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Violence sweeps northwest
Pakistan in wake of Mehsud assassination
By James Cogan
The civil war between the US-backed government of President Asif
Ali Zardari and Islamist and tribal militants is escalating in the
wake of the August 5 assassination of Pakistani Taliban leader Baitullah
Mehsud by a US Predator drone in South Waziristan. The killing has
been followed by a series of further Predator attacks, armed clashes,
murders, bombings and rocket attacks across northwest Pakistan.
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| On Tuesday, three missiles fired by unmanned American
drones slaughtered as many as 14 alleged militants in a village
just seven kilometres from where Mehsud was killed. The US military
has stepped up Predator flights over South Waziristan, calculating
that the tribal and Taliban leadership will be holding meetings
to determine who will replace Baitullah as the head of both the
Mehsud tribe and the umbrella Islamist movement in the region, Tehrik-e-Taliban.
The Mehsud and the Taliban are carrying out sweeping retaliation
for the killing of their leader, targeting tribes that have collaborated
with the Islamabad government against them.
On Wednesday, as many as 1,000 Mehsud tribal fighters launched an
assault on the stronghold of one rival, Turkistan Bhittani, in the
South Waziristan town of Jandola. Fighting raged for several hours,
with the Taliban using rockets and mortars to level as many as 40
houses.
Pakistani Army helicopter gunships and ground artillery had to be
called in to drive off the attackers. At least 70 members of Bhittani’s
militia were killed and scores more were wounded. Taliban losses
are unknown but are believed to have been substantial. The military
claims at least 15 militants were killed when its artillery destroyed
three vehicles attempting to leave the area. READ
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US
Still Paying Blackwater Millions
by JEREMY SCAHILL
Just days before two former Blackwater employees alleged in sworn
statements filed in federal court that the company's owner, Erik
Prince, "views himself as a Christian crusader tasked with
eliminating Muslims and the Islamic faith from the globe,"
the Obama administration extended a contract with Blackwater for
more than $20 million for "security services" in Iraq,
according to federal contract data obtained by The Nation. The State
Department contract is scheduled to run through September 3. In
May, the State Department announced it was not renewing Blackwater's
Iraq contract, and the Iraqi government has refused to issue the
company an operating license.
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"They are still there, but we are transitioning them out,"
a State Department official told The Nation. According to the State
Department, the $20 million represents an increase on an aviation
contract that predates the Obama administration.
Despite its scandal-plagued track record, Blackwater (which has
rebranded itself as Xe) continues to have a presence in Iraq, trains
Afghan forces on US contracts and provides government-funded training
for military and law enforcement inside the United States. The company
is also actively bidding on other government contracts, including
in Afghanistan, where the number of private contractors is swelling.
According to federal contracting records reviewed by The Nation,
since President Barack Obama took office in January the State Department
has contracted with Blackwater for more than $174 million in "security
services" alone in Iraq and Afghanistan and tens of millions
more in "aviation services." Much of this money stems
from existing contracts from the Bush era that have been continued
by the Obama administration.
While Obama certainly inherited a mess when it came to Blackwater's
entrenchment in Iraq and Afghanistan, he has continued the widespread
use of armed private contractors in both countries. Blackwater's
role may be slowly shrinking, but its work is continuing through
companies such as DynCorp and Triple Canopy. READ
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African Muslims
to launch parallel probe into Darfur conflict
The Muslim leaders from Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda, Burundi
and the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) said the independent
investigations into the Darfur conflict would begin immediately
as a way of finding Africa's homegrown solutions to its problems.
NAIROBI, Aug. 3 (Xinhua) -- African Muslim leaders on Monday launched
parallel investigations into Sudan's restive
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Darfur region where a six-year fighting has left thousands of
people dead and millions others displaced.
Addressing a news conference in Nairobi, the Muslim leaders from
Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda, Burundi and the Democratic Republic
of Congo (DRC) said the independent investigations into the Darfur
conflict would begin immediately as a way of finding Africa's homegrown
solutions to its problems.
"We undertaken to talk with the major parties to the conflict
and its victims and open communication channels between them in
order to find out the real issues and then give our collective advice
as Muslims of the region," Sheikh Hammad Kassim Mazrui, the
Chief Kadhi of Kenya told journalists.
Mazrui who led other Heads of the Islamic faith from the Great
Lakes region said the team would also investigate the ramifications
of the International Criminal Court (ICC) on Africa with reference
to the Darfur conflict.
"As religious leaders with extensive experience in peace making
in other parts of the region, we must take a lead and initiate missions
to bring peace in Darfur and the wider region, to the exclusion
of undue external interference," Mazrui said.
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Nigerian riot
leader killed in northeast Borno state
Nigeria`s Islamic sect leader Mohammed Yusuf was killed during a
gun battle on Thursday evening.
LAGOS, July 30 (Xinhua) -- Nigeria's Islamic sect leader Mohammed
Yusuf was killed by Nigerian military force in Maiduguri, capital
of Borno State, on Thursday evening, according to the Nigerian military
authority.
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Mohammed Yerima, director of information
of Nigerian Military Force, told Xinhua that the wanted sect leader
Yusuf was killed during a gun battle on Thursday evening.
Nigeria's Television Authority (NTA) also reported that the sect
head's body was recognized by local residents.
The sect leader, who stirred up the four-day riot in northeast
Nigeria states, was said to have told his men never to retreat,
but he caused about 300 deaths of his men in their gun fight against
the military and police on Wednesday.
Nigeria's Borno State Governor Ali Sheriff vowed to catch Yusuf
and bring punishment to him.
The military destroyed Yusuf's camp and conducted a house-to-house
search to ensure that they cleared all his men hiding around the
place.
Saleh Maina, military officer commanding of three Armored Division,
said the army and the police had taken over the area, noting that
there was no escape route for Yusuf and his men.
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Majority
of Americans now oppose Afghan war: poll
BY JOHN BYRNE
Support ‘cratering’ among liberals
On the eve of Afghanistan’s historic presidential election,
a newly released poll shows Americans’ support for the war
is fading.
Among liberals, the decline in support is even faster — support
for the war among progressives has plummeted 20 percent since January.
The eight year conflict, which began after the US routed the Taliban
from the country in 2001, has bogged down American forces and resulted
in hundreds of servicemember deaths. In recent months, the Taliban
have seen resurgent success. A US effort to capture Osama Bin Laden
has failed.
Only a quarter of Americans say more US troops should be sent to
the battle zone. Obama’s new commander for Afghanistan, Stanley
McChrystal, has hinted that he may need more troops to beat back
insurgent forces.
“When it comes to the baseline question, 42 percent of Americans
say the United States is winning in Afghanistan; about as many,
36 percent, say it is losing,” the Washington Post’s
Jennifer Agiesta and Jon Cohen write Thursday. “The new poll
comes amid widespread speculation that Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal,
the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, will request more troops…That
position gets the backing of 24 percent of those polled, while nearly
twice as many, 45 percent, want to decrease the number of military
forces there.”
Obama recently sent 17,000 more troops to the region. Critics of
Bush Administration policy say the war effort suffered as a result
of diverting tens of thousands of troops to Iraq from Afghanistan.
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Holt on anthrax
mailings: Investigate the investigators
BY DANIEL TENCER
Until the US holds a “broader inquiry” into the investigation
of the 2001 anthrax mailings, US House Rep. Rush Holt (D-NJ) won’t
be satisfied that there isn’t a mass killer on the loose in
his home town.
Holt — whose 12th Congressional district of New Jersey includes
a postal facility from which some of the anthrax letters were mailed
during the 2001 biological terrorism scare — says that the
FBI “suffers from a credibility gap” because of the
many mistakes made by the bureau during its long investigation into
the first serious case of biological terrorism on American soil.
“If the technical and scientific procedures [used by the
FBI] are as flawed as the non-technical procedures, they certainly
deserve a look,” the Frederick, Md., News-Post quoted Holt
as saying.
At the FBI’s request, the National Academy of Sciences has
convened a 15-member panel to review the scientific soundness of
the FBI’s eight-year-long investigation into the anthrax mailings.
According to Elie Dolgin at Nature magazine, the FBI believes the
scientific review of its own investigation to be “unprecedented.”
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U.S.
- Insane Food Bill 2749 Passes House On 2nd Try. HR 2749: Totalitarian
Control Of Our Food Supply
By A collective of food-farm citizens
Farm Wars
A new food safety bill is on the fast track in Congress-HR 2749,
the Food Safety Enhancement Act of 2009. The bill needs to be stopped.
HR 2749 gives FDA tremendous power while significantly diminishing
existing judicial restraints on actions taken by the agency. The
bill would impose a one-size-fits-all regulatory scheme on small
farms and local artisanal producers; and it would disproportionately
impact their operations for the worse. HR 2749 does not address
underlying causes of food safety problems such as industrial agriculture
practices and the consolidation of our food supply. The industrial
food system and food imports are badly in need of effective regulation,
but the bill does not specifically direct regulation or resources
to these areas.
To read a detailed account of the bill, go to The Farmer-Consumer
Legal Defense Fund (Read the section on tracing. That is NAIS, isn't
it? highly disguised yet triggered by the word "trace."
)
Alarming Provisions: Some of the more alarming provisions in the
bill are:
* HR 2749 would impose an annual registration fee of $500 on any
"facility" that holds, processes, or manufactures food.
[isn't this every home in the US, every garden?] Although "farms"
are exempt, the agency has defined "farm" narrowly. [What
is the definition?] And people making foods such as lacto-fermented
vegetables, cheeses, or breads would be required to register and
pay the fee, which could drive beginning and small producers out
of business during difficult economic times. [Yes. There are laws
against this corporate-size-destroys-the-little-guy policy, aren't
there? Are home bread or cheese or lacto-fermented vegetable makers
who make for their own families included in this?] READ
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Venezuela's
Chavez to visit Iran: report
www.chinaview.cn
TEHRAN, Aug. 18 (Xinhua) -- Venezuelan Ambassador to Tehran David
Velasquez Caraballo said on Tuesday that President Hugo Chavez is
to visit Tehran soon, the official IRNA news agency reported.
Chavez will make a two-day visit to Tehran in the first week of
September, according to the semi-official Fars news agency.
Referring to the U.S. plots against Venezuela and its South
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American allies, Caraballo said "the
United States does not want South American states to lean towards
the East," said Fars.
"We want peace but we are fully prepared to confront potential
attacks in a bid to prevent developments like U.S.-Colombia military
agreement," Fars quoted Caraballo as saying.
Chavez and his Iranian counterpart Mahmoud Ahmadinejad have both
described themselves as opponents to the U.S. imperialism on the
world stage.
The Venezuelan president has developed strong ties with the government
of Iran, in particular in energy production, economic, and industrial
cooperation. He has visited Iran several times since Ahmadinejad
took office in 2005.
According to Caraballo, President Chavez will also make a tour
to Russia, Libya and Syria.
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Israel Seeks
to Block Iran Relations in South America
Zionist FM Avigdor Lieberman tells Latin American nations who not
to be friends with
By MATTI FRIEDMAN
Associated Press Writer
(AP) -- Israel's foreign minister is heading to South America on
a mission partly aimed at stemming Iranian "infiltration"
on the continent, a senior diplomat said Monday.
Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman's 10-day visit to Brazil, Argentina,
Peru and Colombia comes at a time of rising Iranian influence in
Latin America.
Venezuela and Bolivia have close ties to Iran, and Israeli and
U.S. officials have expressed concern about Islamic militant activities,
some of them connected to Iran, in the lawless region where the
borders of Brazil, Argentina and Paraguay meet.
The visit is meant to "emphasize the high importance the Foreign
Ministry ascribes to Latin America," a statement from the ministry
said.
Iran underscored its interest in the region on Monday when the
country's ambassador to Brazil, Moshen Shaterzadeh, announced President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad will visit Brazil on his first foreign trip
since winning election. He did not give a date.
Lieberman was set to leave late Monday. During his trip, Lieberman
will tackle the Iranian issue with South American leaders, Deputy
Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon said, and chiefly the activities of
the Iranian-backed Lebanese guerrilla group Hezbollah.
"Israel, along with many others, is concerned about Iran's
infiltration into Latin America, primarily through Hezbollah, and
this will definitely be an issue discussed between the Israeli foreign
minister and his counterparts," Ayalon said. READ
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The
Secrets of China's Economy: The Government Owns the Banks rather
than the Reverse
by Ellen Brown
Global Research
“The banks -- hard to believe in a time when we’re facing
a banking crisis that many of the banks created -- are still the
most powerful lobby on Capitol Hill. They frankly own the place.”
-- U.S. Senator Dick Durbin, Democratic Party Whip, April 30, 2009
While the U.S. spends trillions of dollars to bail out its banking
system, leaving its economy to languish, China is being called a
“miracle economy” that has decoupled from the rest of
the world. As the rest of the world sinks into the worst recession
since the 1930s, China has maintained a phenomenal 8% annual growth
rate. Those are the reports, but commentators are dubious. They
ask how that growth is possible, when other countries relying heavily
on exports have suffered major downturns and remain in the doldrums.
Economist Richard Wolff skeptically observes:
We now have a situation in the world where we have a global capitalist
crisis. Everywhere, consumption is down. Everywhere, people are
buying fewer goods, including goods from China.
How is it possible that in that society, so dependent on the world
economy, they could now have an explosive growth? Their stock market
is now 100 percent higher than at its low -- nothing remotely like
that hardly anywhere in the world, certainly not in the United States
or Europe. How is that possible? In order to believe what the Chinese
are saying, you would have to agree that in a matter of months,
at most a year, no more, they have been able to transform their
economy from an export-based powerhouse to a domestically focused
industrial engine. Nowhere in the world has that ever taken less
than decades.”
How can China’s stimulus plan be working so well, when ours
is barely working at all? The answer may be simple: China has not
let its banking system run roughshod over its productive economy.
Chinese banks work for the people rather than the reverse. So says
Samah El-Shahat, a presenter for Al Jazeera English who has a doctorate
in economics from the University of London. In an August 10 article
titled “China Puts People Before Banks,” she writes:
“China is the one leading economy where the divide –
the disconnect between its financial sector and the world normal
Chinese people and their businesses inhabit – doesn’t
exist. Both worlds are booming again and this is due to the way
the government handled its banks. China hasn’t allowed its
banking sector to become so powerful, so influential, and so big
that it can call the shots or highjack the bailout. In simple terms,
the government preferred to answer to its people and put their interests
first before that of any vested interest or group. And that is why
Chinese banks are lending to the people and their businesses in
record numbers.” READ
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