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FOCUS: Republican Leadership? Face It, That's an Oxymoron! Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=20877"><span class="small">William Boardman, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Friday, 18 September 2015 10:40

Boardman writes: "Making fun of the assortment of Republican candidates for President as some sort of clown show is easy enough to do, which is probably one reason so many people do it. But that sort of ridicule is so insubstantial, so irrelevant, that it ends up serving as a form of endorsement of the motley crew, as if, underneath it all, these are actually serious people."

Donald Trump and Jeb Bush tussled during the most recent Republican presidential debate, held at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library. (photo: CNN)
Donald Trump and Jeb Bush tussled during the most recent Republican presidential debate, held at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library. (photo: CNN)


Republican Leadership? Face It, That's an Oxymoron!

By William Boardman, Reader Supported News

18 September 15

 

Polls suggest America might elect a joke as President

aking fun of the assortment of Republican candidates for President as some sort of clown show is easy enough to do, which is probably one reason so many people do it. But that sort of ridicule is so insubstantial, so irrelevant, that it ends up serving as a form of endorsement of the motley crew, as if, underneath it all, these are actually serious people. This implied endorsement is reinforced by the tepid questions they are asked in conjunction with media coverage of their mostly foolish answers to pointless questions, as if this charade were somehow a meaningful and sober way to choose a leader. 

Actually, it’s all a big joke. The participants must know it’s a big joke, but it works for them, it protects them from answering hard questions with possibly dangerous, relevant answers, AND it lets them throw verbal cream pies in each others’ faces – what’s to hate? And the media know it’s all a big joke, which works for them, pandering to ugly prejudices, treating truth and lie as equals, and getting good ratings from pie-in-the-face lovers of almost all opinions. 

None of this is a secret. It’s an open conspiracy. Any of the candidates or reporters involved in this campy superficiality could break it down in a moment with consistent focus on what matters rather than just what gets laughter or emotional outburst. Covering the Republican debate of September 16, the New York Times the next day winkingly gave the game away in its print-edition subhead:

“Talk of Ability to Lead Takes a Backseat to Sharp Attacks”   

Then the story’s lede said, confusingly and contradictorily, treating name-calling as if it were a policy statement: “Determined to prove their mettle, several Republican presidential candidates showed new aggressiveness in lacing into Donald J. Trump on Wednesday night, seeking to elevate themselves as leaders of substance….” 

Say that again. “Lacing into” Trump is the equivalent of being a “leader of substance?” So says the Times, speaking as the organ of the permanent ruling class. So you’re on notice: it’s not only a joke, there’s not only nothing you can do about it, but you’re expected to accept this absurdist theatre as an affirmation that these people, no matter how silly or petty or nasty or vacant in style, still have the substance to serve honorably and effectively as President of the US. 

They don’t. Seriously, they don’t. Is there anything in the full transcript that makes you think any of them does? 

Republican policy: expand military, destroy Planned Parenthood? 

The reality of American military might is pretty simple, and has been for decades. The American military is the most powerful and most expensive military in the world. No one else is even close. China, at #2, spends about a third as much as the US spends on its military. The US is alone in the world in spending more than half its discretionary federal budget on its military. Currently that comes to $610 billion a year. That’s more than the combined military budgets of China, Russia, Saudi Arabia, France, United Kingdom, India, and Germany. (A different calculation puts US military spending at $711 billion a year, more than the military budgets of the nextthirteen countries’ military budgets combined.) 

Looked at another way, the US accounted for 39% of all the world’s military spending in 2012, while the combined military spending of Iran, Syria, and North Korea was less than 1% of the global total.

US military spending has more than doubled since 9/11. During the same period, US military has participated in the longest war in US history and several others (some ongoing), having won none of them and having little prospect of winning any soon. Judging by recent experience, the military option is not only too expensive, but almost entirely ineffective. 

And yet Republicans (and many Democrats) want more and more military, and they want it for no articulable purpose, they want it because they want it, and it polls well. (There is also a longstanding, specious argument about military decay due to the decline of military spending as a percentage of GDP, and the like, none of which changes the reality that the military has been expensive and all but useless – unless one argues the likely truth that using the military option has cost more and caused more devastation than just doing nothing would have cost.)

Anyone here against more war? Nope. 

Never mind any of that. The eleven Republicans in the recent debate all spoke up in 60-second soundbite answers to a simpleminded question, saying that they were all for more military, and more military adventurism (though some were somewhat less aggressively adventurous than others). That’s Republican leadership, lockstep for more war, with some difference of opinion on how much more war. Taking the prize for maximum hawk among the lesser hawks was Carly Fiorina (whose looks got almost as much debate time as militarism):

Russia is a bad actor, but Vladimir Putin is someone we should not talk to, because the only way he will stop is to sense strength and resolve on the other side, and we have all of that within our control. We could rebuild the Sixth Fleet. I will. We haven’t. We could rebuild the missile defense program. We haven’t. I will. We could also, to Senator Rubio’s point, give the Egyptians what they’ve asked for, which is intelligence. We could give the Jordanians what they’ve asked for—bombs and materiel. We have not supplied it…. I will. We could arm the Kurds. They’ve been asking us for three years. All of this is within our control.  

None of the ten men on the stage with Fiorina took serious issue with any of this. When the moderator asked about the recent Russian increase of its military presence in Syria, he framed it as “a threat to our national security” and he omitted Putin’s call for talks. No one corrected this deceptive spin, much less did anyone suggest that talking to your adversaries was at least as useful as talking to your friends. No one asked how Fiorina planned to pay for this military expansion, nor even how many billions she thought it would cost. And no one pointed out that arming the Kurds, whose diaspora reaches into Turkey, Syria, Iraq, and Iran, looked like a really good way to get a much bigger war going in the region, which is maybe her point.

Rand Paul came the closest to sort of opposing more militarism, pointing out that he would talk to Russia and China and Iran. He reminded people that he had opposed the Iraq War and American involvement in Syria’s civil war. Unlike others, Paul said: “I don’t think we need to be reckless.” 

America’s war on drugs creates more Republican ambivalence

Rand Paul expressed outright opposition to the war on drugs, as he has for some time, pointing out that the war on drugs is effectively a war on poor people and a war on people of color. He argued that the federal government should have no role in drug law enforcement, that under the Tenth Amendment to the Constitution that role properly belongs to the states, leaving them free to experiment as Colorado is doing (under the shadow of federal intervention). Paul also nailed Jeb Bush, who admits to smoking marijuana, as one of those privileged white kids who never had to worry about going to jail (any more than his drug-using brother George did). 

Fiorina supported Paul on the drug war. Last May, in a conference call with reporters promoting her book, she said: “Drug addiction shouldn’t be criminalized.” But she said saying that smoking marijuana was like drinking a beer was a bad message, and that marijuana now was not the same as it was 40 years ago, which drew strong laughter from the California audience. Fiorina referred to the story of her step-daughter in her book, where she spoke of not seeing the signs of the step-daughter’s addiction until it killed her at age 34. Fiorina did not make any connection to her step-daughter’s going into rehab three times and working in a pharmaceutical sales job. Nor did she make any connection between her step-daughter’s situation and her never being arrested or jailed. 

When it came to the war on Planned Parenthood, the other half of the Republicans’ two-point consensus, Fiorina was on the front line, firing wildly. She was not alone, Planned Parenthood was named 23 times in all by her and others. She linked attacking Planned Parenthood to attacking Iran, the first as a defense of national character, the second as a defense of national security. Then she cited a controversial, spurious videotape and demagogued it shamelessly, reaping sustained applause:

As regards Planned Parenthood, anyone who has watched this videotape – I dare Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama to watch these tapes. Watch a fully formed fetus on the table, its heart beating, its legs kicking, while someone says we have to keep it alive to harvest its brain. This is about the character of our nation, and if we will not stand up and force President Obama to veto this bill, shame on us.

No one at the debate pointed out that the videotape in question was attached to a faked tape indicting Planned Parenthood falsely. No one pointed out that no one knows where the video with the fetus came from or what it actually shows or who is speaking on it. And no one pointed out that Planned Parenthood has adamantly denied the accusations of harvesting. So Fiorina was demonstrating her presidential ability to attack with as much solid evidence as George Bush used to go to war on Iraq. 

Republican candidates: is there any there there? 

Given the conventional wisdom about Donald Trump being a showman without qualification to be President, even though he’s the leading candidate in the polls by far, one might have expected at least one of the other Republicans to try a more substantial tactic, like appearing to be the grown-up in the room. Maybe some did try, but none succeeded, since being the grown-up requires the willingness to confront reality honestly and that was rare in this debate. 

Perhaps the most hilarious detachment from reality was when Jeb Bush said of his brother the former President: “He kept us safe.” Hello, Jeb? Your brother was in charge when 9/11 happened, your brother chose to take no action when briefed of the imminence of an attack on the US, your brother didn’t keep us safe before 9/11 (when the information needs was available but unconnected), and your brother has hardly made us more safe since 9/11. George Bush squandered thousands of innocent lives and trillions of tax dollars for the sake of strutting puffed up on an aircraft carrier. George Bush took a budget surplus and turned it into a series of devastating deficits that have ballooned the national debt to the point where a former chairman if the joint chiefs of staff called it “the most significant threat to our national security.” 

He did not keep us safe, ever. 

In a far less serious moment, Fiorina and Trump exchanged accusations that the other was an atrocious business person and a bad manager. No factual basis was introduced to measure the insults. The likelihood seems to be that they were both right. 

The absence of any sensible, engaged discussion of what to do about climate change (not all the candidates are outright deniers) provoked some funny comments on the twitternet. One featured Marco Rubio’s comment, “America is not a planet.” 

For all their faults, and their absence of strengths, none of the candidates was as baldly unwilling to treat the selection of the next President seriously as CNN. There is no excuse for CNN asking silly, irrelevant, insubstantial questions. There is no excuse for CNN not asking questions about the important priorities of our time. And in this day and age, there is no excuse for CNN not fact-checking in real time, and holding the candidates to account (they don’t all tell the truth all the time). Maybe media responsibility would make no difference, but we can’t know till it’s tried.

Meanwhile, early, unofficial, and unscientific returns after the debate show Trump farther in the lead than ever. The almost instant Drudge poll results put Trump at 53%, followed by Fiorina at 21%. Way behind them at 6% are Ted Cruz and Rubio, then Rand Paul and Ben Carson at 4%. At the bottom, with 1% or less, are Bush, Chris Christie, John Kasich, Scott Walker, and Mike Huckabee.   

Another unreliable real world indicator, the tweet count, also shows Trump with an overwhelming overall lead by one measure. An assessment of the debate in Forbes finds Fiorina and Ben Carson in a virtual twitter tie, with Trump a distant third and the rest much farther back. International Business Times also scored it for Fiorina, with John Kasich second.  

Some of this is the result of self-fulfilling prophecy, as CNN managed to give Trump the frontrunner more time than anyone else. Surely there’s good reason and many methods for CNN to give the impression of fairness and neutrality by giving candidates close to equal time. 

About an hour into the debate, Bernie Sanders tweeted: “War, war, war. When do we get to their other major priority: tax breaks for billionaires?” Hillary Clinton tweeted in Spanish about the right to speak any language in the US. 

This debate didn’t get to tax breaks for billionaires, and there was no question about that issue, so people could be left with the impression that these Republicans might at least be willing to let the rich suffer in their present condition. And if the majority of Americans end up believing enough things that are not true, the Republicans will win the presidency in a walk.



William M. Boardman has over 40 years experience in theatre, radio, TV, print journalism, and non-fiction, including 20 years in the Vermont judiciary. He has received honors from Writers Guild of America, Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Vermont Life magazine, and an Emmy Award nomination from the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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Noam Chomsky: It's the US, Not Iran, That Is the Main Threat to World Peace Print
Friday, 18 September 2015 09:00

Prashad writes: "To get the wider context of the Iranian deal, I spoke to Professor Noam Chomsky, who laid out the geopolitical and historical context for this important agreement."

Professor Noam Chomsky, linguist, philosopher, cognitive scientist and activist. (photo: Va Shiva)
Professor Noam Chomsky, linguist, philosopher, cognitive scientist and activist. (photo: Va Shiva)


Noam Chomsky: It's the US, Not Iran, That Is the Main Threat to World Peace

By Vijay Prashad, CounterPunch

18 September 15

 

On September 2, the United States’ support for the Iran nuclear deal was secured. President Barack Obama’s team negotiated the deal along with other countries of the P5+1 (China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom, the U.S. and Germany). The Republicans in the U.S. Congress had threatened to pass a resolution that would block Obama’s signature on such a deal. Obama had said he would veto any Bill that constrained his hand to sign that deal. He needed 34 Senators to back him in order to secure his veto. When Senator Barbara Mikulski of Maryland said she would support the President, the deal was safe.

Phyllis Bennis of the Institute for Policy Studies in Washington, D.C., told me that Barbara Mikulski’s vote was “a big relief”. She said that the Iran deal was “a huge victory for diplomacy over the real threat of war with Iran”. Trita Parsi and Reza Marashi of the National Iranian American Council agreed. Obama, they said, “has proven to the U.S. that security is better achieved through diplomacy than through militarism”. Emad Kiyaei of the American Iranian Council told me just after Barbara Mikulski’s announcement: “There is no ‘better’ deal and the opposition has not introduced a viable alternative, except more coercive policies that to date have not slowed—rather accelerated—Iran’s nuclear programme.”

In late August, Obama suggested that those who agreed with him were “the crazies”. This suggested the strong push the White House had made to get the deal through. No wonder that the American Enterprise Institute’s Danielle Pletka told me that Obama was more belligerent with the Congress than the Iranian negotiators. “I only wish the President had brought the same tenacity and purpose to the Iran talks,” she told me, “than he brought to bludgeoning the representatives of the American people.”

To get the wider context of the Iranian deal, I spoke to Professor Noam Chomsky, who laid out the geopolitical and historical context for this important agreement. — Vijay Prashad


rofessor Chomsky, how would you characterise the Republican Party’s reaction to the Iran nuclear deal?

The Republicans are almost unanimously opposed to the nuclear deal. The current Republican primaries illustrate the proclaimed reasons. Ted Cruz, considered one of the intellectuals of the group, warned that Iran may still be able to produce nuclear weapons, and it could use one to set off an electromagnetic pulse that “would take down the electrical grid of the entire eastern seaboard” of the U.S., killing “tens of millions of Americans”. The two most likely winners of the primary, Jeb Bush and Scott Walker, are battling over whether to bomb Iran immediately after being elected or after the first Cabinet meeting. The one candidate with some foreign policy experience, Lindsey Graham, described the deal as “a death sentence for the State of Israel,” which came as a surprise to Israeli intelligence and strategic analysts—and which Graham too knows to be utter nonsense, raising immediate questions about actual motives.

It is important to bear in mind that the Republicans have long abandoned the pretence of functioning as a normal parliamentary party. Rather, they have become a “radical insurgency” that scarcely seeks to participate in normal parliamentary politics, as observed by the respected conservative political commentator Norman Ornstein of the right-wing American Enterprise Institute. Since Ronald Reagan, the leadership has plunged so far into the pockets of the very rich and the corporate sector that they can attract votes only by mobilising sectors of the population that have not previously been an organised political force, among them extremist evangelical Christians, now probably the majority of Republican voters; remnants of the former slave-holding States; nativists who are terrified that “they” are taking our white Christian Anglo-Saxon country away from us; and others who turn the Republican primaries into spectacles remote from the mainstream of modern society—though not the mainstream of the most powerful country in world history.

The Republican suspicion of Iran seems to be shared across sections of the political spectrum, even among those who are for the deal. Could you address that suspicion of Iran?

Across the spectrum, there is general agreement with the “pragmatic” conclusion of General Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, that the Vienna deal “did not prevent the U.S. from striking Iranian facilities if officials decide that it is cheating on the agreement”, even though a unilateral military strike is “far less likely” if Iran behaves. Former Clinton and Obama Middle East negotiator Dennis Ross recommends that “Iran must have no doubt that if we see it moving towards a weapon, that would trigger the use of force” even after the termination of the deal, when Iran is free to do what it wants. In fact, the existence of a termination point 15 years hence is “the greatest single problem with the agreement,” he adds, recommending that the U.S. provide Israel with B-52 bombers to protect itself before that terrifying date arrives.

The underlying assumption here is that Iran is a serious threat, that it would attack Israel with nuclear weapons. How credible is that threat?

To be sure, Israel faces the “existential threat” of Iranian pronouncements: Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and former President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad famously threatened it with destruction. Except that they didn’t—and if they had, it would be of little moment. They predicted that “Under God’s grace [the Zionist regime] will be wiped off the map.” Another translation suggests that Ahmadinejad actually said that Israel “must vanish from the page of time”. This is a citation of a statement made by Ayatollah Khomeini, during a period when Iran and Israel were tacitly allied. In other words, they hope that regime change will someday take place. They do not say that they will attack Israel either now or later.

Ahmadinejad’s threats fall far short of regular U.S.-Israeli direct calls for regime change in Iran, not to speak of actions to implement regime change going back to the actual “regime change” of 1953, when the U.S. organised a military coup to overthrow the Iranian parliamentary regime and install the dictatorship of the Shah, who proceeded with one of the world’s worst human rights records. These crimes were known to readers of Amnesty International and other human rights organisations, but not to readers of the U.S. press, which has indeed devoted plenty of space to Iranian human rights violations, but only after 1979, when the U.S.-imposed regime was overthrown. The instructive facts are documented carefully in a study by Mansour Farhang and William Dorman.

None of this is a departure from the norm. The U.S., as is well known, holds the world championship in regime change, and Israel is no laggard either. The most destructive of Israel’s invasions of Lebanon, in 1982, was explicitly aimed at regime change, along with securing its hold on the Occupied Territories. The pretexts offered were very thin, and collapsed at once. That too is not unusual and pretty much independent of the nature of the society, from the laments in the Declaration of Independence about the “merciless Indian savages” to Hitler’s defence of Germany from the “wild terror” of the Poles.

No serious analyst believes that Iran would ever use, or even threaten to use, a nuclear weapon if it had one, thus facing instant destruction. There is, however, real concern that a nuclear weapon might fall into jehadi hands—not from Iran, where the threat is minuscule, but from the U.S. ally Pakistan, where it is very real.

In the journal of the (British) Royal Institute of International Affairs, two leading Pakistani nuclear scientists, Pervez Hoodbhoy and Zia Mian, write that increasing fears of “militants seizing nuclear weapons or materials and unleashing nuclear terrorism [have led to] the creation of a dedicated force of over 20,000 troops to guard nuclear facilities [though] there is no reason to assume, however, that this force would be immune to the problems associated with the units guarding regular military facilities,” which have frequently suffered attacks with “insider help”. In brief, the problem is real, but is displaced by fantasies concocted for other reasons.

Professor Chomsky, the U.S. Ambassador to the U.N., Samantha Power, has said that the problem is the “instability that Iran fuels beyond its nuclear programme”. She echoed U.S. Defence Secretary Ashton Carter, who went to Israel’s northern border and said, “We will continue to help Israel counter Iran’s malign influence” by supporting Hizbollah. The U.S., he intimated, reserved the right to use military force against Iran. Could you comment on this?

Power’s usage is standard: she defines “stabilisation” according to a peculiar logic. For instance, U.S. policy in Iraq is defined as stabilisation. What does that stabilisation look like? The U.S. invades a country, with hundreds of thousands killed and millions becoming refugees, along with barbarous torture and destruction that Iraqis compare to the Mongol invasions, leaving Iraq the unhappiest country in the world according to WIN/Gallup polls. It also ignited sectarian conflict that is tearing the region to shreds and laying the basis for the ISIS [Islamic State of Iraq and Syria] monstrosity along with its Saudi ally. That is stabilisation. The standard usage sometimes reaches levels that are almost surreal, as when liberal commentator James Chace, former editor of Foreign Affairs, explains that the U.S. sought to “destabilise a freely elected Marxist government in Chile” because “we were determined to seek stability” [under the Pinochet dictatorship].

Let us consider the case of Hizbollah and Hamas. Both emerged in resistance to U.S.-backed Israeli violence and aggression, which vastly exceeds anything attributed to these organisations. Whatever one thinks about them, or other beneficiaries of Iranian support, Iran hardly ranks high in support for terror worldwide, even within the Muslim world. Among Islamic states, Saudi Arabia is far in the lead as a sponsor of Islamic terror, not only by direct funding by wealthy Saudis and others in the Gulf but even more by the missionary zeal with which the Saudis promulgate their extremist Wahhabi-Salafi version of Islam through Quranic schools, mosques, clerics, and other means available to a religious dictatorship with enormous oil wealth. The ISIS is an extremist offshoot of Saudi religious extremism and its fanning of jehadi flames.

In generation of Islamic terror, however, nothing can compare with the U.S. “war on terror”, which has helped to spread the plague from a small tribal area in Afghanistan-Pakistan to a vast region from West Africa to South-East Asia. The invasion of Iraq alone escalated terror attacks by a factor of seven in the first year, well beyond even what had been predicted by intelligence agencies. Drone warfare against marginalised and oppressed tribal societies also elicits demands for revenge, as ample evidence indicates.

The two Iranian clients [Hizbollah and Hamas] also share the crime of winning the popular vote in the only free elections held in the Arab world. Hizbollah is guilty of the even more heinous crime of compelling Israel to withdraw from its occupation of southern Lebanon in violation of [U.N.] Security Council orders dating back decades, an illegal regime of terror punctuated with episodes of extreme violence, murder and destruction.

Iran’s “fuelling instability” is particularly dramatic in Iraq, where, among other crimes, it alone came at once to the aid of Kurds defending themselves from the ISIS invasion and it is building a $2.5 billion power plant to try to bring electrical power back to the level before the U.S. invasion.

The other argument made here is that Iran has a terrible human rights record. How can the U.S. cut a deal with such a state?

Leon Wieseltier, contributing editor of the venerable liberal journal The Atlantic, said that the U.S. should pursue “an American-sponsored alliance between Israel and the Sunni states”. This is in reaction to his and others’ outrage that the U.S. would make a deal with the “contemptible” regime in Iran. Wieseltier can barely conceal his visceral hatred for all things Iranian. With a straight face, this respected liberal intellectual recommends that Saudi Arabia, which makes Iran look like a virtual paradise in comparison, and Israel, with its vicious crimes in Gaza and elsewhere, should ally to teach Iran good behaviour. Perhaps the recommendation is not entirely unreasonable when we consider the human rights records of the regimes the U.S. has imposed and supported throughout the world. The Iranian government is no doubt a threat to its own people, though it regrettably breaks no records in this regard and does not descend to the level of favoured allies [of the U.S.]. But that cannot be the concern of the U.S., and surely not Israel and Saudi Arabia.

It might also be useful to recall —surely Iranians do—that not a day has passed since 1953 when the U.S. was not severely harming Iranians. As soon as Iranians overthrew the hated U.S.-imposed regime of the Shah in 1979, Washington at once turned to supporting Saddam Hussein’s murderous attack on Iran. Ronald Reagan went so far as to deny Saddam’s major crime, his chemical warfare assault on Iraq’s Kurdish population, which Reagan blamed on Iran. When Saddam was tried for crimes under U.S. auspices, this horrendous crime, and others in which the U.S. was complicit, were carefully excluded from the charges, restricted to one of his very minor crimes, the murder of 148 Shias in 1982, a footnote to his gruesome record.

Saddam was such a valued friend of Washington that he was even granted a privilege accorded otherwise only to Israel: to attack a U.S. naval vessel with impunity, killing 37 crewmen—the USS Stark, in 1987. Israel did the same in its 1967 attack on the USS Liberty. Iran pretty much conceded defeat shortly after when the U.S. launched Operation Praying Mantis against Iranian ships and oil platforms in Iranian territorial waters. The Operation culminated in the shooting down of an Iranian civilian airliner in Iranian airspace by USS Vincennes, under no credible threat, with 290 killed, and the subsequent granting of a Legion of Merit award to the Vincennes commander for “exceptionally meritorious conduct” and for maintaining a “calm and professional atmosphere” during the period when the attack on the airliner took place. “We can only stand in awe of such display of American exceptionalism!” Thill Raghu commented.

After the war, the U.S. continued to support Iran’s primary enemy, Saddam Hussein’s Iraq. President Bush I, the statesman Bush, even invited Iraqi nuclear engineers to the U.S. for advanced training in weapons production, an extremely serious threat to Iran. Sanctions against Iran were intensified, including against foreign firms dealing with Iran, along with actions to bar Iran from the international financial system.

In recent years, the hostility has extended to sabotage, murder of nuclear scientists [presumably by Israel], and cyberwar, openly proclaimed with pride. The Pentagon regards cyberwar as an act of war, justifying a military response, with the accord of NATO [North Atlantic Treaty Organisation], which affirmed in September 2014 that cyberattacks might trigger the collective defence obligations of the NATO powers. When we are the target that is, not the perpetrators.

It is only fair, however, to add that there have been breaks in the pattern. President Bush II provided several major gifts to Iran by destroying its major enemies, Saddam Hussein and the Taliban. He even placed Iran’s Iraqi enemy under Iranian influence after the U.S. defeat, which was so severe that the U.S. had to abandon its officially declared goals of establishing military bases and ensuring privileged access to Iraq’s vast oil resources for U.S. corporations.

There seems to be little evidence that the Iranians would ever use nuclear weapons. In 2005, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei delivered a fatwa (decree) against nuclear weapons. Why is there this belief that the Iranians are eager almost to use their non-existent nuclear weapons?

We can decide for ourselves how credible the denials from Iranian leaders are, but that they had such intentions in the past is beyond question, since it was asserted openly on the highest authority, which informed foreign journalists that Iran would develop nuclear weapons “certainly, and sooner than one thinks”. The father of Iran’s nuclear energy programme and former head of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organisation was confident that the leadership’s plan “was to build a nuclear bomb”. A Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) report also had “no doubt” that Iran would develop nuclear weapons if neighbouring countries did [as they have].

All of this was under the Shah, the highest authority just quoted. That is, during the period when high U.S. officials—Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Henry Kissinger and others—were urging the Shah to proceed with nuclear programmes, and pressuring universities to accommodate these efforts. As part of these efforts, my own university, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), made a deal with the Shah to admit Iranian students to the nuclear engineering programme in return for grants from the Shah, over the very strong objections of the student body, but with comparably strong faculty support, in a meeting that older faculty will doubtless remember well. Asked later why he supported these programmmes under the Shah but opposed them now, Kissinger responded honestly that Iran was an ally then.

Putting aside absurdities, what is the real threat of Iran that inspires such fear and fury? A natural place to turn for an answer is, again, U.S. intelligence. Recall its analysis that Iran poses no military threat, that its strategic doctrines are defensive, and its nuclear programmmes [with no effort to produce bombs, as far as intelligence can determine] are “a central part of its deterrent strategy”.

Who, then, would be concerned by an Iranian deterrent? The answer is plain: the rogue states that rampage in the region and do not want to tolerate any impediment to their reliance on aggression and violence. Far in the lead in this regard are the U.S. and Israel, with Saudi Arabia trying its best to join the club with its invasion of Bahrain to support the crushing of the reform movement by the dictatorship and now its murderous assault on Yemen, accelerating the humanitarian catastrophe there.

Could you talk a bit more about these “rogue states”? After all, this is not the typical characterisation of rogue states, a term developed in 1994 by U.S. National Security Adviser Anthony Lake to refer to North Korea, Cuba, Iraq, Iran and Libya. Your list does not include these powers. It has the U.S., Israel and Saudi Arabia.

Fifteen years ago, the Professor of the Science of Government at Harvard, the prominent political analyst Samuel Huntington, warned in the major establishment journal, Foreign Affairs, that for much of the world the U.S. was “becoming the rogue superpower” considered “the single greatest external threat to their societies”. His words were echoed shortly after by the president of the American Political Science Association, Robert Jervis, who observed, “In the eyes of much of the world, in fact, the prime rogue state today is the U.S.”

Global opinion supports this judgment by a substantial margin. According to the leading Western polling agencies (WIN/Gallup), the greatest threat to world peace is the U.S. Far below in second place is Pakistan, its ranking probably inflated by the Indian vote. Iran is ranked below, along with Israel, North Korea and Afghanistan.

The U.S., by its own admission, is the gravest threat to world peace. That is the clear meaning of the insistence of the leadership and the political class, in media and commentary, that the U.S. reserves the right to resort to force if it determines, unilaterally, that Iran is violating some commitment. It is also a long-standing official stand of liberal democrats, for example the Clinton Doctrine, that the U.S. is entitled to resort to “unilateral use of military power” even for such purposes as to ensure “uninhibited access to key markets, energy supplies and strategic resources”, let alone alleged “security” or “humanitarian” concerns. And adherence to the doctrine is well confirmed in practice, as need hardly be discussed among people willing to look at the facts of current history.

Turning to the next obvious question, what in fact is the Iranian threat? Why, for example, are Israel and Saudi Arabia trembling in fear over the threat of Iran? Whatever the threat is, it can hardly be military. U.S. intelligence years ago informed Congress that Iran had very low military expenditures by the standards of the region and that its strategic doctrines are defensive, designed to deter aggression. Intelligence reports further confirmed that there was no evidence that Iran was pursuing a nuclear weapons programme, and that “Iran’s nuclear programme and its willingness to keep open the possibility of developing nuclear weapons is a central part of its deterrent strategy.”

The authoritative Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) review of global armament ranks the U.S., as usual, far in the lead in military expenditures, with China in second place at about one-third of U.S. expenditures. Far below are Russia and Saudi Arabia, well above any Western European state. Iran is scarcely mentioned. Full details are provided in an April study of the Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), which finds “a conclusive case that the Arab Gulf states have … an overwhelming advantage [over] Iran in both military spending and access to modern arms”. Iran’s military spending is a fraction of Saudi Arabia’s, and is far below even the spending of the United Arab Emirates (UAE). Altogether, the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states—Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE—outspend Iran on arms by a factor of eight, an imbalance that goes back decades. The CSIS observes further that “the Arab Gulf states have acquired and are acquiring some of the most advanced and effective weapons in the world [while] Iran has essentially been forced to live in the past, often relying on systems originally delivered at the time of the Shah”, which are virtually obsolete. The imbalance is, of course, even greater with Israel, which, along with the most advanced U.S. weaponry and its role as a virtual offshore military base of the global superpower, has a huge stock of nuclear weapons.

Finally, could you say a little on what you just mentioned—namely, on Israel’s stockpile of nuclear weapons?

Israel, of course, is one of the three nuclear powers, along with India and Pakistan, whose nuclear weapons programmes have been abetted by the U.S. and who refuse to sign the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif welcomed the nuclear deal and said that it was now the turn of the “holdout”, namely Israel. The regular five-year NPT review conference ended in failure this April. One of the main reasons for the failure was that the U.S. once again blocked the efforts to move toward a Weapons of Mass Destruction Free Zone in the Middle East [West Asia]. These efforts have been led by Egypt and other Arab states for 20 years. Two of the leading figures promoting them at the NPT and other U.N. agencies, and at the Pugwash conferences, Jayantha Dhanapala and Sergio Duarte, observe that “the successful adoption in 1995 of the resolution on the establishment of a zone free of weapons of mass destruction in the Middle East was the main element of a package that permitted the indefinite extension of the NPT”, the most important arms control treaty, which, were it adhered to, could end the scourge of nuclear weapons. Repeatedly, implementation of the resolution has been blocked by the U.S., most recently by Barack Obama in 2010 and again in 2015. Dhanapala and Duarte comment that the effort was again blocked “on behalf of a state that is not a party to the NPT and is widely believed to be the only one in the region possessing nuclear weapons”, a polite and understated reference to Israel. They “hope that this failure will not be the coup de grâce to the two longstanding NPT objectives of accelerated progress on nuclear disarmament and on establishing a Middle Eastern WMD-free zone”. Their article, in the journal of the Arms Control Association, is entitled: “Is There a Future for the NPT?”

A nuclear weapons-free zone in the Middle East is a straightforward way to address whatever threat Iran allegedly poses. And a great deal more is at stake in Washington’s continuing sabotage of the effort, protecting its Israeli client. This is not the only case when opportunities to end the alleged Iranian threat have been undermined by Washington, raising further questions about just what is actually at stake.

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A Canadian Manifesto for the Planet and One Another Print
Friday, 18 September 2015 08:56

Excerpt: "The time has come for energy democracy: We believe not just in changes to our energy sources, but that wherever possible communities should collectively control these new energy systems."

A shift to 100 percent renewable energy is within our grasp but must begin now. (photo: Bayne Stanley/The Canadian Press)
A shift to 100 percent renewable energy is within our grasp but must begin now. (photo: Bayne Stanley/The Canadian Press)


A Canadian Manifesto for the Planet and One Another

By Naomi Klein, David Suzuki, Leonard Cohen, Donald Sutherland and Ellen Page, The Globe and Mail

18 September 15

 

e could live in a country powered entirely by renewable energy, woven together by accessible public transit, in which the opportunities of this transition are designed to eliminate racial and gender inequality. Caring for one another and caring for the planet could be the economy’s fastest growing sectors. Many more people could have higher-wage jobs with fewer work hours, leaving us ample time to enjoy our loved ones and flourish in our communities.

Canada is not this place today – but it can be.

The time for this great transition is short. Climate scientists have told us this is the decade to take decisive action to prevent catastrophic global warming. That means small steps will no longer suffice.

So we need to leap.

This leap must begin by respecting the inherent rights and title of the original caretakers of this land. Indigenous communities have been at the forefront of protecting rivers, coasts, forests and lands from out-of-control industrial activity. We can bolster this role by fully implementing the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.

Moved by the treaties that form the legal basis of this country and bind us to share the land “for as long as the sun shines, the grass grows and the rivers flow,” we want energy sources that will last for time immemorial and never run out or poison the land. Technological breakthroughs have brought this dream within reach. The latest research shows it is feasible to get 100 per cent of our electricity from renewable resources within two decades. We demand that this shift begin now.

There is no longer an excuse for building new infrastructure projects that lock us into increased extraction decades into the future. That applies equally to oil and gas pipelines; fracking in New Brunswick, Quebec and British Columbia; increased tanker traffic off our coasts; and to Canadian-owned mining projects the world over.

The time has come for energy democracy: We believe not just in changes to our energy sources, but that wherever possible communities should collectively control these new energy systems. We can create innovative ownership structures: democratically run, paying living wages and keeping much-needed revenue in communities. And indigenous peoples should be first to receive public support for their own clean energy projects. So should communities currently dealing with heavy health impacts of polluting industrial activity.

Power generated this way will not merely light our homes but also redistribute wealth, deepen our democracy, strengthen our economy and start to heal the wounds that date back to this country’s founding.

A leap to a non-polluting economy can create countless other multiple “wins.” We want training and resources for workers in carbon-intensive jobs, ensuring they are fully able to participate in the clean-energy economy. High-speed rail powered by renewables and affordable public transit can unite every community in this country – in place of more cars, pipelines and exploding trains that endanger and divide us.

Since this leap is beginning late, we need to invest in our decaying public infrastructure so it can withstand increasingly frequent extreme weather events.

Moving to a far more localized and ecologically based agricultural system would reduce reliance on fossil fuels, capture carbon in the soil and absorb sudden shocks in the global supply – as well as produce healthier and more affordable food for everyone.

We call for an end to all trade deals that interfere with our attempts to rebuild local economies, regulate corporations and stop damaging extractive projects. Rebalancing the scales of justice, we should ensure immigration status and full protection for all workers.

Shifting to an economy in balance with the Earth’s limits also means expanding the economic sectors that are already low-carbon: caregiving, teaching, social work, the arts and public-interest media. Following on Quebec’s lead, a national child-care program is long past due. All this work, much of it performed by women, is the glue that builds humane, resilient communities – and we will need our communities to be as strong as possible in the face of the rocky future we have already locked in.

We declare that “austerity” – which has systematically attacked low-carbon sectors such as education and health care, while starving public transit and forcing reckless energy privatizations – is a fossilized form of thinking that has become a threat to life on Earth. The money we need to pay for this great transformation is available – we just need the right policies to release it. Such as an end to fossil-fuel subsidies. Financial transaction taxes. Increased resource royalties. Higher income taxes on corporations and wealthy people. A progressive carbon tax. Cuts to military spending. All of these are based on a simple “polluter pays” principle and hold enormous promise.

One thing is clear: Public scarcity in times of unprecedented private wealth is a manufactured crisis, designed to extinguish our dreams before they have a chance to be born.

Those dreams go well beyond this manifesto. We call for town hall meetings across the country where residents can gather to democratically define what a genuine leap to the next economy means in their communities.

Inevitably, this bottom-up revival will lead to a renewal of democracy at every level of government, working swiftly toward a system in which every vote counts and corporate money is removed from political campaigns.

This is a great deal to take on all at once, but such are the times in which we live.

The drop in oil prices has temporarily relieved the pressure to dig up fossil fuels as rapidly as high-risk technologies will allow. This pause in frenetic expansion should not be viewed as a crisis, but as a gift. It has given us a rare moment to look at what we have become – and decide to change.

And so we call on all those seeking political office to seize this opportunity. This is our sacred duty to those this country harmed in the past, to those suffering needlessly in the present and to all who have a right to a bright and safe future.

Now is the time for boldness.

Now is the time to leap.

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An Open Letter to America's "Illegal Aliens" Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=36478"><span class="small">John Kiriakou, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Thursday, 17 September 2015 13:34

Kiriakou writes: "Here in the United States we've entered something we like to call the 'silly season.' That's when anybody with narcissistic personality disorder and lots of money can run for president."

A group of people hold up an American flag at a demonstration celebrating immigrants. (photo: Getty)
A group of people hold up an American flag at a demonstration celebrating immigrants. (photo: Getty)


An Open Letter to America's "Illegal Aliens"

By John Kiriakou, Reader Supported News

17 September 15

 

ear Friends,

Here in the United States we’ve entered something we like to call the “silly season.” That’s when anybody with narcissistic personality disorder and lots of money can run for president. It’s when the most hate is spewed as these would-be leaders try to set themselves apart. As a result, in the Republican Party, at least, they compete to see who can be the most conservative, the least tolerant, and the most exclusionary. I’m sorry to say that you take the brunt of the abuse that results.

I can only imagine what it must feel like to be on the receiving end of institutionalized hate, having to hear from people who want to lead the world’s most powerful country that you are not good enough to live here, that you’re rapists, criminals, and drug dealers, and that we ought to go to the trouble and taxpayer expense of building a wall to keep you out, despite the facts that many of you have children who are American citizens and that our economy simply could not run without your participation in it.

I want to tell you that, while it may be difficult, you should ignore these imbeciles. I know from first-hand experience that you are exactly the kind of people we need in this country. You see, many members of my family arrived in the United States as “illegal immigrants,” even as recently as the 1960s.

When I was a kid, my father’s cousin Angelo was a member of the Greek Merchant Marine. One day in 1968, Angelo’s ship came into port in Norfolk, Virginia. The ship’s captain approached Angelo and told him that he was the only person the captain could trust. “All these men will jump ship,” he said. “You’re the only one I can trust to stand guard.”

Angelo went right over the side of the ship as soon as the captain went to bed for the evening. He swam to shore, dried off, hitchhiked to Richmond, Virginia, and found a Greek coffeehouse. There he found friends and compatriots who put him on a train and sent him to my grandparents’ house in Farrell, Pennsylvania. I remember being four years old and Angelo hiding in the broom closet in my grandparents’ kitchen. I also remember an Immigration officer banging on the front door of the house, and shouting, “We know he’s in there!”

My grandfather, who had a third-grade education and could barely read and write, knew enough to shout back that nobody was getting into the house without a warrant.

Angelo moved from house to house among my relatives in Pennsylvania and Washington, DC over the next couple of years. He worked as a dishwasher and cook in restaurants and he learned to cut hair. He waited for a federal amnesty and was finally “legalized.” He became an American citizen a few years after that.

Angelo lived the American dream. He became a barber in the Pentagon barbershop, bought a nice middle-class home in Springfield, Virginia, married, and had a son. It was all he ever wanted.

Angelo is just like you. He wanted to make a decent wage, to support his family, and to live in peace. He was happy to pay his taxes, and he was proud to be a productive member of society. U.S. immigration law was behind the times. It discriminated against Greeks just like it now discriminates against people from Latin America and elsewhere. I don’t see coming to this country without a visa as a violation of the law. I see it as defiance of an unjust law.

Our politicians have had ample opportunity, over many years, to come up with some sort of “guest worker” plan that would have allowed hardworking undocumented workers to pay their taxes and legalize their status. That hasn’t happened. It’s not your fault. It’s ours.

So my advice is this: Don’t listen to our politicians. If your lives are so bad in your home country that risking a dangerous desert crossing is more appealing than remaining where you are, please come. Ours is an immigrant country. That’s what makes us great. Mi casa es su casa. Beiti beitak. My house is your house. Welcome to the United States.



Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

John Kiriakou is an associate fellow with the Institute for Policy Studies. He is a former CIA counterterrorism officer and a former senior investigator with the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

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To Fight Inequality, Turn On Clean Energy Everywhere Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=24129"><span class="small">Mark Ruffalo, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Thursday, 17 September 2015 13:26

Ruffalo writes: "As the nations of the world tackle the problem of inequality, remember this: clean energy is part of the solution."

Solar panels at a village in Indonesia. (photo: Asian Development Bank)
Solar panels at a village in Indonesia. (photo: Asian Development Bank)


To Fight Inequality, Turn On Clean Energy Everywhere

By Mark Ruffalo, Reader Supported News

17 September 15

 

s the nations of the world tackle the problem of inequality, remember this: clean energy is part of the solution.

Much of the world is still held captive by last century's dirty-energy system that has a long history of locking inequality into place, economically and politically. Look across the world and you will find the vast majority of people subject to the whims of a very few. And they are forced to pay exorbitant prices just to keep their lights on and water flowing. Here in the United States, this dirty, old-energy system has protected the profits of special interests while continuing to pollute our water and air -- essentially making the rest of us carry the health costs. This hits the poorest the hardest, whose asthma rates are skyrocketing and who have to choose between their health and putting food on the table. And this system has propped up despots and oligarchs, creating some of the least egalitarian, least democratic nations in the world.

But what if everyone had the freedom to create and control their own energy? Imagine a world where we were not dependent on ever-more costly fuels controlled by the ever-shrinking few? Imagine a world where the "fuel" was limitless, free and healthy.

This is not a pipe dream. It is happening in communities around this country and world, who are embracing energy democracy. In New York State, organizations like PUSH Buffalo are helping families reduce high energy bills through efficiency and solar energy, while creating new living-wage jobs for local residents. In Los Angeles, LAANE and the unions came together to triple the budget for energy efficiency and create a pipeline into good jobs targeted to those workers who have been on the bench the longest. In Iowa and South Dakota, residents are harnessing the wind to produce more than a quarter of their electricity and creating economic opportunity for farmers in the process. In Arizona, Barry Goldwater, Jr. is fighting for rooftop solar because, as a standard bearer for the Republican Party, he believes every American has the right to capture and use energy from the sun. In South Carolina, Boeing employees make airplanes using clean renewable energy, strengthening pathways to the middle class through manufacturing.

From neighborhoods to states, from the suburbs to the city, and from farms to factories, people are blazing a clean-energy path to economic growth and greater equality. Affordable clean energy for everyone is 100 percent possible and it is up to our leaders in government, business, and in communities around the world to make it so.

When people are provided the opportunity to produce their own energy in a way that grows the economy and protects their health and the environment, every person has a chance at a better life. And since the fuels involved -- like the sun and the wind -- are free and can never run out, clean energy opens the door to generations of sustainable growth. This is exactly the kind of development the United Nations is trying to achieve through its new global Sustainable Development Goals.

And as clean technology's costs continue to fall, a wonderful possibility emerges: developing countries can leapfrog fossil fuels entirely, skipping the dirty-energy sources of the past and going right to the cutting-edge clean and renewable-energy sources of the future. It happened with cell phones -- developing countries might not have much in the way of landline systems, but everyone has a mobile. If it happens with clean energy and localized ownership is prioritized, this world will be a very different place.

And just as mobile phones have been a force for democratization, so too will local renewable energy. Just imagine a world where the people own and control their own energy, instead of having to rely on a troubled regime or faraway company for power.

More than a billion people still lack access to electricity. It's hard to envision ending poverty, hunger, and want -- or achieving any of the other Sustainable Development Goals -- if a billion people can't turn on a light when they need one, much less a computer.

Clean renewable energy offers a way to bring people out of darkness, while developing local jobs and local economies -- and all this without doing damage to the planet or to the health of those who share it. It offers a way to unleash the human spirit -- the most powerful and equitably distributed energy of all.

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