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"Imperial Crusades: a Diary of Three Wars" by Cockburn and St. Clair

Today's Stories

June 16 / 17, 2007

Uri Avnery
The Gaza Cage

June 15, 2007

Alan Farago
View from the Construction Crane: Sex, Taxes and Real Estate Scams in Miami

Andy Worthington
The Ordeal of Ali al--Marri

Michael Simmons
Terrorizing Artists in the USA

Franklin Lamb
Blowback Across Lebanon: The Failed Sunni Army Solution

Gary Leupp
The Day After We Attack Iran

John Ross
Ballot Burning Time in Ol' Mexico

Website of the Day
The American Rationalist

 

June 14, 2007

Michael Donnelly
Charred SUVs and the End of Citizen Eco--Activism

Faisal Kutty
Scare Canada: The No--Fly List's False Sense of Security

Harry Browne
Ireland's Green Party Sells Out

Charles Jonkel
From the Arctic to Yellowstone: Bears in a World of Indifference

Steven Higgs
Murder in a Small Town: "Gay Panic" in Indiana?

Bruce Dixon
Black Power Through Low Power Radio

Bruce K. Gagnon
What Do We Do Now? A 10--Step Plan for Antiwar Activists

Website of the Day
Finkelgate

June 13, 2007

Glen Ford
Obama's Siren Song

Marjorie Cohn
Repression in Oaxaca

Bill Christison
A Grave Injustice at DePaul University

Silvia Cattori
"I Was Not Prepared for the Horrors I Saw": an Interview with Hedy Epstein

Richard Gott
Racism and TV in Venezuela

Firmin DeBrabander
How the Neocons Misread Machiavelli

William S. Lind
The Perfect (Sine) Wave: Bombing Railroad Stations in Iraq

Keith Rosenthal
Workers Score a Victory at Harvard

Website of the Day
GOP and Monty Python Explain: "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques"

June 12, 2007

Jeffrey St. Clair
How to Sell a War

Paul Craig Roberts
The Neocon Threat to American Freedom

P. Sainath
India's Plutocrats and the Press

Ralph Nader
The Biggest Scam in the World

Omar Waraich
A Black Day for Pakistan's Press

Dave Lindorff
Things Your Media Momma Didn't Tell You

Harvey Wasserman
Confessions of an Anti--Nuke Jerk

Malini Johar Schueller
It Takes a Bomb

Ramzy Baroud
War Foretold: Mark Twain and the Sins of Empire

Website of the Day
Palestinian Chronicle Needs Our Help!

 

June 11, 2007

Patrick Cockburn
The War on Journalists

Paul Craig Roberts
Losing the Economy to Mythology

Uri Avnery
40 Bad Years: the Rot of Occupation

Norman Solomon
The Silence of the Bombs

Eva Liddell
Paris Hilton Doesn't Do Dishes: How Barbie Stood Up to Allen Ginsberg

Rannie Amiri
Groundhog Day in Pakistan

Rachel Voss
Poetry and Politics in Nassau County

Christopher Brauchli
A Wild West Tale, Starring Rev. Dobson and Bill O'Reilly

D. K. Wilson
Untangling Michael Vick from the Dogs

Website of the Day
Paris, Mixed Up


June 9 / 10, 2007

Alexander Cockburn
Dissidents Against Dogma

George Ciccariello--Maher
Behind Venezuela's "Student Rebellion": Who's Pulling the Strings?

Saul Landau
An Interview with Ricardo Alarcon, Vice President of Cuba

Robert Fisk
Believe It or Not in the Middle East

Brian Cloughley
Troop Support: Deceptions and Insipid Sentiments

Ron Jacobs
Condoleezza Rice Names the System

Ward Boston
Searching for the Truth About the USS Liberty

Conn Hallinan
Dark Plots in Byzantine Beirut

Leonard Peltier
The Ongoing War on Native American Religious Practices

Lawrence Davidson
Israel's New Anti--Boycott Task Force

John Ross
Mass Nude--In Complicates Church--State Scuffling in Mexico

Kate Allan
Some People Think the Internet is a Bad Thing

Fred Gardner
Ignorance Marches On

Stephen Fleischman
Little Boy, Fat Man and Iran

Monica Benderman
Reading Tom Paine in a Time of Crisis

Geoff Bailey
A Real Oil Conspiracy: Gouged at the Pump

Missy Beattie
Faith and War

Patrick Dyer
A Democrat Revs Up Ohio's Death Machine

Tim Lengerich
Dispelling the Cowboy Myth: an Interview with George Wuerthner

James Irani
and David Rahni

Perspectives on the Arrests of Iran--Americans in Tehran

Gary Leupp
The Unfair Treatment of Paris Hilton

Michael Tillery
The Heart of a Sportswriter: an Interview with David Aldridge

Michael Simmons
Beating Off the Squares: the Hipness of Anton Rosenberg

Poets' Basement
Laymon, Davies and Ford

Website of the Weekend
This is Sea Shepherd!

 

June 8, 2007

Serge Halimi
What Sarkozy Learned About Politics from the US

Patrick Cockburn
The Turkish Incursion

Jeffrey St. Clair
Israel's Attack on the USS Liberty, Revisited

 

Paul Craig Roberts
The Secret War

William Blum
What If NBC Cheered on a Military Coup Against Bush?

Joshua Frank
Swing--State Strategy: Looking for a Spoiler

Lance Selfa
How the Six Day War Changed the Middle East

Dave Lindorff
A "Criminal Conspiracy" in the White House

Lawrence Ferlinghetti
The Summer of Love: Flashbacks of a Human Be--In

Website of the Day
Robert Pollin: "Making the Federal Minimum Wage a Living Wage"


June 7, 2007

Marjorie Cohn
The Prison is the War Crime

Soldz, Reisner and Olson:
A Q & A on Psychologists and Torture

Soldz, Reisner
and Olson, et al:
An Open Letter to Sharon Brehm, President of the American Psychological Association

Paul Craig Roberts
Losing Iraq, Nuking Iran

Bill Quigley
"How Long Must We Support a Mistake?"

Silvia Cattori
Sailing to Gaza

Carl G. Estabrook
What the June Bug Is: Politics in the Dismal Season

Ellen Taylor
Free the Tweakers!: The Good News About Meth

Corporate Crime Reporter
BAE Systems, Prince Bandar and the $2 Billion Account at the Riggs Bank

Brenda Norrell
Torture Training at Ft. Huachuca: Two Priests Face Prison for Exposing Torture in Arizona

D. K. Wilson
What Gary Sheffield Really Said

Kevin Zeese
Iraq Occupation Coming to a Head Over Oil

Website of the Day
How the Press Expired


June 6, 2007

Alain Gresh
Countdown to War on Iran

Gary Leupp
Poddy's Crazy Prayer: Bomb Iran, For Israel and America!

Steven Sherman
The Perils of Humanitarian Intervention

Bruce Dixon
Is Bill Gates Trying to Hijack Africa's Food Supply?

Corporate Crime Reporter
The Professor and the Nukes

Brian M. Downing
The Iraq War and Presidential Politics

Ron Jacobs
Luv n' Hate: a Different Take on the Summer of Love

George Bisharat
The Mirage of the Two State Solution

Nicole Colson
Over to You, Dante: Falwell's Ministry of Hate

Bruce K. Gagnon
From Italy to Guam: A Global Peace Movement is Taking Shape

Website of the Day
How the Democrats Should Treat Bush

 

June 5, 2007

Michael Neumann
Canada in Afghanistan

Jonathan Cook
The Shin Bet and the Persecution of Azmi Bishara

David Vest
The Democrats' War

Robert Fantina
America's Cuba Policy

Hoffman, Parsneau and Chowdhury
CounterTerrorism as International Healthcare

John V. Walsh
Shaming the Official Antiwar Movement

Richard Cretan
Yellow Dog: The Strange Love of Martin Amis and Tony Blair

Adam Engel
Days of Dread: an American Tale

William S. Lind
The News from Anbar: Has Al Qaeda Over--Reached?

Myles Hoenig
Free the Oaks! Cut Down Those Yellow Ribbons!

Jim Minick
Lead--Foot Nation

Website of the Day
Punk Rock Soap Opera


June 4, 2007

Nizar Latif
An Interview with Moqtada al--Sadr

Diana Johnstone
Sarko and the Ghosts of May, 1968

Gregory Wilpert
RCTV and Freedom of Speech in Venezuela

Paul Watson
The Anchorage Whale Killing Bureaucrats Summit

Susan Rosenthal, MD
How Cindy Sheehan Unmasked the Democrats

Richard Ward
The Right of Return to New Orleans

Eva Liddell
Don't Support the Troops

Zahi Khouri
Four Decades of Occupation

Evelyn Pringle
The FDA, GlaxoSmithKline and the Avandia Disaster

China Hand
About Those North Korean Benjamin Franklins ...

Karyn Strickler
George W. Bush: a "Ficeist" Leader

Website of the Day
The Guantanamo Files

 

June 2 / 3, 2007

Alexander Cockburn
The Last of the Texas Outsiders

Marc Levy
Iraq Dead Ahead: a Brief Military History and Civilian Guide to Arlington National Cemetery

Martin Smith
Camilo Mejía's War: From Foot Soldier for Empire to Rebel for Peace

Diana Johnstone
Great Power Meddling in Kosovo

John Ross
The Oaxaca Volcano Stews

Uri Avnery
On Generals and Admirals

Sunsara Taylor
This is Not a Story About Cindy Sheehan

Richard Neville
Were the Hippies Right?

P. Sainath
The Farm Crisis and 100,000 Indian Widows

Missy Comley Beattie
Let's Roar

Nisrine Abiad
and Victor Kattan
The Hariri Tribunal: a Fait Accompli?

Rannie Amiri
Lebanon, Bush and the Three Stooges

Margot Pepper
Deconstructing "Return to Sender"

Eric Stewart
Censorship and Cop Brutality in the New Bison Wars

Ralph Nader
The Halberstam Camp

Dan Bacher
A Victory for the Fish

Shaun Harkin
and Sandy Boyer
Irish War Protesters on Trial

Richard Rhames
Selling Five Acres in Crawford

Frederick Hudson
The Rediscovery of Ella Fitzgerald

Poets' Basement
Lindorff, Landau and Buknatski

Website of the Weekend
Gimme Shelter


June 1, 2007

Dave Marsh
The FBI and the Godfather (of Soul): James Brown's FBI Files

Saul Landau
Return to Cuba: 47 Years Later in Havana

David Phinney
How the Baghdad Embassy Was Built: Forced Labor and Worker Abuse

Robert Jensen
The Bigot and the Boycott

Stanley Heller
Arrest Robert McNamara

Yifat Susskind
Indigenous Women Fight Back

Robert Weissman
Corporate Power Since 1980

Paul Buchheit
Africa and Its Discontents

William S. Lind
The Folly of Maximalist Objectives

Sherwood Ross
78,000 Iraqis Have Been Killed by Coalition Airstrikes

Stephen Lendman
Terrorism Defined

Website of the Day
Desert Autonomous Zone

 

 

Weekend Edition
June 16 / 17, 2007

Our Gang of Thugs

The 1970s as a Context for Terrorist Violence

By SAUL LANDAU

EvAlthough Bush never would say so, the mid1970s serve as background for today’s “war on terrorism.” That’s the time his dad led the CIA and anti-Castro Cubans bombed and shot their way through the hemisphere. The leading star of the 1970s terrorist show, and still performing, was Luis Posada Carriles.

Posada, currently leader of the fabled GAS (Geezers Assassination Society), enjoys his newly achieved freedom living in the Miami area. A federal judge dismissed charges against him by rightfully concluding that the U.S. government had played games with his case by charging him with minor immigration offenses and then purposely prolonging the legal processes so as to avoid confronting the nature of Posada’s crimes: blowing up a Cuban passenger plan in 1976, planning numerous assassination attempts over three decades and bombing Cuban tourist sites, which resulted in the death of an Italian tourist.

Good reasons abound for Justice Department officials to feel reluctant to charge Posada with terrorism. As soon as they open the files, they discover the U.S. government had trained and encouraged him to practice terrorism as a vocation, had sworn repeatedly to use violence to overthrow the Castro government and was deeply involved in many of his and his close associates’ plots.

The problem originated in early 1960, when President Eisenhower first formally agreed to initiate a covert operation to train and finance Cuban exiles to invade the island and overthrow the revolutionary government. When the invasion failed a year plus later, what should the new President do with these thousands of people?

President Kennedy followed Eisenhower and kept some of the CIA Cubans busy with terrorist activities in the post Bay of Pigs era, a policy that inadvertently led to the Missile Crisis. Indeed, the intensity of attacks on Cuban personnel and property led Castro to offer concessions. In August 1961, he dispatched Che Guevara to Uruguay to hold a secret talk with Kennedy Latin America adviser Richard Goodwin. If Washington would call off the terrorist attacks and relax the embargo, Cuba would not push "any political alliance with the East." Che also implied that Cuba might “discuss the activities of the Cuban Revolution in other countriesâ€_ (exporting revolution). Che went further, indicating that Cuba would be willing to compensate expropriated U.S. companies. Che also emphasized that "we do not have, nor intend to have, any political or military alliance with anyone unless we are pressed toward it."

The Cuban revolution is "irreversible," Goodwin understood from Che. By maintaining an outward veneer of defiance, Che clearly communicated that he was negotiating, not surrendering. Goodwin, and more importantly his boss, JFK, saw the concessions offer as signs of weakness.

Kennedy turned up the heat, the terrorist attacks escalated. Castro gave the Soviets the green light to place intermediate range nuclear missiles on the island and by October 1962 the world trembled under the impending mushroom cloud.

After Kennedy and Soviet Premier Khrushchev resolved peacefully the Missile Crisis, the issue of “what to do with all the rabid Cubans?â€_ became troublesome for successive U.S. presidents. The CIA reduced drastically the number of Cubans on its payroll and began to try to retract. Some Cubans took such policies as treason.

In 1967, Orlando Bosch, who teamed up with Posada on the Cuban airliner job, showed his rebelliousness at U.S. government restrictions by firing a bazooka at a Polish freighter anchored in the Miami harbor. Paroled after serving a few years, Bosch tried to find other sponsors for violence against Cuba. He found the most compatible spot in Venezuela where his friend Orlando Garcia ran intelligence, DISIP, along with his number two Rafael Rivas Vazques. But even with openly violence-loving and Castro-hating allies in such positions, Bosch pushed the terrorist envelope over the edge. In 1973, he plotted to assassinate Henry Kissinger for signing an anti-hijacking treaty with Cuba and staged two bombings, while offering $3 million to the person who would assassinate Castro. He had not only violated the terms of his parole, he had made the U.S. government very uncomfortable. This translated into his old confreres having to arrest him, albeit apologetically. Venezuela asked the United States to allow him back. Washington said no and Bosch went to Chile, where he expected General Pinochet to throw down a red carpet for him.

In March 1976, Bosch tried and botched a contract for Pinochet: to assassinate exiled Chilean left leader Andres Pascal Allende, the nephew of Salvador and his companion Mary Anne Beausire.

Bosch then initiated an umbrella organization of terrorists who gathered in June 1976 in Bonao, the Dominican Republic, assembling murderers of different types, all of whom pledged to assassinate Castro. He called the new group the Commando of United Revolutionary Organizations (CORU).

Apparently, the gang of hoodlums all agreed that murderous action would bring down Castro -- although the absence of an articulate theoretician was painfully obvious. “Those guys were thugs,” a former FBI Special Agent told me. “I knew them all, interrogated them. They were criminals hiding behind some flimsy ideological screen. Bosch was a mad man. The others weren’t much saner.”

A former Miami police officer said years ago that the “The Cubans held the CORU meeting at the request of the CIA.” They were “running amok in the mid-1970s, and the United States had lost control of them. So the United States backed the meeting to get them all going in the same direction again, under United States control. The basic signal was “Go ahead and do what you want, outside the United States’.” (Assassination on Embassy Row, p. 251)

After the Bonao meeting concluded in mid June, a series of violent anti-Cuban acts occurred, for which CORU members claimed credit. On July 9, a bomb exploded in the baggage cart that was in the process of loading onto a Cubana airliner. Had the plane left on time, the luggage would have exploded in mid air.

On July 14, the British West Indian Airlines office in Barbados got bombed (they had started flights to Cuba) as did a car owned by a Cuban official in Barbados. Three days later, machine gunners opened fire at the Cuban Embassy in Bogota. Air Panama offices got hit in that city as well, presumably because they handled Cubana Airlines business in Colombia.

On July 22, kidnappers in Merida, Mexico, tried unsuccessfully to grab the Cuban consul. They did, however, kill a Cuban fisherman in the attempt.

On July 24, three anti-Castro Cubans got busted trying to place a bomb at the New York City Academy of Music, where an event celebrating Cuba was taking place.

On August 9, CORU claimed credit for kidnapping and murdering two Cuban diplomats with Argentine secret police help. In August and September, CORU members bombed Cuban targets twice in Panama. In Trinidad-Tobago, bombers hit the Guyanese Embassy, presumably for Guyana allowing Cuban aircraft to refuel on route to Angola.

The violence escalated when Omega 7 (a name used by the ultra right Cuban Nationalist Movement) bombed a Soviet ship anchored in New Jersey and five days later assassinated Orlando Letelier in a car bombing in Washington, D.C., killing his IPS colleague Ronni Karpen Moffitt as well. The orders to kill Letelier came from the Chilean government, but the assassins hired by Chile’s secret police sprang from the same pool of crows that had met in Bonao. These crows -- Bosch and Posada -- then hit the Cuban commercial airliner over Barbados on October 6, killing 73 passengers and crew members.

For those spooks that still retained memory, the old Spanish refrain should have echoed loudly. “Train crows and they return to peck your eyes out.” Posada has joined his old comrade in bombs Orlando Bosch, who apparently enjoys his dotage in Miami where he still boasts to reporters that he ships explosives to Cuba. These violent exiles used their intolerance for U.S."policy changes" toward Cuba to become literally loose cannons.

An investigator would find the bloody trail of these men and their acts traced back to a decision made in the Oval Office. Eisenhower condoned violence. Kennedy escalated. President Lyndon B. Johnson placed a tempering hand. But Richard Nixon and his National Security Adviser Henry Kissinger re-opened Pandora’s Box of terrorists. This ugly container of death merchants emerged from the initial illegal policy designed to destroy the Cuban revolutionary government through violence and economic strangulation. Once created and trained, the crows returned -- and continue to do so -- to peck out the eyes of those who cultivated them.

President Bush now has his “Posada problem.” He said after the 9/11 attacks: “He who harbors a terrorist is as guilty as the terrorist.” It’s lucky we have a president for whom words are meaningless!

Maybe some aspiring candidates for the presidency will reflect on recent “ terrorist history” and reject “covert” means to achieve policy ends. The world already has more than enough crows.

Saul Landau’s new Counterpunch Press book is A BUSH AND BOTOX WORLD. His new film WE DON’T PLAY GOLF HERE is available on DVD: roundworldproductions@gmail.com


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