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Kovalik reports: "Given that the US is currently attempting to wage actual war, as well as to carry out acts of war (such as embargos or other forms of economic strangulation), against numerous countries, one is subject to a constant barrage of lies from the US government to justify such acts."

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton arrives in Libya to meet the new leaders who were helped into power by Washington, 10/18/11. (photo: Reuters)
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton arrives in Libya to meet the new leaders who were helped into power by Washington, 10/18/11. (photo: Reuters)



Seven Truths Inconvenient to US Foreign Policy

By Dan Kovalik, CounterPunch

22 January 12

 

s George Orwell so eloquently stated, "Truth is the first casualty of war." Indeed, lying is absolutely necessary to the ability of countries such as the U.S. aiming to wage unprovoked war upon other countries - the worst form of human rights crime as recognized by the Nuremberg Tribunal which noted that it is "the supreme international crime differing only from other war crimes in that it contains within itself the accumulated evil of the whole." Given that the U.S. is currently attempting to wage actual war, as well as to carry out acts of war (such as embargos or other forms of economic strangulation), against numerous countries, one is subject to a constant barrage of lies from the U.S. government to justify such acts.

In light of the foregoing, I thought it was important to set forth some truths (though, of course, not an exhaustive list) which undermine the U.S.’s cause for war throughout the world.

1. Gaddafi troops did not engage in mass rapes.

One of the big lies of 2011 (though hard to believe on its face) was that told by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton about Libya as a means to justify regime change in that country - a goal not authorized by either the U.S. Congress or the UN. Thus, with a straight face, Ms. Clinton told the press that Gaddafi was passing out Viagra to his troops so they could go out and rape dissidents en masse, and that the troops were indeed engaging in mass rapes. Of course, the compliant media was more than happy to spread such outlandish accusations. What the press was more reluctant to do was to publish Amnesty International’s later report that there was absolutely no factual support for these accusations. As Amnesty International reported, "Not only have we not met any victims, but we have not even met any persons who have met victims."

2. The NATO-backed Libyan rebels have committed egregious human rights abuses.

Ironically, the NATO-supported rebels themselves did engage in verifiable acts of rape against civilians, as well as the targeted arrests, displacements and disappearance of black Africans (as opposed to Arabs) living in Libya. The most notorious such case was the military assault on the black African town of Tawarga in which the rebels emptied the entire town of its 10,000 residents, forced them into a refugee camp and then burned down the refugee camp. The rebels justified their racist attacks on black Africans upon the claim that they were serving as mercenaries for Gaddafi. This claim also proved to have no factual basis, but again, this did not stop the press from reporting it over and over.

3. The US has been involved in violent attacks in Iran for years.

Hillary Clinton told another big whopper this past week when she adamantly denied "any United States involvement in any kind of act of violence inside Iran." Indeed, the U.S. has been supporting terrorist attacks within Iran for years. As Seymour Hirsch reported as far back as 2008 in a New Yorker piece, the U.S. has been supporting the terrorist group "Mujahideen-e-Khalq, known in the West as the M.E.K" for some time. As Hirsch noted, "The M.E.K. has been on the State Department’s terrorist list for more than a decade, yet in recent years the group has received arms and intelligence, directly or indirectly, from the United States." In addition, as Hirsch related back in 2008, the U.S. has been supporting "The Kurdish party, PJAK, which has ... has been operating against Iran from bases in northern Iraq for at least three years."

4. The US was an enemy of democracy & human rights in Iran for over a quarter of a century.

While the U.S. points to provocative acts committed by Iran since its revolution in 1979 to justify the continued vilification of that country, what it wants you to forget is that the conflict with Iran began in 1953 and was started by the U.S. itself. Thus, in 1953, the U.S. instigated a coup against the democratically-elected president of Iran, Dr. Mohammad Mosaddegh (whose crime was to nationalize British oil companies), and replaced him with the despotic Shah who ruled Iran for the next 26 years. The Shah ruled Iran through his brutal and torturous Savak - the secret police force which was created by and funded by the U.S. until the 1979 Iranian revolution. In short, Iran has a lot to be angry with the U.S. about.

5. The US began the conflict in Afghanistan that helped spawn al Qaeda.

While one would believe from the press that the Soviet Union ignited the conflict in Afghanistan by invading that country in 1979, and that the U.S. reacted by supporting covert operations by the Mujahedin - the Mujahedin, who counted Osama bin Laden as one of its leaders, later becoming the nucleus of al Qaida - this is not true. Indeed, the reverse was true. Such covert operations were started by the U.S. before the Soviet Union invaded, and in fact were designed to draw the Soviets into a "Vietnam-like quagmire." U.S. National Security Adviser Zbignew Brzezinski admitted this later, stating in an interview: "That secret operation was an excellent idea. It had the effect of drawing the Russians into the Afghan trap and you want me to regret it? The day the Soviets officially crossed the border I wrote to President Carter: We now have the opportunity of giving to the USSR its Vietnam War. Indeed, for almost 10 years, Moscow had to carry on a war unsupported by the government, a conflict that brought about the demoralization and finally the breakup of the Soviet Empire."

6. The worst human rights abusers in the western hemisphere are US allies.

While the U.S. government and press constantly vilify Venezuela, Cuba and Nicaragua by criticizing their human rights policies, allies of the U.S. in the region are by far the worst abusers of human rights. The country with the worst human rights situation in the Americas is Colombia, which also happens to be the U.S.’s number one ally in the Hemisphere and one of the top recipients of U.S. military aid in the world. Colombia’s human rights record is horrendous from top to bottom. Thus, largely because of the forced displacement carried out by the Colombian military and its paramilitary (death squad) allies, Colombia has the largest internally displaced population in the world at over 5 million; Colombia has around 7500 people in prison who can be characterized as political prisoners or prisoners of conscience (compared to the one hundred or so such prisoners which Cuba’s harshest critics allege it has); the paramilitary allies of the Colombian government have killed around 150,000 civilians since the mid-1990’s and have disappeared around 50,000 civilians. In terms of government violence against its own people, close U.S. ally and military recipient Mexico currently runs second to Colombia with about 47,000 civilians killed in the so-called "drug war" being run jointly by the U.S. and Mexico. However, the country that historically tops all of these countries for anti-civilian violence is Guatemala whose U.S.-sponsored military dictatorship (a dictatorship installed by the U.S. back in 1954) killed around 200,000 civilians, mostly Mayan Indians, during the civil war in the 1980’s and 1990’s. This is relevant because the new President of Guatemala, Otto Perez Molina, was a general during this period, was personally responsible for egregious human rights abuses against civilians, and, of course, was supported by the U.S. in his recent candidacy.

7. Cuba has played one of the greatest humanitarian roles in the world, especially given its small size and scant resources.

While the U.S. continues to paint Cuba as some member of an imaginary "axis of evil" in the world, Cuba has given selflessly of itself to better the world even despite the U.S.-imposed embargo which has brought the Cuban economy to a near breaking point. Cuba has sent more doctors throughout the world to minister to the poor than even the World Health Organization. In Haiti, Cuba’s medical aid through its doctors, who were on the ground years before the earthquake of 2010, has been critical in fighting the outbreak in cholera in that country. Even the New York Times recently acknowledged this in a November 7, 2011 article entitled, "In Haiti’s Cholera Fight, Cuba Takes Lead Role." This is contrasted to the U.S. which, despite its puffery, has done little to aid Haiti with medical or humanitarian assistance after the earthquake, and instead sent about 14,000 troops to repress the restless population.

One could of course go on, but this at least gives a flavor of how the world is not as the U.S. and its media mouthpieces portray it. The U.S. is not the "world’s policeman" or the spreader of democracy and human rights that it claims to be. Rather, it has done much more to undermine democracy, human rights and even stability, than it has done to promote these conditions. This is a critical reality to keep in mind as the U.S. tries to start the next war based upon lies, usually premised on false claims that it is trying to protect human rights. Of course, if past is prologue, the U.S. will be allegedly attempting to promote human rights through the greatest violation of human rights a state can commit - the invasion of another country.

 

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+87 # cadan 2012-01-22 13:50
Dan Kovalik, thank you for writing this article!

I do think it points out that maybe our greatest weakness is the astounding dishonesty of the main stream media (MSM).

Do we really have to go through a collapse in order for our MSM to be either reformed or eliminated? Maybe we do, but what a fate :(.
 
 
+34 # noitall 2012-01-22 16:45
It is ironic that the MSM leases the airwaves from the People and we allow them to serve us garbage and lies over them. Another failure of our civil servant managers and the resulting lack of a unified voice of the People...but that's the job of the MSM. Another catch-22!
 
 
-17 # MidwestTom 2012-01-22 16:45
Remember that the MSM is 100% owned and controlled by the International Banking crowd located in NYC and running the Fed. Support Ron Paul, he is the only one who understands the mess we are in, and has a plan that is not more of the same.
 
 
+50 # Anarchist 23 2012-01-22 18:19
Ron Paul is great if you are an independently wealthy white man. Otherwise you are on your own-no pension, no social security, and don't even think about getting help for medical care! Oh yeah-and if you are a woman it's 'Kinder, Kuchel, Kirke-just like the Nazis-who also had a thing about unions and not allowing collective bargaining.

Ron Paul YOYO (Your'e On Your Own)

Vote Stephen Colbert!
 
 
-66 # Jmac 2012-01-22 21:32
well why don't we just hand everyone one a welfare check, pay for thier mortgage and college debt to get a collective warm fuzzy. no one should have to work for anything.
 
 
+47 # OWSMama 2012-01-23 03:25
We do that only for war contractors. Most of your/my tax money goes to companies who make war materials, not for foodstamps or (God forbid!) universal health care. Other advanced countries are able to provide very good health care and education (great equalizer) on what we spend on war.
 
 
+29 # Cambridgemac 2012-01-23 06:06
Only banks and defense contractors - and oil companies - and big agra - have a right to welfare checks.
 
 
+18 # bugbuster 2012-01-23 09:50
No doubt there are a few extremists who would advocate something like that.

There are also some who would advocate allowing families to freeze and starve to death for lack of money. Just gather 'em up and put 'em in the landfill when they start to stink. You must be one of those, right?

Extreme ideology is about overstatement and hyperbole. It is never useful or worthwhile.
 
 
+17 # Activista 2012-01-23 11:29
"no one should have to work for anything"
pay for college - most of the advanced societies invest in their youth - NOT war and military. Education including graduate schools are FREE and for the brightest - NOT richest.
They do not have anomaly like George Bush graduating with MBA from Yale because of his RICH grandfather, not his abilities.
 
 
+13 # Observer 47 2012-01-23 14:04
While I have to agree that Ron Paul has a total lack of compassion when it comes to social safety nets and women's rights, he is correct about the Fed and about who's really in charge of this country. Unfortunate that his negatives much outweigh his positive qualities.
 
 
+22 # Doubter 2012-01-22 18:30
Let me know when you have convinced RP against eliminating SS & Medicare and I'll immediately start campaigning for him.
 
 
+1 # Karlus58 2012-01-24 09:46
Here's the thing folks, do you really think Mr. Paul will have the capability and support to end Meedicare and Social Security? He does have the balls to speak the truth regarding Empire, wars and the Fed. No one else does or has. And he has taken a firm stance against NDAA that Mr. Obama just signed quietly on the last day of the year while you were partying. He appears to be the only one speaking truth to power, and I for one...am listening. I'm quite tired of listening to the Democrats lip service and they dance with the devil....all the time!
 
 
+18 # Cambridgemac 2012-01-23 06:26
I'm afraid that if Ron Paul somehow became President, the 1% and the banksters would push him to rapidly fulfill his promises to eliminate Social Security and Medicare (and abortion), and then, the day after he tries to close any of our 1000+ foreign military bases, he will be assassinated or declared insane or framed in a phony scandal. So, I don't think he represents "change we can believe in" any more than the current fraud.
 
 
+7 # BenECoyote 2012-01-23 13:10
Ron Paul voted for the war in afghanistan before he was against it. Ron Paul is tainted meat, who will kill the EPA, is against healthcare, is against regulating wall street. Rocky Anderson has ALWAYS been against the oil wars, and stands firmly to get the money out of politics, without throwing the people to the financial wolves. Rocky Anderson and the Justice Party, the progressive alternative to the democrapublican one party system.
 
 
+22 # Adoregon 2012-01-22 18:59
In short, one may generalize that the opposite of what we are told by the government and its minions is true.

Perhaps it would be more accurate to say, "What we are told by the corporations and their minion, the government is the opposite of the truth."

'Cause the truth appears to be that the government acts for and in the interests of the corporations whilst mythtifying the masses with pablum about democracy and freedom.
 
 
+12 # maddave 2012-01-22 22:44
The MSM prints & reports only that information which is fed or leaked by one faction or another within our government. Investigative reporting is a thing of the past.

Where they fail abysmally is in not checking their facts and by contaminating what few reliable facts that they DO report with hair brained or orthodox opinions.
 
 
+73 # Billy Bob 2012-01-22 14:10
One of the best articles I've read on here in the past few months.

Many of these "secrets" are not exactly new or even very well kept. Yet, to state them out loud can get you branded a "blame America first liberal".

One you don't hear about too often is Columbia. From what I understand (see, I'm an American too so I'm not positive), Columbia has been a major human rights abuser of its own people with U.S. help since, at least the '80s.
 
 
+21 # Texas Aggie 2012-01-22 20:03
The Christian Peacekeeper Teams have been working in Columbia for years and have been posting weekly updates as to the situations in the villages where they have a presence.

www.cpt.org

To say that the government has been respecting human rights provokes gales of laughter. Also, check out the video (in Spanish) where President Uribe justifies the disappearance of leftist students when confronted by a group of university presidents.
 
 
+59 # ritaague 2012-01-22 14:22
Dan Kovalik, I thank you for your courage for reporting these so egregious failures by today's U.S. of (greed and power) A.(ddiction).

OCCUPY WE MUST:

failure to end war, war, war, for oil, oil, oil, control over all, and profit for the 1%ers in the militaly/indust rial and terrorism complex;

failure to end enslavement attempt by the 1% of the 99% worldwide.

Evil ain't nothin' new
Lots and lots we have to do
To Undo the Evil Coup!
 
 
+34 # anotherraginggranny 2012-01-22 14:43
Seven inconvenient truths out of how many? It seems we should have a "one-a-day truth" info stream. Problem is that someone has to get NAKED while spreading the "vicious truths" so the main stream media will cover it..... Maybe a towel that you threaten to drop would do, so the cameras can roll.
 
 
+23 # giraffee2012 2012-01-22 15:55
We have mostly private companies fighting although the media talks about "our troops" - and at the bottom of waging wars is that a FEW are making a ton of money - from our tax dollars.

And these companies pay less taxes than you and me!

Occupy needs to continue and the military-type police that have arrested (+ worse) must be stopped. At least we can do something about the police actions UNTIL the government passes (behind our backs)laws to censure our first amendment rights on the internet.

I have a little hope with Democrats in W.H. + Congress but if the RepubNUTS get in - rest assured, we will go down like the bombs dropped on Japan at end of WWII.

The top GOP contenders for President have TOLD US they will reduce taxes on top 1% - TOLD US! They claim they will turn the economy around ---- BUT THEY NEVER EVER TELL US HOW THEY WILL DO THIS!

Unless we stop rewarding companies who take jobs out of USA (and don't tax goods made in other countries)- we will remain jobless!
 
 
-22 # Gordon K 2012-01-22 16:00
A well-meaning article, but without citations of sources, its usefulness is limited.
 
 
+21 # Ken Hall 2012-01-22 19:05
The information presented isn't new or obscure unless your only source of news is US media, and yes, it is well-documented .
 
 
-17 # Jmac 2012-01-22 21:34
serioulsy? RSN is not an un-exatctly unbiased source either.
 
 
+11 # maddave 2012-01-22 23:08
After viewing this and your previous post, I'd seriously advise to to have our meds checked by a competent, licensed physician. You just can't trust that shit that you're buying on the street.

I Trust me. I'm a doctor.
 
 
+8 # Activista 2012-01-22 22:13
try to Google for the details - Dan Kovalik is very careful in presenting the facts.
And once a while select Libya today ... civil war and killing continues - thanks to Obama, Clinton, NAZO
 
 
+11 # maddave 2012-01-22 23:04
Gordon K:
With the exception of #2, in which no witnesses could be found to confirm Secretary Clinton's statements, every single one was referenced and most of them are so steeped in common knowledge that they need no further confirmation than is available at the click of a mouse.

Of course you'll find that the abilities to read; to think clearly & critically; and to display a greater-than-ro om temperature IQ will be helpful.
 
 
+30 # tm7devils 2012-01-22 16:06
Let me see if I have this correct - If I wave the American flag, take my hat off and pledge allegiance to it and sing the Star Spangled Banner...then I am a patriot...if I don't then I am a scum sucking traitor. But wait, if I do show my unwavering patriotism, I am abetting a terrorist government - my government...wh ich makes ME a terrorist!
Traitor?...terrorist?...
traitor?...terrorist?...
What's a feller s'posed ta do...???
 
 
+35 # John Locke 2012-01-22 16:13
This is one of the best and most informative articles I have read in awhile. Although we are aware of alot of this, it is inspiring to see it in such bold print...and now this article leaves us with this question... Are we going to continue to allow Wall Street, The military industrial complex and the CIA, to go on destroying the worlds people...or are we going to require this country to go in a different direction, do we as a people have the moral fiber to take a stand and say enough is enough...
 
 
+7 # MidwestTom 2012-01-22 16:37
Are the NYC bankers preparing to attack Iran because they do not borrow money them? Other countries do not borrow from them, but they are militarily weak; while Iran is not. Libya also did not borrow money from the intl. bankers.
 
 
+22 # noitall 2012-01-22 16:40
An article that should be read by every American taxpayer. It is our taxes that are paying for the evil manipulation that the U.S.A. is conducting all over the world in the name of Big Oil and Big Corporations. Terrible reality...if realized! Thanks to the big-money-owned media, most Americans still live in blissful ignorance, seeing themselves as the shining star of peace and everything in the world that is good. Big Money is afraid for the truth to get out because they know that it would be the People's instinct to try to set it right; to regain the standing in the world that we kid ourselves into thinking that we still possess. We are the only ones in the world that are fooled. Travel abroad and experience it for yourself. On the bright side, Australia still likes us for saving them from the Japanese but give them time.
 
 
+24 # MidwestTom 2012-01-22 16:42
Chinese intelligence is questioning why we have sent our oldest carrier into the Persian Gulf. They advance the theory that it is a sitting duck, waiting for an Israeli submarine to torpedo it, which we will blame on the Iranians. Wait and see if they are correct. Remember that Iran has an elected government, their neighbors all have nuclear bombs, and their young people are secular, much more to our ideals than the other Muslim countries.
 
 
-8 # Jmac 2012-01-22 21:40
First the USS Abraham Lincoln is not our oldest carrier it's the USS Nimitiz (CVN-68) and second are you some kind of 007 with secret ties to china?..lol i hope they continue to make assesments like this.
 
 
+8 # maddave 2012-01-22 23:32
Wrong! Try the USS Enterprise CVN-65, and second, there are those of us on this circuit who have enough interest, assets, intelligence and consideration-f or-others to get our act together and our facts in order before barging in.
 
 
+24 # corallady 2012-01-22 17:01
Add to all of this the fact that while we go around the world preaching democracy we are rapidly destroying our own here at home. Look at the Citizens United decision handed down by our Supreme Court, which is making a mockery of our elections. Look at the laws passed by many of our states that are trying to restrict voters who more often than not vote Democratic. Look at the NDAA bill passed by a large majority in Congress and signed into law by the President. And how about peaceful demonstrators being pepper-sprayed by police when they had done nothing wrong. And on and on. Our democracy is dying; no, it is being choked to death.
 
 
+12 # noitall 2012-01-22 18:36
Our country has never had any qualms about killing democracies if they do not sell out to the demands of our corporate interests. There are many, many examples throughout history and we allow it by swallowing, unquestioningly , the story as spun by the MSM. They kill the internet and we will be the most blissfully ignorant people on earth.
 
 
+7 # punk 2012-01-22 17:17
1000 pardons. i've become doubtful of everything i read. i've heard some of this before, and i dont disbelieve it. but in #5 where Z-big admits in an interview that he funded the mujihadeen to bankrupt ussr, i think he denies saying that and i dont think there is any proof that he did-ie the interview wasnt recorded. [called operation cyclone?]
i dont know if there's any proof of #3 either. i've read accusations of the usa supporting dissident groups to destabilize iran and i think that's highly likely, but i dont think there is proof. [but gingrich supports this type of covert, deniable action].
i just dont want to get told that something is true or known when it is disputed. i think we get yanked around enuf by the ms media.
 
 
+7 # Ken Hall 2012-01-22 19:15
Seymour Hersh has a track record as a journalist, if he says it's so, it probably is. The folks who are really good are not heard in the MSM, and the one's I've heard ("Democracy Now", for instance) give substantial support to the claims of this article, including #3.
 
 
+5 # Cambridgemac 2012-01-23 06:12
Are you questioning US funding for the mujahadeen? OR Zbig's quote. Because the story of the US funding the mujahadeen was reported in the MSM all along....
 
 
0 # punk 2012-01-25 02:33
i DO believe that funding for and assistance to insurgent groups [in syria, lebanon, iraq, egypt,etc]comes from both agents of the USA[cia] and private ex-pat groups that want to see the govs in those countries overthrown. i Do believe that Zbig wanted to bankrupt the USSR and instigated the russian invasion into a'stan. but there is no proof and both zbig and the usa deny it. i just think the denial sd be mentioned even tho i dont believe it.
 
 
+13 # sandyboy 2012-01-22 17:45
Bravo! We knew Hillary Clinton was a habitual liar (remember when she insisted she'd braved gunfire at a foreign airport, until footage emerged showing nothing of the kind?), but sad to see Jimmy Carter in there accepting a plot to cause Soviet war with the Afghans. Where are the journalists of principle who will start refusing to bury the truth?
 
 
+15 # noitall 2012-01-22 18:42
"Where are the journalists of principle who will start refusing to bury the truth?" Buried, bought, or hiding out. Look what Julian Assange is living through. No good deed goes unpunished, especially when you go against the greed of the evil. Don't count on the American Public to support whistle blowers, its not our way.
 
 
+7 # Cambridgemac 2012-01-23 06:14
Let's not forget - those of us who do remember - when the US military was targetting and killing journalists in Baghdad in 2004.
 
 
+12 # Huck Mucus 2012-01-22 18:31
An open question to our active duty senior military leadership: Is there a Smedley Butler among you?

I suspect no one could carry the corn in his shit. America doesn't make men like that any more.

War is a Racket.
 
 
+8 # William Bjornson 2012-01-22 22:10
Semper fi, if only it were really true for all Marines. Always faithful, to oneself only, doesn't count. Major General Smedley Darlinton Butler, the most decorated soldier in American history, THE Marine's Marine. "My Thirty Years as a Thug for Capitalism: War is a Racket". OO-RAH!

and sandyboy: "Where are the journalists of principle who will start refusing to bury the truth?"

Doing long term interviews with Bradley Manning or comtemplating same. And it will have to be the "publishers of principle". We currently have none except those devoted to a completely corrupt principle exactly opposite to our own best interests. But there has to be an 'audience of principle' as well. This is where we are lacking. Disrespect for learning and respect for pro sports makes Americans an easy mark, who will even believe gingrich. Too bad for you younger people. You're screwed. We need to bury the Fed no matter what it costs us or it will cost us, you, a whole lot more in the future. An 'emperor' may be a lot closer than most of us think. And he will be a rothschild. And you will be a peon.
 
 
-25 # Jmac 2012-01-22 21:30
Okay topic points 6 and 7 are pretty scewed. you give Cuba a thumbs up for humanitarian efforts and US allies are the biggest human rights violators?
Where do you get your facts? Socialist/stron gars dictators monthly? how about patting North Korea on the back for some imaginary act of kindness as well.
 
 
+9 # sandyboy 2012-01-23 03:40
Quoting Jmac:
Okay topic points 6 and 7 are pretty scewed. you give Cuba a thumbs up for humanitarian efforts and US allies are the biggest human rights violators?
Where do you get your facts? Socialist/strongars dictators monthly? how about patting North Korea on the back for some imaginary act of kindness as well.

Yes, I forgot to mention you asked where the author got his facts about imaginary acts of kindness by Cuba etc? Go back and you'll see he cites the New York Times! D'oh. Unless you think they're all a bunch of commie liberals who worship dictators too, surely that should be a good enough source for you.
 
 
+11 # Cambridgemac 2012-01-23 06:21
The enormous Cuban medical aid effort to African, Caribbean and Latin American countries has been reported on for years.
http://www.coha.org/cuban-medical-diplomacy-when-the-left-has-got-it-right/

North Korea has never provided aid to anyone. You lose credibility when you conflate Cuba and North Korea.
 
 
+7 # David Starr 2012-01-23 11:10
Jmac,
How about going back to your cave living amongst Righties who think that Fox "news" is "fair and balanced"?
 
 
+12 # noitall 2012-01-23 14:22
How soon we forget! In the aftermath of Katrina, Cuba sent a hospital ship and doctors to aid the people of New Orleans only to be slapped aside by Bush who continued to do nothing. Not much has happened since compared to what is needed there. That action pretty much sums up the immature attitude that our government shows to Cuba. It is cruel to the Cuban people to continue the aggression against their freedoms because their government will not give themselves over to the greed of our corporate interests and tolerate being used as a brothel for rich Americans.
 
 
+11 # handskhan 2012-01-22 22:59
It is most unfortunate that the single major world power has such a basically flawed Foreign Policy record. If the whole system is based on falsehood, deception and corrupt practices how long the world is going to sustain it. There will come a breaking point and it will be sooner rather than later.
 
 
-2 # Jmac 2012-01-22 23:00
Smedely Butler is an intersting character although his stint as defacto military dictator of Philly leaves much to be desired. his efforts would've been better served overturning Prohibition.
 
 
+4 # David Starr 2012-01-23 11:06
Jmac,
The Smedley Butler comment is actually the first, intelligent thing you posted. Care to try for another? (Without going into regression?)
 
 
+15 # sandyboy 2012-01-23 00:55
Jmac: I don't say you should accept RSN is perfect - after all, those in power make it pretty hard to find out the truth. But if you really think those who object to the status quo want to give everyone a freeby with no work then you're way off base. People just want a fair system where the masses don't get screwed at every turn while the rich pay minimal taxes. If you're not wealthy yourself then you are the kind of guy the establishment loves, who works hard and thinks the game isn't rigged, someone who ignores unpalatable facts and will vote for his own enslavement. You deny Cuba's independently verified good deeds and the USA support of vile tyrants when those are verifiable facts - if you refute those statements in the article how about some detail as to why? USA supported a Cuban regime that welcomed gangsters until Fidel Castro threw em out. Remember the USA was cosy with Saddam as he abused his people for years until he stopped being useful.
 
 
+6 # futhark 2012-01-23 04:48
After the plutocracy got away with the poorly executed "Reichstag Fire" event of 9/11, they are not likely to shirk continuing to lie about world events to support their own perceived interests. Those who challenge the propaganda machines are routinely denigrated and marginalized, quite successfully to date.

Stop accepting and using the appellation of "truther" as a derogatory term. Those who challenge the accepted paradigms are the ones who will help us all achieve a greater understanding of these events.

Yes, we need more General Smedley Darlington Butlers to expose the corruption that permeates our government, especially in relation to "security".
 
 
+10 # colvictoria 2012-01-23 07:03
Thank you Dan Kovalik for this jaw dropping article.
With regards to Cuba and Libya both leaders at the beginning had a vision for their country and their people. If people read up on the history both leaders did some great things for the people. Before the NATO strikes Libya was one of the wealthiest African countries with one of the highest standards of living. People had a decent comfortable life with some sense of stability but now it is in shambles and on the brink of civil war.
The US still has an embargo on Cuba but that has not stopped Cuba from educating its masses for free who in turn go on to do humanitarian work.
Seems to me these countries somehow have the wealth to provide its people with free health care and free university. What is wrong with that?
Meanwhile here our gov't forces everyone to buy insurance and college grads are left with mounting debt and no jobs.
You would think that with all the wealth our gov't has squandered from Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya and everywhere else the American people would see some benefit NOT!. I guess the 1% want all of the war profits for themselves profits hidden in secret bank accounts tax free.
Clearly our gov't does not care about the masses. If they had it their way we would all be illiterate, drug & alcohol addicted zombies and you know in some communities that is exactly what is happening.You have to wonder does this just happen or is it by design?
 
 
+5 # Activista 2012-01-23 11:41
"Obama’s most "historic" achievement is to bring the war on democracy home to America. On New Year’s Eve, he signed the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), a law that grants the Pentagon the legal right to kidnap both foreigners and US citizens and indefinitely detain, interrogate and torture, or even kill them. They need only "associate" with those "belligerent" to the United States. There will be no protection of law, no trial, no legal representation. This is the first explicit legislation to abolish habeus corpus (the right to due process of law) and effectively repeal the Bill of Rights of 1789"
www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=28753
 
 
+4 # colvictoria 2012-01-23 08:07
For anyone interested a poignant article by John Pilger very similar to Kovalik's with a little more punch.
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=28753
 
 
+3 # handmjones 2012-01-23 09:32
It started before the Revolution with lies and exagerations about the Boston Tea Party and the so-called Boston Massacre and every war since has been preceded by propoganda, false flag operations and other provocations... . or at least that's how it appears from the land of the United Empire Loyalists.
 
 
+4 # David Starr 2012-01-23 11:29
Dan Kovalik's article is one of the best (if not the best) to be published online by RSN; and of course credit goes to CounterPunch. Contrary to the snipes & cheapshots of those who judge from an ivory tower of "True Americanism", info w/in it has been known for years, e.g., Cuba's positive, medical contributions to other countries, U.S. support for the Mujahadeen & of course in turn bin Laden, almost routine support for the worst of the worst of Latin America's rulers, etc. Then there's the other info re. Iran & it's not surprising. It all amounts to an obvious historical pattern of invade, occupy, bomb evident w/in U.S. foreign policy. This has to be & will be changed. It's inevitable because it's utterly necessary.
 
 
+4 # tomo 2012-01-23 11:38
I accept Kovalik's article pretty much as is. While the Main Stream Media is a mess, there is still excellent investigative reporting and analysis going on: Scheer, Parry, Hersh, Hedges, Phillips, Solomon, Ricks, etc., etc. Many of these first honed their skills in mainstream media before MSM began their steep decline to their present state. Kovalik's article is well grounded in what they and he have turned up.

A question that addresses the reader who, like me, accepts Kovalik is: Why have we the people put up with the lies we've been told? For an answer, I think one has to go way back. "The American Story" was there almost before America was. It is a story full of self-serving myths; and we may have come to a place in time where we would rather see America die, and ourselves die with it, than give it up.
 
 
+7 # carurosu 2012-01-23 12:59
When the US accuses lack of freedoms and military intervention in Syria, it would at least be honest enough to face the fact that newyorkers were not treated better when protesters were harassed and physically maltreated in the Occupy Wall Street manifestos.
 

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