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Today's
Stories
February 12, 2009
P. Sainath
Neo-Liberal Terrorism in India: The Largest Wave of Suicides in History
Jean Bricmont
French Echoes of the Israeli-Palestine Conflict
Michael Hudson
Trying to Revive the Bubble Economy: Obama's Awful Financial Recovery Plan
Peter Lee
Pakistan, Not Afghanistan, Is the Main Event
Dave Lindorff
Judges Nabbed, Jailing Kids for Kickbacks
February 11, 2009
Neve Gordon
Few Peacemakers in the New Israeli Knesset
Peter Morici
Anatomy of a Hemorrhage
Andy Worthington
Who's Running Guantánamo?
Marjorie Cohn
A Call to End All Renditions
Fred Gardner
Change We Can Smoke?
Niranjan Ramakrishnan
The G & O (Geithner and Obama) Bank
Zoe Blunt
Vancouver Island Hippies: Top Security Threat for 2010?
Belén Fernández
Politics on the Panamericana
Martha Rosenberg
Don't Breathe the Meat
Website of the Day
George Dyson on Project Orion
Blues of the Day
David Vest on the CBC
February 10, 2009
Kathy Kelly
How Do People Keep Going?
Nikolas Kozloff
The Stimulus Imbroglio
Uri Avnery
Dirty Socks
Michael J. Berg
Will South Carolina be the Center of the Nuclear Revival?
Russell Mokhiber
Et Tu, Atul?
Joe Bageant
A Commodity Called Misery
Gareth Porter
Petraeus' Subterfuge
Dave Lindorff
Seek Truth, But Prosecute Liars
Rannie Amiri
The Implications of Recognizing Israel's "Right to Exist"
Harvey Wasserman
Nukes and the Stimulus
Niranjan Ramakrishnan
What We Didn't Learn at Obama's Press Conference
Website of the Day
RIAA Takes Over DoJ Under Obama
February 9, 2009
Vicente Navarro
Why Sanjay Gupta is the Wrong Man for Top US Health Job
Paul Craig Roberts
Driving Over the Cliff
Julio Sanchez /
Feliz de Bedout
The Threat of Peace in Colombia: an Interview with Hollman Morris
National Lawyers Guild
Strong Indications of Israeli War Crimes
Jonathan Cook
Israeli University Welcomes "War Crimes" Colonel
Alana Smith
The Nightmarish Case of Fahad Hashmi
Binoy Kampmark
Taking the Bong
Sam Bahour
End the Occupation First
Nicole Colson
Can You Afford College?
Ron Jacobs
Remembering the Second Intifada
Website of the Day
The Legacy of Ed Grothus and the Black Hole
February 6-8, 2009
Alexander Cockburn
Obama's First Bad Week
Ishmael Reed
Saint Thelma's Book
James Abourezk
Obama, Mitchell and the Palestinians
William Blum
Obama and the Empire
Patrick Cockburn
Maliki's Triumph
Henry A. Giroux
Educating Obama
Manuel Garcia, Jr.
Darwin's Living Legacy
Mouin Rabbani
A New Low on Gaza?
David Yearsley
Ein Volk, Ein Reich, Ein Springsteen!
Saul Landau
The Wrestler: an American Tragedy
Jules Rabin
Israel's Disproportionate Responses
Raymond J. Lawrence
A Country Awash in Money But Going Broke
Janette Habel
Castro's Socialism in Crisis
Dave Lindorff
Economy on a Thread
Missy Beattie
Blackout at the Gaza Zoo Massacre
Dale Gieringer
The Opium Exclusion Act of 1909: Marking 100 Years of Failed Drug Prohibition
John Ross
Davos vs. Belem; Swine vs. Pearls
Richard Rhames
Jobs is a Four Letter Word
Bob Wing
Obama, Race and the Future of U.S. Politics
Robert Bryce
Corn Dog Update: Another Study Exposes Bio-Fuel Scam
David Macaray
AFL-CIO and Change to Win in "Re-Wed" Talks
James L. Secor
Inaugural Questions Nobody Asks: Notes from Kuala Lumpur
Jason Flom /
Anthony Papa
The Scourging of Michael Phelps
Norm Kent
Ten Reasons to Get High About Pot in 2009
Kim Nicolini
When Utopia Crumbles: Why Revolutionary Road was Shut Out of the Oscars
Lorenzo Wolff
Ridiculous Flow:
How Cee Lo Green Sells Soul
Poets' Basement
Emily Dickinson (with Commentary by Daniel Wolff)
Website of the Weekend
S.J. Gould: Darwin's Untimely Burial
February 5, 2009
Michael Mandel
Self-Defense Against Peace
Saul Landau /
Philip Brenner
Killing the Monroe Doctrine
Ralph Nader
Tax the Speculators!
Robert Bryce
The Unraveling of the Ethanol Scam
Russell Mokhiber
Occupied Territory
Sameh Habeeb /
Janet Zimmerman
Innocents Lost
Dave Lindorff
Small Change
Carmelo Ruiz-Marrero
Beyond Green Capitalism
George Ochenski
A Blow to Big Coal in Montana
Website of the Day
Putting CEO Pay in Context
February 4, 2009
Arno J. Mayer
On Corruption
Paul Craig Roberts
The War on Terror is a Hoax
Patrick Cockburn
The Iraqi Elections
Jonathan Cook
An IDF Jihad?
Fred Gardner
Obama's Mixed Messages on Marijuana
Stan Cox
Slumwrecking Millionaires:
India's Fragile New Temples
Margaret Kimberley
The Deepening Economic Crisis
Lawrence Velvel
Agony & Desperation:
Madoff's Victims
Dave Lindorff
A Generals' Revolt?
Doug Giebel
A Helping of Bitter Beltway Baloney
Serge Quadruppani
Student Protests Sweep Italy
Website of the Day
The San Francisco 8
February 3, 2009
David Price
Counterinsurgency & Anthropology: Roberto Gonzalez on Human Terrain Systems
Bill Moyers
Obama's Wars: an Interview with Pierre Sprey and Marilyn Young
Kirkpatrick Sale
Obama's Lincoln Thing
Conn Hallinan
When Mind Wounds Don't Count
Peter Morici
The Slippery Slope of Stimulus
George Ciccariello-Maher
From Oakland to Santa Rita: "Fired Up, Can't Take It No More"
Muhammad Idrees Ahmad
The BBC's Nadir
Allan Nairn
What Does It Take to Get a Meal Here, an Earthquake?
Norman Solomon
Why are We Still at War?
David Macaray
The Late, Great UAW
Website of the Day
The Bloody Cove
February 2, 2009
Uri Avnery
Under the Black Flag: Israeli War Crimes
Ralph Nader
What to Do About Wall Street
Gareth Porter
Generals Move to Obstruct Obama's Iraq Withdrawal Orders
Paul Craig Roberts
The Death of American Leadership
Harvey Wasserman
The Nuclear Industry's Latest Money Grab
Rannie Amiri
Gaza and the Crimes of Mubarak
Cal Winslow
Stern's Gang Seizes UHW Union Hall
Steve Early
Checking Out of Stern's Hotel California
Alan Farago
Superbowl as Panopticon
Diane Farsetta
Banning Domestic Propaganda
January 30 / February 1, 2009
Alexander Cockburn
Obama and the Oddsmakers
Michael Hudson
Obama's New Bank Giveaway
Ismael Hossein-Zadeh
"Too Big to Fail:"
a Bailout Hoax
Dave Lindorff
The Ugly Truth: the American Economy is Not Coming Back
Saul Landau
Freedom Fighters, Terrorists or Schlemiels?
Andy Worthington
Blame the Chef: How Cooking for the Taliban Can Get You Life in Gitmo
Subcomandante Marcos
Gaza Will Survive
Robert Jensen
Future Farming: an Interview with Wes Jackson
Ron Jacobs
Return of the Democrats
Gareth Porter
Is Gates Undermining Another Opening to Iran?
Allan Nairn
Hope for the Dump Cities?
Laura Carlsen
NAFTA's Dangerous Security Agenda
Rev. William E. Alberts
The Feelings of a Stranger
Christopher Brauchli
From Gitmo to Supermax?
Jules Rabin
Israel and the Bomb
Col. Dan Smith
Thoughts From an Inauguration Refugee
Missy Beattie
The US Garden of Evil
Tom Barry
Obama's Immigration Challenge
J. Michael Cole
The Downfall of an Academic
Manuel Garcia, Jr.
Burning the First Amendment
Dan Bacher
How Dam Removal Can Save the Klamath River
David Rosen
Last Gasp of the Culture Wars?
Don Monkerud
Religion in the American Bedroom
Binoy Kampmark
Updike: Apostle of the Middlebrows
Lorenzo Wolff
Playing Down a Bad Reputation: the Lovin' Spooful's Near Perfect Record
David Yearsley
When Orfeo and Euridice Lived Happily Ever After in Upstate New York
Poets' Basement
Valentine and Rihn
January 29, 2009
Peter Linebaugh
Tom Paine's Birthday
Paul Craig Roberts
Is It Time to Bail Out of America?
Riz Khan
The Future of Gaza:
an Interview with Jimmy Carter
M. Reza Pirbhai
Pakistan: a New Cambodia?
Wajahat Ali
Obama's Al-Arabiya Interview
Gregory Vickrey
What About the Environment?
Cap and Trade and Selling Out
Dina Jadallah-Taschler
Whither the Two State Solution?
Alison Weir
Killing Palestinians Doesn't Count: Fact-Checking Ceasefire Breaches
Alan Farago
Economy Without Escape Routes
Walter Brasch
Taxing a House of Cards
Website of the Day
Madoff Inc.
January 28, 2009
Norman Finkelstein
Behind the Bloodbath in Gaza
Noam Chomsky
Obama's Emerging Policies on Israel, Iraq and the Economic Crisis
Patrick Cockburn
Is Mitchell's Mission Already Doomed?
Rob Larson
The Clinton Foundation Donors
George Wuerthner
Who Will Speak for the Forests?
Allan Nairn
South-East Asian Groups Threaten Retaliation Over Gaza Invasion
M. Junaid
Levesque-Alam
A Muslim's Memo to Obama
Stefan Simanowitz
The Silent Trade
Charles R. Larson
The Autumn of the Patriot
Website of the Day
Veggie Love: PETA's Banned Superbowl Ad
January 27, 2009
Winslow T. Wheeler
Save the Economy by Cutting the Defense Budget
Yigal Bronner /
Neve Gordon
Fueling the Cycle of Hate
Joshua Frank
Obama's Neocon: the Curious Case of Richard Holbrooke
Jordan Flaherty
Torture at a Louisiana Prison
Ralph Nader
Access to Economic Justice
Rev. José M. Tirado
How Iceland Fell: a Hundred Days of (Muted) Rage
Benjamin Dangl
Bolivia Looking Forward
Russell Mokhiber
What If Israel Were in Your Neighborhood?
Martha Rosenberg
Who Says Technology Transfer Doesn't Pay?
C. G. Estabrook
The Inaugural Address: the Digested Read
Website of the Day
Who Profits From the Occupation?
January 26, 2009
Paul Craig Roberts
Speaking the Truth is a Career-Ending Event
Deepak Tripathi
The BBC's Day of Shame
Vijay Prashad
The India Lobby:
Drunk with the Sight of Power
Peter Lee
Geithner's Pop Gun Volley at China
Allan Nairn
The Torture Ban That Doesn't Ban Torture
Uri Avnery
On the Wrong Side of History
John Sayen
The Next Shoe to Drop
Dave Lindorff
Afghanistan is No Threat to America
Lawrence R. Velvel
Investing with Madoff
David Macaray
Obama vs. Labor
Roger Burbach
Winds of Change in Cuba
Norman Solomon
The Ghost of LBJ
Website of the Day
Landscapes of Occupation
January 23 / 25, 2009
Alexander Cockburn
The Ghosts at Obama's Side
P. Sainath
The Freefalling Economy
Patrick Cockburn
In Israel, Detachment From Reality is the Norm
Saul Landau
Reasons for War?
Sasan Fayazmanesh
Our Current Economic Crisis: the Monks' Cure
Alan Farago
The Problem with the Stimulus
Christopher Brauchli
When Due Diligence is a One-Way Street
Andy Worthington
Return to Law?
Ron Jacobs
Obama's Pentagon:
Bowing to the Masters of War?
Lawrence Velvel
Investing with Madoff: My Experience (Part Four)
Henry A. Giroux
The Audacity of Educated Hope
David Yearsley
The Music That Wasn't There: Chamber Music for Obama's Masses
Raymond F. Gustavson
Here We Go Again:
General Shinseki and Veterans
Dave Lindorff
The Way Forward
Roberto Rodriguez
Fighting for Migrant Justice in the Desert
Dina Jadallah-Taschler
The Struggle of an Un-People
Fidel Castro
Meeting Cristina
J. Michael Cole
Can Obama's Shift on Terror Succeed?
Bob Fitrakis /
Harvey Wasserman
It's Time to Free Leonard Peltier
Ramzy Baroud
Breaking Gaza's Will
Mohammad Ali Shabani
The Aftermath of the War on Gaza
Richard Rhames
Panning for Pyrite on a Cold Day at the Mall
Stephen Martin
Voices in the Mirror
Lorenzo Wolff
Jurassic Radio
Kim Nicolini
Katrina's Endless Loop
Poets' Basement
Fleming, Henson, First, Jaramillo and Glendinning
Website of the Weekend
Cartoon Love
January 22, 2009
Paul Craig Roberts
Another Real Estate Crisis is About to Hit
Kathy Kelly
Worse Than an Earthquake
Allan Nairn
US Intel Nominee Lied About Church Murders
Lawrence Velvel
Investing with Madoff: My Experience (Part Three)
Andy Worthington
Halting the Gitmo Trials
Peter Morici
How to Fix the Banks
Joseph G. Davis
The First MBA Presidency and the Business Academy: a Damage Assessment
Adriana Kojeve
The Democrats on Israel: a Brief Oral History
Benjamin Dangl
Bolivia Poised for Historic Vote
Website of the Day
Support the Gaza Community Mental Health Program
January 21, 2009
Gabriel Kolko
Understanding Gaza
Harry Browne
Obama's Work Ethic
Michael Colby
Ready. Aim. Organize.
Lawrence R. Velvel
Investing with Madoff: My Experience
Audrey Stewart
Starting Over in Gaza
Wajahat Ali
Obama and the Muslims
Binoy Kampmark
The Marketing of Hope
David Kεr Thomson
Abolition
John Ross
In My Own Bones
Allan Nairn
Killer in Chief: Will This President Murder Civilians?
Sheldon Richman
The Peaceful Transfer of Violent Power
Website of the Day
Globistan
January 20, 2009
Chuck Spinney
Hosing Obama Israeli Style
Kathy Kelly
The Strongest Weapon of All
Raymond Deane
The EU, Gaza and the Lisbon Treaty
Ralph Nader
State Terrorism Against Gaza
Audrey Stewart
Why I am in Gaza
Jonathan Cook
Israel's Doctrine of Destruction
Harvey Wasserman
A Ten-Point Solar Agenda for Obama
Christopher Ketcham
Inauguration Ad Nauseam
Robert Jensen
A Citizen's Oath of Office
Dave Lindorff
Commie Chorus on the Mall: This Land Really is Made for You and Me
David Macaray
SAG Watches It All Slip Away |
February 12, 2009
Pakistan, Not Afghanistan, Is the Main Event
By PETER LEE
A Polish engineer is beheaded in Pakistan. The Pakistani Taliban threaten attacks on Islamabad. In a desperate effort to turn around the struggle against Islamicist extremists, the Pakistani government considers permitting the imposition of sharia law in a key battleground.
Maybe it’s time to admit we don’t have an Afghanistan problem. We have a Pakistan problem, and Afghanistan is simply aggravating it.
Hamid Mir writes in Pakistan’s The News that the Taliban is threatening a major escalation of its violent campaign against the counterinsurgency operation that the Pakistani Army and Frontier Corps are mounting in the ethnic Pashtun North West Frontier Province and affiliated Federated and Tribal Areas at America’s behest:
ISLAMABAD: The local Taliban leadership has decided to send its fighters to Islamabad as a reaction to the operations in Darra Adamkhel and Swat Valley and in this regard chalkings on the walls of Islamabad are already appearing, forcing the Islamabad administration to whitewash these messages quickly.
Many religious scholars in Islamabad have also received messages from the Taliban that they have only two options, either to support the Taliban or leave the capital or they will be considered collaborators of the “pro-American Zardari government” which, they claim, is not different from the previous Musharraf regime.
Islamabad, Pakistan’s capital, is in the sedentary and urbanized heartland of Punjab far from the Pashtun areas. The Taliban don’t attack Islamabad unless they believe they can make an immediate and effective political statement.
In this case, the statement would probably be that Pakistanis are dying and their country fragmenting for the sake of a Western agenda for Afghanistan that few inside Pakistan endorse.
There appears to be a major disconnect between U.S. and Pakistani strategies for dealing with the Taliban’s entrenched presence and its increasing reach into non-Pashtun areas.
Pending a review by the Obama administration, the U.S. considers the battles in west Pakistan are considered an adjunct to the faltering Afghan adventure. This is a fatal misreading of the facts on the ground and ranks as a strategic blunder of historical portions.
It turns out the war against the Taliban is a counterinsurgency operation across the entire Pashtun ethnic area, on both sides of the Durand Line that arbitrarily splits the Pashtun homeland into Afghan and Pakistani jurisdictions, and in which the Taliban have discovered that their key bulwark against NATO and U.S. operations is, unsurprisingly, the Pakistan side.
U.S. attempts to deny the Pakistan havens to the Taliban have simply encouraged the Taliban to focus on the weakest element in the counter-insurgency equation, the Pakistan government, entrench themselves not only in the semi-autonomous FATA areas but also in key districts of the NWFP such as the Swat valley, and make it clear that the cost of any U.S. success against them and in Afghanistan will be borne by Pakistan.
In other words, Afghanistan is the sideshow and Pakistan is the main event.
In my view, the Obama foreign policy team should be burning the midnight oil trying to figure out how to support Pakistan in its long term struggle to integrate the Pashtun areas into the national system, not only militarily but politically, ideologically, and culturally, in order to neutralize the Taliban challenge inside Pakistan, while simply holding the line in Afghanistan--and not the other way around.
Indeed, as the Pakistan government points out resentfully, in 2008 Pakistan suffered a death toll of 2000 from terrorist attacks—and still is subjected to incessant U.S. bullyragging concerning its lackadaisical counterinsurgency efforts against the Taliban.
Relations between Pakistan and the Afghan government are quite frosty. Pakistan’s arch enemy, India, has been welcomed into Afghanistan, raising fears of strategic encirclement--and it’s safe to say that few people in Pakistan’s army or general population are enthusiastic about dying for the sake of Hamid Karzai’s regime. And when the Taliban reacts to U.S. (or U.S. mandated) pressure in the tribal areas by attacks in Pakistan’s heartland, the result has historically been anger directed not only the terrorists, but the U.S. effort in Afghanistan that brings so much suffering but little apparent benefits to Pakistan beyond a corrupting financial subsidy.
The central government of Pakistan, both under Musharraf and Zardari, has been loath to employ solely military measures against the Taliban, in order to avoid radicalizing the Pashtun population and bringing a battle in the marginal mountainous border areas into Pakistan’s populous heartland.
The United States, on the other hand, has insisted that Pakistan subordinate its own fears of instability and terrorism to the needs of the Afghan campaign. With the Taliban resurgent in Afghanistan, the United States has adopted a strategy that appears supremely counter-productive: pressuring Pakistan to achieve a military victory in the Pashtun areas, a goal that has eluded non-Pashtuns for centuries on a timetable designed to forestall a military collapse in Afghanistan next spring.
The disconnect was strikingly illustrated in Mir’s story:
Some diplomatic sources have revealed that initially Pakistan was ready to release some arrested Taliban fighters in exchange for the abducted Polish and Chinese engineers but the US authorities raised objections and a deal could not be finalised.
The Pakistani authorities successfully negotiated the release of a kidnapped Pakistani diplomat Tariq Azizuddin in 2008 and the release of kidnapped Army personnel in 2007 by releasing some Taliban fighters. But this time the US pressure complicated the situation.
The Polish engineer was subsequently decapitated.
The most genuinely sensational revelation of Mir’s article concerns the stated willingness of the NWFP governor -- and President Zardari -- to permit the
[A top Army official stated,] “We are no more fighting the secular insurgents, we are fighting with the Taliban and they are demanding the enforcement of the Islamic law in Swat and all the local secular political leaders are supporting this demand under public pressure.”
Chief Minister of NWFP Ameer Haider Hoti, Governor Awais Ghani and the Army high command have strongly recommended to enforce the long pending Sharia regulations, which will be called the “Nifaz-e-Adal regulation”.
District Police Officer of Swat Dilawar Khan Bangash said the Taliban will have no justification to fight against the state after the enforcement of the Islamic law in Swat.
Swat, which was a princely state till July 28, 1969, had Qazi courts operating when the state was finally merged into Pakistan. Residents of Swat think that it was easy to get justice before 1969 through the Qazi courts but after the imposition of the English law, the poor people of Swat are not getting justice.
Taliban have exploited this delay in justice and also instigated the poor people to rise against the big landlords. The Awami National Party swept the valley of Swat in 2008 election with the slogan of peace and justice and now this party is ruling the NWFP in collaboration with the PPP.
Sources have claimed that the ANP leadership has convinced President Asif Ali Zardari to promulgate the Sharia regulations in Swat and the president will announce the promulgation in a few days.
Maulana Sufi Muhammad of the Tehrik-e-Nafaze Shariat Muhammadi has assured the ANP leadership that he will start a long march from Dir to Swat valley after the imposition of the Sharia law and he will appeal to his son-in-law Maulana Fazalullah and other Taliban leaders to surrender.
For the Western powers, there are few issues more hot-buttony than Pakistan acquiescing to the imposition of sharia law in a key battle zone.
So it’s possible that President Zardari is raising the threat of sharia law as a wake-up call to the United States and NATO that the largely military counter-insurgency effort in western Pakistan is not viable, and an alternate strategy -- call it engagement, call it appeasement, in any case a protracted political, propaganda, and economic effort that de-emphasizes vain hopes of a quick military solution in time to save the Karzai regime -- that gives a more central position to Pakistan’s needs and priorities, indeed its survival as a democratic state, and treats the exploitation of Pakistan havens by the Taliban primarily as one element of Pakistan’s thorny Pashtun issue.
Peter Lee is a business man who has spent thirty years observing, analyzing, and writing on Asian affairs. Lee can be reached at peterrlee-2000@yahoo.
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