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http://snipurl.com/b4ds
AP: Navy Probes New Iraq Prisoner Photos


http://snipurl.com/b4ed
U.S. OKs Evidence Gained Through Torture

Statements produced under torture have been inadmissible in U.S. courts
for about 70 years. But the U.S. military panels reviewing the detention
of 550 foreigners as enemy combatants at the U.S. naval base in Cuba are
allowed to use such evidence, Principal Deputy Associate Attorney General
Brian Boyle acknowledged at a U.S. District Court hearing Thursday.


http://www.cnn.com/2004/US/12/05/musharraf.cnn/
The U.S.-led invasion of Iraq was a mistake that has made the world a more
dangerous place, but a swift withdrawal would make matters worse,
Pakistan's president said this weekend.

-------------

http://www.sundayherald.com/46389

US admits the war for ‘hearts and minds’ in Iraq is now lost
Pentagon report reveals catalogue of failure

By Neil Mackay, Investigations Editor
The Glasgow Sunday Herald
6 December 2004


THE Pentagon has admitted that the war on terror and the invasion and
occupation of Iraq have increased support for al-Qaeda, made ordinary
Muslims hate the US and caused a global backlash against America because
of the “self-serving hypocrisy” of George W Bush’s administration over the
Middle East.

The mea culpa is contained in a shockingly frank “strategic
communications” report, written this autumn by the Defence Science Board
for Pentagon supremo Donald Rumsfeld.

On “the war of ideas or the struggle for hearts and minds”, the report
says, “American efforts have not only failed, they may also have achieved
the opposite of what they intended”.

“American direct intervention in the Muslim world has paradoxically
elevated the stature of, and support for, radical Islamists, while
diminishing support for the United States to single digits in some Arab
societies.”

Referring to the repeated mantra from the White House that those who
oppose the US in the Middle East “hate our freedoms”, the report says:
“Muslims do not ‘hate our freedoms’, but rather, they hate our policies.
The overwhelming majority voice their objections to what they see as
one-sided support in favour of Israel and against Palestinian rights, and
the long-standing, even increasing support, for what Muslims collectively
see as tyrannies, most notably Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Pakistan and
the Gulf states.

“Thus when American public diplomacy talks about bringing democracy to
Islamic societies, this is seen as no more than self-serving hypo crisy.
Moreover, saying that ‘freedom is the future of the Middle East’ is seen
as patronising … in the eyes of Muslims, the American occupation of
Afghanistan and Iraq has not led to democracy there, but only more chaos
and suffering. US actions appear in contrast to be motivated by ulterior
motives, and deliberately controlled in order to best serve American
national interests at the expense of truly Muslim self-determination.”

The way America has handled itself since September 11 has played straight
into the hands of al-Qaeda, the report adds. “American actions have
elevated the authority of the jihadi insurgents and tended to ratify their
legitimacy among Muslims.” The result is that al-Qaeda has gone from being
a marginal movement to having support across the entire Muslim world.

“Muslims see Americans as strangely narcissistic,” the report goes on,
adding that to the Arab world the war is “no more than an extension of
American domestic politics”. The US has zero credibility among Muslims
which means that “whatever Americans do and say only serves … the enemy”.

The report says that the US is now engaged in a “global and generational
struggle of ideas” which it is rapidly losing. In order to reverse the
trend, the US must make “strategic communication” – which includes the
dissemination of propaganda and the running of military psychological
operations – an integral part of national security. The document says that
“Presidential leadership” is needed in this “ideas war” and warns against
“arrogance, opportunism and double standards”.

“We face a war on terrorism,” the report says, “intensified conflict with
Islam, and insurgency in Iraq. Worldwide anger and discontent are directed
at America’s tarnished credibility and ways the US pursues its goals.
There is a consensus that America’s power to persuade is in a state of
crisis.” More than 90% of the populations of some Muslims countries, such
as Saudi Arabia, are opposed to US policies.

“The war has increased mistrust of America in Europe,” the report adds,
“weakened support for the war on terrorism and undermined US credibility
worldwide.” This, in turn, poses an increased threat to US national
security.

America’s “image problem”, the report authors suggest, is “linked to
perceptions of the US as arrogant, hypocritical and self-indulgent”. The
White House “has paid little attention” to the problems.

The report calls for a huge boost in spending on propaganda efforts as war
policies “will not succeed unless they are communicated to global domestic
audiences in ways that are credible”.

American rhetoric which equates the war on terror as a cold-war-style
battle against “totalitarian evil” is also slapped down by the report.
Muslims see what is happening as a “history-shaking movement of Islamic
restoration … a renewal of the Muslim world …(which) has taken form
through many variant movements, both moderate and militant, with many
millions of adherents – of which radical fighters are only a small part”.

Rather than supporting tyranny, most Muslim want to overthrow tyrannical
regimes like Saudi Arabia. “The US finds itself in the strategically
awkward – and potentially dangerous – situation of being the long-standing
prop and alliance partner of these authoritarian regimes. Without the US,
these regimes could not survive,” the report says.

“Thus the US has strongly taken sides in a desperate struggle … US
policies and actions are increasingly seen by the overwhelming majority of
Muslims as a threat to the survival of Islam itself … Americans have
inserted themselves into this intra-Islamic struggle in ways that have
made us an enemy to most Muslims.

“There is no yearning-to- be-liberated-by-the-US groundswell among Muslim
societies … The perception of intimate US support of tyr-annies in the
Muslim world is perhaps the critical vulnerability in American strategy.
It strongly undercuts our message, while strongly promoting that of the
enemy.”

The report says that, in terms of the “information war”, “at this moment
it is the enemy that has the advantage”. The US propaganda drive has to
focus on “separating the vast majority of non-violent Muslims from the
radical- militant Islamist-Jihadist”.

According to the report, “the official take on the target audience [the
Muslim world] has been gloriously simple” and divided the Middle East into
“good” and “bad Muslims”.

“Americans are convinced that the US is a benevolent ‘superpower’ that
elevates values emphasising freedom … deep down we assume that everyone
should naturally support our policies. Yet the world of Islam – by
overwhelming majorities at this time – sees things differently. Muslims
see American policies as inimical to their values, American rhetoric about
freedom and democracy as hypocritical and American actions as deeply
threatening.

“In two years the jihadi message – that strongly attacks American values –
is being accepted by more moderate and non-violent Muslims. This in turn
implies that negative opinion of the US has not yet bottomed out

Equally important, the report says, is “to renew European attitudes
towards America” which have also been severely damaged since September 11,
2001. As “al-Qaeda constantly outflanks the US in the war of information”,
American has to adopt more sophisticated propaganda techniques, such as
targeting secularists in the Muslim world – including writers, artists and
singers – and getting US private sector media and marketing professionals
involved in disseminating messages to Muslims with a pro-US “brand”.

The Pentagon report also calls for the establishment of a national
security adviser for strategic communications, and a massive boost in
funding for the “information war” to boost US government TV and radio
stations broadcasting in the Middle East.

The importance of the need to quickly establish a propaganda advantage is
underscored by a document attached to the Pentagon report from Paul
Wolfowitz, the deputy defence secretary, dated May.

It says: “Our military expeditions to Afghanistan and Iraq are unlikely to
be the last such excursion in the global war on terrorism.”

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