*BUSH, CHENEY GUILTY OF WAR CRIMES

*
**
*The war crimes tribunal in Malaysia investigating war crimes of the
Bush regime has found the former president, his vice president, and six
others guilty of war crimes
<http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2012/05/13>.

The Obama regime may next be tried for covering up these war crimes
rather than investigating them, as international law requires
governments to do.

Our national political leaders have banded together to ignore
international law, but there are still people in the world who have a
respect for justice and human rights.
*
**
------------------------------------------------------------------------
*KILLING CIVILIANS FOR OIL


*
**
*"NATO air strikes killed 72 civilians in Libya last year, Human Rights
Watch said on Monday, accusing the western alliance of failing to
acknowledge the scope of collateral damage it caused during the campaign
that helped oust Muammar Gaddafi," begins a piece in British news
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/05/14/nato-civilian-deaths-nato_n_1513667.html#s754777>
this morning.

Others have estimated as many as 30,000 were killed as a result of NATO
arming and supplying opposition forces, including many alleged
terrorists.  The leading NATO nations in the slaughter were awarded oil
contracts from those they had backed.
*
**
------------------------------------------------------------------------
**
**
**
------------------------------------------------------------------------

**Anybody familiar with the many definitions of fascism will realize
that militarization of society while bowing to corporate control are at
the center of it  --Jack

**
**Americans Love a Good Killer**
<http://www.thiscantbehappening.net/print/1159>


****
**by John Grant **
****
**
**

    **  The essential American soul is hard, isolate, stoic and a killer.**
    **- D.H. Lawrence**
    ****
    **The realist in murder writes of a world in which gangsters can
    rule nations ... where a judge with a cellar full of bootleg liquor
    can send a man to jail for having a pint in his pocket ... where no
    man can walk down a dark street in safety because law and order are
    things we talk about but refrain from practicing.**
    **- Raymond Chandler**
    ****

**
****American pop culture is certainly not unique in having a love affair
with killers. Since the first cave man cracked his neighbor's head open
to control a water hole, eliminating others has been top on the list of
problem-solving techniques.
**

**Life today has evolved to the point the club has been improved and a
young man can sit in an air-conditioned room sipping a Diet Pepsi as he
whacks somebody 12,000 miles away. Or else an elite team of tricked-up
killers with sophisticated air support can be dropped in at night to do
the job. **

****

**That's the state of the art of homicide 2012, America's dirty little
secret.
**

****

**Our military is now establishing secret bases all over the world from
which to launch these types of homicide assaults specifically focused on
leaders of movements we don't like. The Navy has even developed a fast,
twin-hulled catamaran called the littoral combat ship that will deliver
these killer teams from the littoral or shallow waters off shore. In the
spirit of historic gunboat diplomacy, it's quite fearsome looking to
intimidate the natives. **

****

**This kind of projected violence is now going on big time in Yemen, the
very poor country on the southern edge of the Arabian peninsula, which
is dominated by the super-rich Saudi royal clan, an oily collaboration
with which US leaders have had a half-century relationship. **

****

**As Jeremy Scahill's [1] excellent reporting from Yemen makes clear,
our drone attacks and support for Yemeni government troops are
aggravating poor Yemenis like crazy, driving them into the arms of al
Qaeda elements. And, as we should all know by now, once the magic word
"al Qaeda" is mentioned all reason and compassion goes out the window
and homicide becomes the acceptable problem-solving recourse.
**

**This new US military doctrine based on sophisticated intelligence and
secret homicide raids virtually anywhere is growing at a time our
military is linking more and more with local, domestic police agencies.
This phenomenon has the potential for serious civil liberties abuse.
National borders are fading and life is becoming more and more
globalized; burgeoning communications technologies ironically make us
less socially cohesive. Add economic, religious and political
polarization to the mix and the symbiosis between the military and local
police becomes quite scary. **

****

**For Americans, the ultimate dark question lurking in all this is: Are
death squads within the domestic borders of the United States a
possibility? Some will surely see such a question as hysterical -- in
both senses of the word. But for those who feel it can't happen here,
there's the lesson of that mythic frog who doesn't hop out of the pot
because the temperature of the water is raised very slowly. For those on
the right, there's also the beloved metaphor of Munich, which says if
you appease the initial signs of oppressive force and don't act against
it, you're certain to be screwed later.
**

**Creeping Militarism Arriving On a Street Near You****
**

**Several recent stories suggest how very deep militarism has seeped
into the post-9/11, Drug War-obsessed American culture. The Bush
Administration's decision to invade two countries and engage in
counter-insurgency wars for ten years is front and center as part of the
problem. War has consequences. In the case of Vietnam, it divided the
nation. **

****

**The first story [2] is about how returning soldiers from Iraq and
Afghanistan are employing counter-insurgency tactics on the street in
places like Springfield, Massachusetts. The enemy is drug gangs, the
domestic suppliers of controlled substances illegally imported from
places like South America. "Gang members and drug dealers operate very
similarly to insurgents," Massachusetts State Trooper Michael Cutone
told the Times; he was a Green Beret in Iraq. **

****

**A second story [3] is summed up in its headline: "U.S. Drug War Inside
Honduras Waged Iraq-Style." To interdict drug shipments from South
America headed for the US, the US military has constructed three forward
operating bases (or FOBs) in Honduras, one a former CIA airfield from
the controversial Contra War days. This kind of military intervention
inside Honduras would have been unlikely without the June 2009 military
coup that overthrew elected President Manuel Zelaya. The Obama
administration, as some may recall, did nothing to prevent or oppose
this coup, which there's little doubt was undertaken with the knowledge
of elements in the US government. **

****

**Admiral Joseph Kernan, deputy commander of Southern Command, told the
Times there are "insidious" parallels between drug traffickers and
terror networks. "They operate without regard to borders," he said. And,
of course, so does the military of the United States of America.
According to the Times, Admiral Kernan "spent years in Navy SEAL combat
units," the elite unit in the forefront of the new quick-and-lethal
special operations doctrine.
**

**The third story [4] recounts the warm reception fired General Stanley
McChrystal is getting at Yale, where he has been hired to lecture on
leadership. McChrystal, of course, is a proven master at two things:
public relations (he was the one-star briefing officer during the Iraq
Invasion) and the management of special operations units. He's arguably
the key person in the successful use of killer teams in Anbar Province
-- known colloquially as "the Salvadoran option" -- which developed into
the US military's current special operations doctrine relying on
assassin teams and drones to weaken and destabilize enemy leadership.
The bin Laden hit was a highly publicized example of this; most examples
are top secret.
**

**General McChrystal is famous for a stark and ascetic lifestyle. When
reduced to its crude fundamentals, General McChrystal's leadership
expertise amounts to controlling information from the US public and
organizing killers. In the 1960s, a man like McChrystal would have faced
protests on a college campus. Today, he's a rock star. **

****

**Even the former antiwar candidate President Obama knows how much
Americans love a good killer, and he's bragging about being the man who
"took out" Osama bin Laden with a SEAL Team. **

****

**Beyond real political people like General McChrystal and President
Obama, Americans' fascination with killers is clear from just a cursory
survey of popular culture. Everywhere, in films, in popular books on the
grocery store shelves and in video games, there's an obsession with hit
men, serial killers, sexual psychopaths and government agents with a
license to kill; popular killers range from those in an underground,
criminal world to those wearing badges and working under the lethal
rights granted by national sovereign. **

****

**There's Lawrence Block's lovable hit man Keller who knocks people off
between trips to stamp-collector shops, the swimming pool and other
mundane tasks his middle-class readers can identify with. There's
Dexter, the lovable serial killer who offs only scum of the earth we're
glad to see eliminated. And there's Jake Grafton, Steven Koonts' CIA
agent in The Assassin, who hunts down al Qaeda demons -- as do a hundred
others in the same genre within a genre. **

****

**Then there's Keith Hayward in Peter Straub's macabre gem of a novella
A Special Place: The Heart of a Dark Matter. Hayward is actually a very
unpleasant character. He starts out as a 12-year-old killing local cats.
His Uncle Till, who likes to kill women with a knife, recognizes his
nephew's talents and trains him in the discipline of killing so he can
safely fulfill his true potential. As I was reading Straub's dark little
fairy tale I couldn't help but wonder if Keith Hayward had the
discipline to enter the realm of sovereign killing and to become a
special ops killer for America. Again, some may see this as a cheap shot
at our national heroes of the moment; I'm not sure.
**

**At this juncture, I should say I'm not a pacifist and, to be perfectly
candid, when the luxury of personal security is lifted I think I'd agree
some people may need killing. (I apologize to all my pacifist friends.)
But this only shifts the argument from the act of killing to the
question who is one killing and why. In the case of the US government,
when it comes to the combined War On Terror and the Drug War, there's a
clear, on-going history of intervention, invasion and occupation that
provokes people to oppose us with violence, which means killing them is
only exacerbating the problem and making more enemies to kill later. The
process of violence is a vicious cycle with no end, as Martin Luther
King so eloquently pointed out before he was assassinated. **

****

**When the Englishman D.H. Lawrence describes the American soul as
"hard, isolate, stoic and a killer," he doesn't include as a trait a
devotion to history. No. History is something too many Americans like to
avoid at all costs -- unless like "remember the Alamo!" it can be used
to mobilize an army for purposes of homicidal revenge. History that digs
in and explains the American soul is like a ball and chain. Better to
remain ignorant, or as Susan Sontag put it after 9/11: "By all means
let's mourn together, but let's not be stupid together." Sadly, the
American leaders at the time and the American mob all chose to be stupid. **

****

**Add to this volatile cultural stew the polarization of fundamentalist
religion and the promotional power of the National Rifle Association and
pretty soon you're back to the wild west where everybody feels they have
the need, and the right, to solve their problems lethally. It's not only
your right -- it's your duty -- to stand your ground with a .40 caliber
Glock.
**

**Military/Police Symbiosis****
**

**The anxiety I feel today is exactly what Raymond Chandler alluded to
in the epigram at the top, about "a world in which gangsters can rule
nations." The militarization of the police inside the US is a perfect
example of this. **

****

**The Posse Comitatus Act of 1878 makes it illegal to use Army units
within the domestic United States. (The Air Force was added to the act
in 1956.) The militarization of police forces, on the other hand, has no
such brake.
**

**It's interesting to look at the issue as a hemisphere problem. In
Latin America, the overlap between military and police forces has been
notoriously problematic, with many instances of human rights abuses. US
military trainers are now being deployed to places like Honduras to
train the police and the military; and one of the things they preach is
the separation of military and police functions. It's ironic that those
very separations are breaking down here in North America. We're becoming
more like Latin America as they become more like us. **

****

**"The Salvador option" was the informal name given to General
McChrystal's Special Operations "death squads" in Anbar Province in
Iraq. In El Salvador such units were referred to as "paramilitary." My
dictionary defines "para-" as "distinct from, but analogous to."
**

**Recently, York County, Pennsylvania, purchased a $296,000 up-armored
Lenco Bearcat for its SWAT Team; the funds came from cash and property
seized from drug dealers. This kind of self-aggrandizing spoils system
is notorious in police forces across the nation. The more property
confiscated, the more sophisticated military equipment and weapons a
department can buy. The problem is, if you buy a tank you naturally want
to use it. The more military equipment and training you get, the more
you will become a paramilitary unit -- "distinct from, but analogous to"
a military unit.
**

**There's also a vast network of associations and training enterprises
that reinforce the militarization of local police forces. An article in
the Spring issue of the National Tactical Officers Association's
magazine The Tactical Edge specifically addresses the military/police
relationship. It's a review of a book called Field Command by Charles
"Sid" Heal.
**

**"The book is a first of its kind," reviewer John Gnagey writes. "The
concepts and principles are taken from tactical texts and military field
manuals but are presented in scenarios that commonly confront law
enforcement officers." The book is divided into sections: At the Scene,
Understanding and Developing Strategy, Command Staff, Planning and
Decision Making and Multi-Dimensional Battlespace.
**

**In the early fifties, I recall my mom literally telling me police
officers were my friend. Those days are gone -- if they were ever
anything more than perception. It's now an entrenched war of gangs on
the streets of America, with the police being the most powerful gang.
And police thinkers are using terms like "counter-insurgency" and
"battlespace" to talk about policing the streets of America.
**

**Like any civilian caught in the middle of a dangerous warzone, it's
becoming less a matter of right and wrong, and more a matter of
prudently choosing sides to cover your ass.
**

**http://www.thiscantbehappening.net/print/1159
**

*Links:*
[1]
http://www.thenation.com/blog/166346/jeremy-scahill-yemens-saleh-has-played-united-states
[2]
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/01/us/springfield-mass-fights-crime-using-green-beret-tactics.html?pagewanted=all
[3]
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/06/world/americas/us-turns-its-focus-on-drug-smuggling-in-honduras.html
[4]
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/07/us/retired-military-officers-teaching-at-ivy-league-schools.html?_r=1

****

**
**
**
------------------------------------------------------------------------
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