggest, most impressive American flags fail to cover up all the crimes against innocent men, women and children throughout the world required to keep the empire of American capitalism growing.

Jason McQuinn, Chuck Munson and Tom Wheeler serve as the editorial collective at the Alternative Press Review.