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Dominating the Skies - and Losing the Wars, Air Supremacy Isn't What It Used to Be Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=13111"><span class="small">William J. Astore, TomDispatch</span></a>   
Thursday, 23 June 2016 13:19

Astore writes: "In the decade and a half between those two bombing decisions, American air power has been loosed not just in Afghanistan, but in Pakistan, Yemen, Iraq, Syria, Libya, and Somalia - seven countries across the Greater Middle East and Africa. So how'd that turn out?"

US fighter jet taking off from aircraft carrier. (photo: Getty)
US fighter jet taking off from aircraft carrier. (photo: Getty)


Dominating the Skies - and Losing the Wars, Air Supremacy Isn't What It Used to Be

By William J. Astore, TomDispatch

23 June 16

 


On October 7, 2001, less than a month after the 9/11 attacks, the Bush administration launched a bombing campaign against Taliban-controlled Afghanistan.  An invasion to “liberate” the country followed.  Almost 15 years later, with the Taliban again gaining ground, President Obama has just eased constraints on the U.S. military’s use of air power there.  To aid Afghan troops, American planes can once again be sent out in "proactive" strikes against the Taliban whenever U.S. commanders believe it useful or necessary.  In the decade and a half between those two bombing decisions, American air power has been loosed not just in Afghanistan, but in Pakistan, Yemen, Iraq, Syria, Libya, and Somalia -- seven countries across the Greater Middle East and Africa.

So how’d that turn out?  Of those countries, only Somalia might have been considered a failed state in 2001.  Today, it has been joined by Libya, Yemen, and Syria.  All are now egregiously failed states.  Iraq, a country invaded by the U.S., occupied, and in most of the years between 2001 and 2016 repeatedly battered by air strikes, is now a riven land.  Its Sunni areas are partially occupied by the Islamic State, its Kurdish territories independent in all but name, its government a sinkhole of corruption and nearly bankrupt, its army notoriously open to collapse.  And as in Afghanistan, so in Iraq all these years later, the skies are again filled with U.S. bombers and drones and just recently another form of air power as well: U.S.-piloted Apache helicopters have been sent back into action to support Iraqi troops in their faltering offensive against the Islamic State (even as U.S. planes help reduce ISIS-controlled cities to rubble).  By now, Iraq certainly qualifies as a failing, if not failed, state.  Afghanistan (see above) falls into something like the same category.  In all of them, terror groups have spread widely.  Of the seven countries in question, only Pakistan might have escaped the failing category and yet, from the expansion of terror groups on its territory to its faltering economic state, it is in worse shape today than it was in October 2001.

Of course, air power can’t be blamed for the sorry fates of these lands, but let’s just say -- as TomDispatch regular and retired Air Force Lieutenant Colonel William Astore does today -- that it has proven remarkably incapable of producing any positive results.  And yet, though the evidence of its ineffectiveness should be clear to all by now, U.S. politicians from Donald Trump to Hillary Clinton respond to just about any development -- linked however minimally to events in the Greater Middle East (including the recent massacre in a gay nightclub in Orlando) -- with calls for loosing yet more air power.  A disconnect?  No one in Washington seems to notice.  Fortunately, William Astore has. Tom

-Tom Engelhardt, TomDispatch


Dominating the Skies -- and Losing the Wars
Air Supremacy Isn’t What It Used to Be

n the era of the long war on terror, Thursday, June 2nd, 2016, was a tough day for the U.S. military. Two modern jet fighters, a Navy F-18 Hornet and an Air Force F-16 Fighting Falcon, flown by two of America’s most capable pilots, went down, with one pilot killed. In a war that has featured total dominance of the skies by America’s intrepid aviators and robotic drones, the loss of two finely tuned fighter jets was a remarkable occurrence.

As it happened, though, those planes weren’t lost in combat.  Enemy ground fire or missiles never touched them nor were they taken out in a dogfight with enemy planes (of which, of course, the Islamic State, the Taliban, and similar U.S. enemies have none).  Each was part of an elite aerial demonstration team, the Navy’s Blue Angels and the Air Force’s Thunderbirds, respectively. Both were lost to the cause of morale-boosting air shows.

Each briefly grabbed the headlines, only to be quickly forgotten.  Americans moved on, content in the knowledge that accidents happen in risky pursuits.

But here’s a question: What does it say about our overseas air wars when the greatest danger American pilots face involves performing aerial hijinks over the friendly skies of “the homeland”?  In fact, it tells us that U.S. pilots currently have not just air superiority or air supremacy, but total mastery of the fabled “high ground” of war.  And yet in Afghanistan, Iraq, and elsewhere in the Greater Middle East, while the U.S. rules the skies in an uncontested way, America’s conflicts rage on with no endgame in sight.

In other words, for all its promise of devastating power delivered against enemies with remarkable precision and quick victories at low cost (at least to Americans), air power has failed to deliver, not just in the ongoing war on terror but for decades before it.  If anything, by providing an illusion of results, it has helped keep the United States in unwinnable wars, while inflicting a heavy toll on innocent victims on our distant battlefields.  At the same time, the cult-like infatuation of American leaders, from the president on down, with the supposed ability of the U.S. military to deliver such results remains remarkably unchallenged in Washington.

America’s Experience with Air Power

Since World War II, even when the U.S. military has enjoyed total mastery of the skies, the end result has repeatedly been stalemate or defeat.  Despite this, U.S. leaders continue to send in the warplanes.  To understand why, a little look at the history of air power is in order.

In the aftermath of World War I, with its grim trench warfare and horrific killing fields, early aviators like Giulio Douhet of Italy, Hugh Trenchard of Britain, and Billy Mitchell of the United States imagined air power as the missing instrument of decision.  It was, they believed, the way that endless ground war and the meat grinder of the trenches that went with it could be avoided in the future.  Unfortunately for those they inspired, in World War II the skies simply joined the land and the seas as yet another realm of grim attrition, death, and destruction.

Here’s a quick primer on the American experience with air power:

* In World War II, the U.S. Army Air Forces joined Britain’s Royal Air Force in a “combined bomber offensive” against Nazi Germany.  A bitter battle of attrition with Germany’s air force, the Luftwaffe, ensued.  Allied aircrews suffered crippling losses until air superiority was finally achieved early in 1944 during what would be dubbed the “Big Week.”  A year later, the Allies had achieved air supremacy and were laying waste to Germany’s cities (as they would to Japan’s), although even then they faced formidable systems of ground fire as well as elite Luftwaffe pilots in the world’s first jet fighters.  At war’s end, Allied losses in aircrews had been staggering, but few doubted that those crews had contributed immeasurably to the defeat of the Nazis (as well as the Japanese).

* Thanks to air power’s successes in World War II (though they were sometimes exaggerated), in 1947 the Air Force gained its independence from the Army and became a service in its own right.  By then, the enemy was communism, and air power advocates like General Curtis LeMay were calling for the creation of a strategic air command (SAC) made up of long-range bombers armed with city-busting thermonuclear weapons.  The strategy of that moment, nuclear “deterrence” via the threat of “massive retaliation,” later morphed into “mutually assured destruction,” better known by its telling acronym, MAD.  SAC never dropped a nuclear bomb in anger, though its planes did drop a few by accident.  (Fortunately for humanity, none exploded.)  Naturally, when the U.S. “won” the Cold War, the Air Force took much of the credit for having contained the Soviet bear behind a thermonuclear-charged fence.

* Frustration first arrived full-blown in the Korean War (1950-1953).  Primitive, rugged terrain and an enemy that went deep underground blunted the effectiveness of bombing.  Flak and fighters (Soviet MiGs) inflicted significant losses on Allied aircrews, while U.S. air power devastated North Korea, dropping 635,000 tons of bombs, the equivalent in explosive yield of 40 Hiroshima bombs, as well as 32,557 tons of napalm, leveling its cities and hitting its dams.  Yet widespread bombing and near total air superiority did nothing to resolve the stalemate on the ground that led to an unsatisfying truce and a Korea that remains bitterly divided to this day.

* The next round of frustration came in the country’s major conflicts in Southeast Asia in the 1960s and early 1970s.  American air power bombed, strafed, and sprayed with defoliants virtually everything that moved (and much that didn’t) in Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia.  A staggering seven million tons of bombs, the equivalent in explosive yield to more than 450 Hiroshimas, were dropped in the name of defeating communism.  An area equivalent in size to Massachusetts was poisoned with defoliants meant to strip cover from the dense vegetation and jungle of South Vietnam, poison that to this day brings death and disfigurement to Vietnamese.  The North Vietnamese, with modest ground-fire defenses, limited surface-to-air missiles (SAMs), and a few fighter jets, were hopelessly outclassed in the air.  Nonetheless, just as in Korea, widespread American bombing and air superiority, while generating plenty of death and destruction, didn’t translate into victory.

* Fast-forward 20 years to Operation Desert Shield/Desert Storm in 1990-1991, and then to the invasion of Iraq in 2003.  In both cases, U.S. and coalition air forces had not just air superiority but air supremacy as each time the Iraqi air force fled or was otherwise almost instantly neutralized, along with the bulk of that country’s air defenses.  Yet for all the hype that followed about “precision bombing” and “shock and awe,” no matter how air power was applied, events on the ground proved stubbornly resistant to American designs.  Saddam Hussein survived Desert Storm to bedevil U.S. leaders for another dozen years.  After the 2003 invasion with its infamous “mission accomplished” moment, Iraq degenerated into insurgency and civil war, aggravated by the loss of critical infrastructure like electrical generating plants, which U.S. air power had destroyed in the opening stages of the invasion.  Air supremacy over Iraq led not to long-lasting victory but to an ignominious U.S. withdrawal in 2011.

* Now, consider the “war on terror,” preemptively announced by George W. Bush in 2001 and still going strong 15 years later. Whether the target’s been al-Qaeda, the Taliban, al-Shabbab, al-Qaeda on the Arabian Peninsula, or more recently the Islamic State, from the beginning U.S. air power enjoyed almost historically unprecedented mastery of the skies.  Yet despite this “asymmetric” advantage, despite all the bombing, missile strikes, and drone strikes, “progress” proved both “fragile” and endlessly “reversible” (to use words General David Petraeus applied to his “surges” in Iraq and Afghanistan).  In fact, 12,000 or so strikes after Washington’s air war against ISIS in Syria and Iraq began in August 2014, we now know that intelligence estimates of its success had to be deliberately exaggerated by the military to support a conclusion that bombing and missile strikes were effective ways to do in the Islamic State.

So here we are, in 2016, 25 years after Desert Storm and nearly a decade after the Petraeus “surge” in Iraq that purportedly produced that missing mission accomplished moment for Washington -- and U.S. air assets are again in action in Iraqi and now Syrian skies.  They are, for instance, flying ground support missions for Iraqi forces as they attempt to retake Falluja, a city in al-Anbar Province that had already been “liberated” in 2004 at a high cost to U.S. ground troops and an even higher one to Iraqi civilians.  Thoroughly devastated back then, Falluja has again found itself on the receiving end of American air power.

If and when Iraqi forces do retake the city, they may inherit little more than bodies and rubble, as they did in taking the city of Ramadi last December.  About Ramadi, Patrick Cockburn noted last month that “more than 70% of its buildings are in ruins and the great majority of its 400,000 people are still displaced” (another way of saying, “It became necessary to destroy the town to save it").  American drones, meanwhile, continue to soar over foreign skies, assassinating various terrorist “kingpins” to little permanent effect.

Tell Me How This Ends

Here’s the “hot wash”: something’s gone terribly wrong with Washington’s soaring dreams of air power and what it can accomplish.  And yet the urge to loose the planes only grows stronger among America’s political class.

Given the frustratingly indecisive results of U.S. air campaigns in these years, one might wonder why a self-professed smart guy like Ted Cruz, when still a presidential candidate, would have called for “carpet” bombing our way to victory over ISIS, and yet in these years he has been more the norm than the exception in his infatuation with air power.  Everyone from Donald Trump to Barack Obama has looked to the air for the master key to victory.  In 2014, even Petraeus, home from the wars, declared himself “all in” on more bombing as critical to victory (whatever that word might now mean) in Iraq.  Only recently he also called for the loosing of American air power (yet again) in Afghanistan -- not long after which President Obama did just that.

Even as air power keeps the U.S. military in the game, even as it shows results (terror leaders killed, weapons destroyed, oil shipments interdicted, and so on), even as it thrills politicians in Washington, that magical victory over the latest terror outfits remains elusive.  That is, in part, because air power by definition never occupies ground.  It can’t dig in.  It can’t swim like Mao Zedong’s proverbial fish in the sea of “the people.”  It can’t sustain persuasive force.  Its force is always staccato and episodic. 

Its suasion, such as it is, comes from killing at a distance.  But its bombs and missiles, no matter how “smart,” often miss their intended targets.  Intelligence and technology regularly prove themselves imperfect or worse, which means that the deaths of innocents are inevitable.  This ensures new recruits for the very organizations the planes are intent on defeating and new cycles of revenge and violence amid the increasing vistas of rubble below.  Even when the bombs are on target, as happens often enough, and a terrorist leader or “lieutenant” is eliminated, what then?  You kill a dozen more?  As Petraeus said in a different context: tell me how this ends.   

Recalling the Warbirds 

From Ronald Reagan to Barack Obama, dropping bombs and firing missiles has been the presidentially favored way of “doing something” against an enemy.  Air power is, in a sense, the easiest thing for a president to resort to and, in our world, has the added allure of the high-tech.  It looks good back home.  Not only does the president not risk the lives of American troops, he rarely risks retaliation of any kind.

Whether our presidents know it or not, however, air power always comes with hidden costs, starting with the increasingly commonplace blowback of retaliatory terrorist strikes on “soft” targets (meaning people) in cities like Paris or Madrid or London.  Strikes that target senior members of enemy armies or terrorist organizations often miss, simply stoking yet more of the sorts of violent behavior we are trying to eradicate with our own version of violence.  When they don’t miss and the leadership of terror groups is hit, as Andrew Cockburn has shown, the result is often the emergence of even more radical and brutal leaders and the further spread of such movements.  In addition, U.S. air power, especially the White House-run drone assassination program, is leading the way globally when it comes to degrading the sovereignty of national borders. (Witness the latest drone strike against the head of the Taliban in violation of Pakistani airspace.)  Right now, Washington couldn’t care less about this, but it is pioneering a future that, once taken up by other powers, may look far less palatable to American politicians.

Despite the sorry results delivered by air power over the last 65 years, the U.S. military continues to invest heavily in it -- not only in drones but also in ultra-expensive fighters and bombers like the disappointing F-35 (projected total cost: $1.4 trillion) and the Air Force’s latest, already redundant long-range strike bomber (initial acquisition cost: $80 billion and rising).  Dismissing the frustratingly mixed and often destabilizing results that come from air strikes, disregarding the jaw-dropping prices of the latest fighters and bombers, America’s leaders continue to clamor for yet more warplanes and yet more bombing.

And isn’t there a paradox, if not a problem, in the very idea of winning a war on terror through what is in essence terror bombing?  Though it’s not something that, for obvious reasons, is much discussed in this country, given the historical record it’s hard to deny that bombing is terror.  After all, that’s why early aviators like Douhet and Mitchell embraced it.  They believed it would be so terrifyingly effective that future wars would be radically shortened to the advantage of those willing and able to bomb. 

As it turned out, what air power provided was not victory, but carnage, terror, rubble -- and resistance.

Americans should have a visceral understanding of why populations under our bombs and missiles resist.  They should know what it means to be attacked from the air, how it pisses you off, how it generates solidarity, how it leads to new resolve and vows of vengeance.  Forget Pearl Harbor, where my uncle, then in the Army, dodged Japanese bombs on December 7, 1941.  Think about 9/11.  On that awful day in 2001, Homeland USA was “bombed” by hijacked jet liners transformed into guided missiles.  Our skies became deadly.  A technology indelibly associated with American inventiveness and prowess was turned against us.  Colossally shocked, America vowed vengeance.

Are our enemies any less resolutely human than we are?  Like us, they’re not permanently swayed by bombing. They vow vengeance when friends, family members, associates of every sort are targeted.  When American “smart” bombs obliterate wedding parties and other gatherings overseas, do we think the friends and loved ones of the dead shrug and say, “That’s war”?  Here’s a hint: we didn’t.

Having largely overcome the trauma of 9/11, Americans today look to the sky with hope.  We watch the Blue Angels and Thunderbirds with a sense of awe, wonder, and pride.  Warplanes soar over our sports stadiums.  The sky is our high ground.  We see evidence of America’s power and ingenuity there.  Yet people in Afghanistan, Iraq, and elsewhere often pray for clouds and bad weather; for them, clear skies are associated with American-made death from above.

It’s time we allow other peoples to look skyward with that same sense of safety and hope as we normally do.  It’s time to recall the warbirds.  They haven’t provided solutions.  Indeed, the terror, destruction, and resentments they continue to spread are part of the problem.

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California Students Face Criminal Charges for Protesting Film Glorifying Israel's Military Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=29641"><span class="small">Murtaza Hussain, The Intercept</span></a>   
Thursday, 23 June 2016 13:06

Hussain writes: "Upset about the screening of a film they viewed as propaganda for a foreign military, the students were also protesting the presence of several IDF representatives who here holding a panel discussion at the screening. That student protest has since become the subject of an intense controversy. The school's chapter of Students for Justice in Palestine is now facing the possibility of being banned from the campus."

Pro-Palestinian activists. (photo: AP)
Pro-Palestinian activists. (photo: AP)


California Students Face Criminal Charges for Protesting Film Glorifying Israel's Military

By Murtaza Hussain, The Intercept

23 June 16

 

ast month, a group of students at University of California at Irvine gathered to protest a screening of the film “Beneath the Helmet,” a documentary about the lives of recruits in the Israeli Defense Forces. Upset about the screening of a film they viewed as propaganda for a foreign military, the students were also protesting the presence of several IDF representatives who here holding a panel discussion at the screening.

That student protest has since become the subject of an intense controversy. The school’s chapter of Students for Justice in Palestine is now facing the possibility of being banned from the campus. In addition, a legal representative for some of the students involved in the protest, Tarek Shawky, told The Intercept that the students were informed by the university that their cases have been referred to the district attorney for criminal investigation.

The day after the event, the school’s chancellor released a statement accusing student protestors of “crossing the line of civility.” In his statement, posted on the school website, Chancellor Howard Gillman said that “while this university will protect freedom of speech, that right is not absolute,” adding that the school would examine possible legal and administrative charges against the protestors. News reports cited claims that attendees at the film had been intimidated and blocked from exiting the event.

The protestors at the event represented a wide range of student groups, including Students for Justice in Palestine, Jewish Voice for Peace, and the Black Student Union. Students who spoke with The Intercept denied that anyone had intimidated attendees at the event or blocked access. “We held our protest in a way that reflected university guidelines, we didn’t use amplified sound and we didn’t restrict anyone’s freedom of access to the event,” says Daniel Carnie, a member of Jewish Voice for Peace who took part in the protest.

Contacted for comment, a media relations representative at UC Irvine said that it was normal practice for cases like this to be referred to the District Attorney. “It is routine for UC Irvine Police Department, when called upon to investigate an incident on campus, to forward the investigation to the District Attorney’s office,” said Cathy Lawhon. “It’s then up to the DA’s office to determine if any charges are warranted.” Lawhon added that the school investigation into banning Students for Justice in Palestine was proceeding separately.

Reached for comment, the Orange County District Attorney stated that they have yet to receive a referral on the case from the school.

The incident is only the latest in which officials at UC Irvine and other major universities around the country have taken harsh measures against pro-Palestinian activists. “There is a really ugly history of targeting student groups advocating for Palestinian issues,” says Liz Jackson, a staff attorney with Palestine Legal, a group which provides legal advice and advocacy to individuals in the U.S. advocating for Palestinian rights. “It suppresses the really important debates about U.S. foreign policy that young people need to be having. Instead of being able to engage freely and voice opinions that challenge the status quo, one side of the debate is just being crushed.”

A report issued last year by Palestine Legal and the Center for Constitutional Rights documented 152 incidents of free-speech suppression on U.S. campuses in 2014. These incidents have included acts of censorship, threats of legal action and even accusations of support for terrorism. Citing the threat posed to the First Amendment by such acts, the report added that they were “undermin[ing] the traditional role of universities in promoting the free expression of unpopular ideas and encouraging challenges to the orthodoxies prevalent in official political discourse.”

Threats, punishment and intimidation are all being routinely used to stifle dissenting viewpoints on Israel-Palestine, says Omar Shakir a fellow at the Center for Constitutional Rights and a co-author of the report. “University officials are erecting bureaucratic actions to make it harder to hold certain events, imposing administrative sanctions and even firing and denying tenure to professors for their views on Israel-Palestine, efforts that collectively represent a grave threat to the First Amendment.”

For instance, Native American Studies Professor Steven Salaita lost his tenured faculty position at the University of Illinois in 2014 after being accused of incivility in his online comments on Israel-Palestine. After a public legal battle, last year the school settled a lawsuit filed by Salaita for financial compensation.

In the case of UC Irvine, Shakir adds that the university’s charge of “incivility” on the part of protestors is a particularly egregious attempt to stifle protected speech. “Accusations of incivility have always been used by those in power to justify attempts to suppress changes to the status quo,” Shakir says. “The term itself, ‘civility’ represents coded language that in the past has been used to try and suppress groups deemed ‘uncivilized,’ like Native-Americans and African-Americans in the United States. It has no place being used as a basis to silence student activists today.”

Those views were partly echoed by Ari Cohn, a lawyer with the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, a campus free-speech organization. “If allegations that protestors at UC Irvine disrupted the event are substantiated that would not be protected speech, as it would impinge on the speech of others attending the event.” Cohn added, however, that “civility in itself cannot be mandated by schools. Incivility plays a fundamental role in much of the social activism on campuses.”

Threats to speech, have come not only from university administrations but from law enforcement as well. In 2010, Osama Shabaik was among a group of eleven students at UC Irvine who were arrested after protesting an appearance by then-Israeli ambassador Michael Oren at the school. Oren’s speaking event came roughly a year after Operation Cast Lead, a three-week Israeli military campaign against the Gaza Strip that killed hundreds of civilians. Intent on making a point about the inappropriate nature of Oren’s appearance following the attack, Shabaik and others organized a protest to disrupt the event.

In an incident that was captured on video, Shabaik and several other students repeatedly stood up in the crowd to interrupt Oren’s speech, chanting slogans against Israeli military abuses during Cast Lead. The students were detained and ejected from the event, something Shabaik says they had expected. But what came next was stunning. The school administration referred the students to the police, filing misdemeanor criminal charges against them for disrupting the event. The charges carried a maximum of one year in prison for each of those who protested.

The following year the case went to court, where Shabaik and nine other students were convicted and sentenced to three years probation.

“The administration was definitely sending a message and implicitly threatening our futures by having us charged as criminals for protesting,” reflects Shabaik today. “A lot of those who were charged were students planning to go on to medical school or law school, and they were worried that having a criminal record would prevent that from happening.”

Shabaik has since gone on to graduate from Harvard Law School, but is concerned about how his criminal record could affect his future employment prospects. Looking back at the incident, he believes it helped inaugurate a high-level campaign to silence dissent on Israel-Palestine in the United States, that has since extended to state legislatures.

Earlier this month, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo signed an executive order that would force public institutions in New York to divest funds from groups supporting the Boycott Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement. The executive order has been criticized as a form of political blacklisting. Shabaik believes Cuomo’s proposal echoes his own experience, where powerful institutions and public figures have sought to quash dissent on this issue.

“Its important to understand duality of responses when it comes to free speech. The whole essence of free speech is to challenge power and push back against government repression,” says Shabaik. “The move to stop debate on this issue is now leading to crackdowns at state-funded colleges and universities and even at the state legislature level. People are facing serious threats to their future for speaking out against the status quo.”

In recent years, a movement has built, mostly on the political right, which charges that free speech is being endangered on American college campuses. The most prominent voices on this issue have been conservative activists like Breitbart journalist Milo Yiannopoulos and Daily Wire’s Ben Shapiro. But liberal writers such as Jonathan Chait have also relentlessly fixated on the idea that “political correctness” is stifling free expression among a new generation of students.

Most of these protestations have focused on a specific type of speech: the right to “offend” by speaking against perceived left-wing orthodoxies on race, feminism and cultural issues. The charges of speech suppression in such cases have generally not been leveled at university administrators or law enforcement, but rather at students who view such speech as offensive. This differs markedly from the Israel-Palestine controversies, where state-funded bureaucracies and government officials have been involved with stifling speech on an issue directly related to American foreign policy.

“Its important to distinguish between the idea that certain views are not popular on campuses, something that may be worthy of discussion separately, and the phenomenon of public institutions and officials taking direct action to restrict speech about vital aspects of government policy,” says Shakir of the Center for Constitutional Rights. “The core of the First Amendment defends the right to free speech on campuses, and we should all be concerned when McCarthey-esque tactics are being used by those in positions of power to silence debate on issues of global importance.”

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The War on Drugs Is Failing - Decriminalization Is the Only Way Forward Print
Thursday, 23 June 2016 13:01

Feilding writes: "International discontent with the 'war on drugs' is growing, with an increasing number of countries experimenting with liberalized drug laws, especially in relation to cannabis. Liberalized policies have not caused drug use to soar, as critics predicted."

US Forces enter helicopter near a poppy field in Afghanistan. (photo: DoD)
US Forces enter helicopter near a poppy field in Afghanistan. (photo: DoD)


The War on Drugs Is Failing - Decriminalization Is the Only Way Forward

By Amanda Feilding, Guardian UK

23 June 16

 

Discontent is growing internationally with prohibitionist drug policies. The UN must heed NGOs, experts and agencies advocating alternative approaches

t is generally accepted that the international “war on drugs” has had devastating and far-reaching consequences. These include public health crises, mass incarceration, corruption, and black market–fuelled violence. Even the United Nations Office on Drug Control (UNODC), responsible for monitoring and managing the international drug control conventions, acknowledges failure resulting from the creation of “a criminal black market of staggering proportions” that is a fundamental threat to global security.

On Sunday, the UN will promote the International Day against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking, otherwise known as the International Anti-Drugs Day. Each year, the 26 June becomes an expression of global solidarity and determination to combat and eradicate drug abuse, and champion the “war on drugs”.

This year’s theme is benignly titled Listen First, and attempts to encourage listening to children and youth in order to prevent drug use and protect their health and safety. It is a particularly apt theme, given the news this week of the three 12-year-old girls who were taken to hospital in Salford after having taken ecstasy pills marketed as “teddy” pills.

This recent incident highlights the flaws in prohibitionist drug policies, enshrined in the UN conventions. It is an example of how criminalising drug use can cause more harm than good. Drugs sold on the black market have no age restrictions, no labelling, no instructions for use, and for the most part you can’t be sure what you are buying.

Many of the health risks associated with drug use result from the fact that drug production and drug use is unregulated and controlled by black market forces. People take too much, don’t get help quickly enough, take adulterated substances, and are poorly educated on the substances they are taking. Additionally, new psychoactive substances (“legal highs”) pose problems because health agencies have no idea what is in them, or how to deal with them when something goes wrong.

The theme of listening to children is commendable, and will help to move the focus from the production and supply of drugs to the demand. Of equal if not more importance, is listening to the evidence that demonstrates how the war on drugs is failing: failing to curb or eliminate drug use, failing to eliminate the production and supply of drugs, failing to protect public health, and failing to uphold the “three pillars” of the UN’s work – peace and security, development, and human rights.

The UN advocates “listening” but seems to have selective hearing. Advice on alternative approaches from the United Nations Development Programme, UNAids, UN Women and the World Health Organisation, and even members of the UNODC themselves, together with pressure from Latin American countries such as Colombia, Mexico and Guatemala, seem to fall on closed ears. At the latest general assembly held in April, prohibitionist policies held sway and only token changes in the direction of harm reduction were made.

However, international discontent with the “war on drugs” is growing, with an increasing number of countries experimenting with liberalised drug laws, especially in relation to cannabis. Liberalised policies have not caused drug use to soar, as critics predicted. In Portugal, where they decriminalised all drug use 15 years ago, they have made significant financial savings, reduced incarceration, benefited from improvements in public health, controlled an explosive, injection-linked HIV epidemic, and seen no significant increase in drug use.

Alongside these more progressive policies, 33 countries retain the death penalty for drug offences. Some of these countries, such as China and Indonesia, use International Anti-Drugs Day to promote harsh penalties, unveiling executions or long prison sentences in the run-up to the event. Although UNODC formally opposes the death penalty, the regimes responsible for them have often been commended for their anti-drug efforts.

The discrepancies in the application of the conventions, and the growing critique with the UN orthodoxy have produced cracks in the armour of this “war”. The UN must take the opportunity to heed its own words, and “listen first”, to the people on the ground, to the NGOs working in the field, to the countries experimenting with alternative approaches, and to the experts and agencies informing them.

At the Beckley Foundation, a thinktank investigating the creation of balanced drug policies, we advocate the following steps: first to decriminalise all drugs. Next, to reschedule currently illegal drugs such as cannabis, MDMA and certain psychedelics from the USA’s schedule I to schedule II, so scientific research can more easily be undertaken and doctors can prescribe them. If harm reduces after decriminalisation, despite the doom-mongering of cynics, we could carefully move towards the third step of a strictly regulated and taxed market for those substances with low risk that the public most desire.

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FOCUS: John Lewis Stands Up for Human Dignity Once Again Print
Thursday, 23 June 2016 10:42

Excerpt: "On the floor of the House of Representatives Wednesday, John Lewis, now 76 and a member of Congress for nearly three decades, took another courageous and principled stand. Many of his Democratic colleagues joined him for a sit-in on the floor of the House chamber itself, the same kind of protest he and his fellow activists used so effectively during the 1960s."

'Do we have the raw courage to make at least a down payment on ending gun violence in America?' asked Rep. John Lewis (D-GA) as he led a sit-in on the floor of the House of Representatives on Wednesday, June 22. (photo: CSPAN)
'Do we have the raw courage to make at least a down payment on ending gun violence in America?' asked Rep. John Lewis (D-GA) as he led a sit-in on the floor of the House of Representatives on Wednesday, June 22. (photo: CSPAN)


John Lewis Stands Up for Human Dignity Once Again

By Bill Moyers and Michael Winship, Moyers & Company

23 June 16

 

A sit-in by the civil-rights icon on the floor of the House of Representatives is a powerful statement against gun violence.

n March 7, 1965, 25-year-old John Lewis, already a veteran of the Freedom Rides, Mississippi’s Freedom Summer and Martin Luther King Jr.’s March on Washington, walked ahead of 600 civil rights activists as they crossed the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama, on the first leg of what was meant to be a peaceful march for voting rights.

As they stepped off the end of the bridge, a posse of 150 state troopers and deputy sheriffs attacked them, wielding clubs, bullwhips and tear gas. Lewis was beaten to within an inch of his life. But he took the horrible pummeling of  “Bloody Sunday” and survived to lead another march a week later. This time they kept going — all the way to the state capitol in Montgomery, 50 miles away.

Fifty-one years later, on the floor of the House of Representatives Wednesday, John Lewis, now 76 and a member of Congress for nearly three decades, took another courageous and principled stand. Many of his Democratic colleagues joined him for a sit-in on the floor of the House chamber itself, the same kind of protest he and his fellow activists used so effectively during the 1960s.

This time they were agitating against one of the most grievous human rights horrors of all: the gun violence running amok in America, including the recent abomination of 49 deaths at that nightclub in Orlando, Florida. There have been nearly 100,000 gun deaths in the United States since the school murders in Newtown, Connecticut, just three and a half years ago.

In Selma in 1965, television cameras sent pictures of what was happening on the Pettus Bridge around the country and a shocked American public took to heart how deep the wounds remained between black and white. On Wednesday, Republican House leadership, as cruel and cold-of-heart as those Alabama state troopers, gaveled the House out of session so the cameras of C-SPAN could not show the American people the courage of those House members sitting on the floor and telling the National Rifle Association and its bought-and-paid-for politicians to go to hell.

Despite the GOP’s attempt to shut television’s probing eye, the demonstrators used social media like Facebook and Twitter to get out their story, putting their cell phones to good use and sending out photos and video of their action across the country and the world (C-SPAN wound up putting much of their footage on the air). Lewis tweeted, “Sometimes you have to get in the way. You have to make some noise by speaking up and speaking out against injustice and inaction. #goodtrouble.”

In a letter to Republican House Speaker Paul Ryan, Rep. Lewis and his colleague Rep. Katherine Clark asked, “What is this Congress waiting for? …We stand with thousands of brokenhearted families who have not been served by this Congress and millions more who are counting on us to find the moral courage to do the right thing. We stand together in our refusal to sit by while this Congress abdicates its fundamental responsibility to protect American families from harm.”

Once again the Republican leaders of Congress have been revealed for what they are: useful stooges of the gun merchants who would sell to anyone — from the mentally ill to a terrorist-in-waiting to a lurking mass murderer. And the Republican Party once again has shown itself an enabler of death, the enemy of life, a threat to the republic itself.

Wednesday, John Lewis said, “The time is always right to do right. Our time is now.” The heroism on the Pettus Bridge turned the tide against the inhumanity of segregation. Today’s protest in the House of Representatives just might mark the beginning of the end of the gun industry’s grip on American life and liberty.

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Democrats' Politics of Fraud Produces No More Gun Safety Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=20877"><span class="small">William Boardman, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Thursday, 23 June 2016 08:50

Boardman writes: "The Democratic Party's empty hoopla on gun issues is a vivid illustration of the party's irrelevance to anything more significant than remaining in office. The measures before the Senate were timid, limited, and of limited likely usefulness - Potemkin gun control."

Senator Chris Murphy, who led a 15-hour filibuster on gun control. (photo: Getty)
Senator Chris Murphy, who led a 15-hour filibuster on gun control. (photo: Getty)


Democrats' Politics of Fraud Produces No More Gun Safety

By William Boardman, Reader Supported News

23 June 16

 

What matters more? War around the world, or mass shootings at home?

hat’s the difference between these two Democrats, Sen. Chris Murphy of Connecticut and Rep. Barbara Lee of California? Chris Murphy puts on a pointless, pompous filibuster to achieve a meaningless vote on gun control measures he knows will never pass. Rep. Barbara Lee is in her 15th year of quietly trying to persuade ANY other Representative or Senator to accept constitutional responsibility for deciding whether or not the US should go to war. Guess who gets more attention?

What is wrong, truly, profoundly wrong with Democrats? Republicans are easy, they embrace their commitment to naked power without principle beyond a simple-minded checklist of ideological bumper sticker thoughts. That made voting for NRA-sponsored mass murder a no-brainer for Republicans (except those in states with a possibly conscious electorate).

But the Democrats – they are so far adrift in their own self-admiration they don’t even appear to realize what fools they’ve seemed chasing the folly of certain defeat with their “victorious” filibuster. It was “one of the longest filibusters” in Senate history, 15 hours – how sad is that? The party’s lemming-like vacuity was even lampooned in The Onion, where the preposterous Sen. Dianne Feinstein was portrayed as unable to get even an empty gun control measure through the Senate chamber door without its self-destructing. Dianne Feinstein pushing gun control is like Donald Trump pushing tax fairness – believe it when it’s real. Dianne Feinstein owes her career to lax gun laws as much as Trump owes his wealth to special tax breaks for the rich.

Even after showboating his way to the defeat he fully expected, Sen. Murphy couldn’t stop congratulating himself and his party for making such a whole-hearted effort to get nothing done:

“So on Wednesday, I took a stand with nearly 40 of my colleagues to demand that Congress do something – anything – to stop the slaughter of innocent victims of gun violence. Millions of Americans engaged in the debate and made their voices heard.”

Sen. Murphy himself illustrated the incoherent irrationality he and most Democrats bring to governing the United States. The day after touting his failure to get inadequate gun measures passed, Sen. Murphy was celebrating Connecticut’s contribution to the continuing threat of nuclear annihilation, calling the 100thanniversary of the New London nuclear submarine base a “momentous occasion” and adding: “We are incredibly proud that Connecticut is home to the Navy’s first and finest submarine base, and look forward to another 100 years.” Sen. Murphy may prattle demagogically about gun violence, but when it comes to nuclear weapons, another century is fine. For a Democrat, those priorities are standard numbness. For Republicans, they aren’t even issues, they are signs of weakness and a reluctance to use any weapons available.

What is it with Democrats fighting popular change?

The Democratic Party’s empty hoopla on gun issues is a vivid illustration of the party’s irrelevance to anything more significant than remaining in office. The measures before the Senate were timid, limited, and of limited likely usefulness – Potemkin gun control. In recent years, recent decades, the very best the Democrats have done amounts to grudging half-measures on war, on healthcare, on income stagnation for most, on police killing, on fossil fuel destruction of the planet, on almost anything that actually matters. In a zero-sum politics, no wonder they’re a minority party. Democrats are really good at mealy-mouthed sentiments in apparent support of the general welfare, but they follow up their empty words with empty gestures (did I mention the filibuster?). Matt Taibbi of Rolling Stone has an excellent piece about the dishonest arguments and moral blackmail that Democrats use to keep themselves in office and out of touch with America. He characterizes their moral imperialism this way:

“Beltway Democrats seem increasingly to believe that all people who fall within a certain broad range of liberal-ish beliefs owe their votes and their loyalty to the Democratic Party. That's why, as a socially liberal person who probably likes trees and wouldn't want to see Roe v. Wade overturned, Nader's decision to take votes from the party-blessed candidate Gore is viewed not as dissent, but as a kind of treason.”

For Democratic Party loyalists committed to their lame and ineffective incrementalism, Sen. Bernie Sanders wasn’t just an alternative, he was a traitor. Never mind that he had never sworn anything like allegiance to the Democratic Party in the first place. Never mind that any political party demanding near-absolute loyalty is not a democratic institution, but a corporate enterprise verging on the fascistic. Any political party that sees its members as true believers and others as apostates will eventually come to believe that staying in power is doing God’s work and that election fraud, for example, is a sacrament. A hermetic party with no guiding principles will find it useful to keep issues like “gun violence” alive with such techniques as offering empty non-solutions that face sure defeat. Why risk success? As Sen. Sanders described the deliberately futile vote:

"Frankly, these Democratic amendments are no-brainers. It is incomprehensible to me, and I believe to the vast majority of Americans, as to why Republicans would oppose them."

To be precise, Democratic Sen. Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota voted to keep guns as available as ever, while two Republicans facing serious re-election challenges voted in favor of the almost-pointless proposals – Sen. Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire and Mark Kirk of Illinois. Sen. Kirk has a D rating from the NRA, which gives an A to Sen. Ayotte. For Ayotte in particular, with a long history of Second Amendment absolutism, this was a transparently unprincipled vote. According to Dana Milbank in the Washington Post, the Republicans were successful in protecting terrorists’ right to bear arms, a Democratic demagogic meme put out by Senators Murphy and Elizabeth Warren. During the filibuster, Sen. Warren went even further off the sanity rails, calling the tormented gay shooter “a terrorist with hate is his heart and a gun in his hand that killed all those people” [emphasis added]. Then she preposterously added:

“And if we fail to act, the next time someone uses a gun to kill one of us, a gun that we could have kept out of the hands of a terrorist, then members of this Congress will have blood on our hands.”

That assertion is detached from reality. Congress already has blood on its hands, decades of blood on its hands. Congress has blood on its hands not only from its impotent response to mass shootings in America, but from endless wars, drone assassinations, depleted uranium poisoning, climate inaction, the list is long, add what you will.

There is NO Senatorial voice for serious gun control

When Sen. Sanders called the Democratic proposals no-brainers, he spoke more truly than he intended. The problems with Sen. Feinstein’s proposals is that they are modeled on unconstitutional, fear-based anti-communist laws of the 1950s – laws that let government bureaucrats put you on a list, without your knowledge and without any due process and with no avenue of appeal. That’s what all these terrorist watch lists and no-fly lists and the rest have in common – the accused is assumed guilty, with no opportunity to prove innocence. Republican Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin has raised this issue, but Democrats and the independents who vote with them seem to be comfortable with autocratic measures carried out by anonymous officers with no systemic accountability. The Democratic dog and pony gun show was not merely a meaningless farce, it was rooted in an authoritarian impulse to which no Senator raised serious objection.

Having succeeded in making no changes in gun laws, Democrats appear to have no Plan B. The Democrats’ filibuster and the Senate vote were pseudo-events, as described long ago by Daniel Boorstin in his 1962 book The Image – they were designed and executed only to be reported, publicized, fill media space, not to achieve anything. Pseudo-events, sometimes called media events, pass too often for reality in our culture – which is exactly what they are intended to do. A real event would have been, for example, a filibuster carried on until enough Senators agreed to vote to ban assault weapons (defined, for the sake of argument, as semi-automatic with a clip of more than five shots). That’s the kind of real event an awful lot of people want to see, a desire that prompted the CODEPINK vigil in front of the National Rifle Association in Virginia, on June 20. That pseudo-event involved more than 100 activists camped out overnight, with 18 arrested in the morning for blocking the NRA entrance, a metaphor for blocking the NRA’s lethal influence.

As for the Second Amendment, it’s not a problem for rational people

After decades of NRA fear-mongering – and lying – about tyrannical government and other scary unrealities (pseudo-threats), some people, like Senators, have a hard time thinking rationally about the Second Amendment, which says, in its entirety:

“A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the People to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.”

It starts with “regulation” and ends with “shall not be infringed,” creating an inherent contradiction than needs to be balanced, even in long absence of the once “necessary” precondition of a militia. What the Second Amendment does NOT say is that the people have a right to keep and bear any and all weapons. The clear implication is that there is a limit to what weapons people have a right to keep and hold, and setting that limit is a legislative function, except when legislators are terrorized by mobs like the NRA. It is surely a reasonable position to ban the people from keeping and bearing surface-to-air missiles. It is certainly a reasonable position not to ban the people from keeping and bearing handguns and long guns, though perhaps not in a crowded theatre. The discussion a reasonable government would have now – would have had and settled decades ago – is whether it’s reasonable to have the people keeping and bearing assault weapons.

The primary responsibility for our presently irrational government lies with the Republican Party, whose policy animus against President Obama is without precedent or principle. But the Democrats, with their patience and acquiescence, and acceptance of the unacceptable, have been enablers and co-conspirators in oligarchic government that primarily serves incumbents. Democrats, in Congress and the White House, have essentially rolled over and tolerated the intolerable, doing a minimum of governing, and perpetuating three decades of good times for the very few and increasingly bad times for the vast majority. The two-party system doesn’t seem capable of reducing mass shootings or doing anything else a majority of Americans want. Both parties are broken, but no new party has yet cohered with sufficient strength to challenge the duopoly, and the system is apparently too complicated (rigged) to allow that to happen in this election cycle.

The United States leads the world in mass shootings, by a wide margin – we’re #1! Australia confronted mass shootings head-on and hasn’t had a mass shooting in 20 years, but Australia has only 23 million people or so. This suggests that, perhaps, the mass shooting issue might be better addressed at the state level, as implied in the Second Amendment. And some states have acted to ban assault weapons, over strenuous objections from the NRA and fellow travelers. Two assault weapons cases reached the Supreme Court recently. While the Senate was putting on its clown show of futility, the Supreme Court on June 20 produced a real event with real consequences by refusing to hear challenges to assault rifle bans in two states. As a result, assault rifle bans in Connecticut and New York remain in force. This is far from a national solution, and Republicans are doing their best to protect mass shootings from further judicial activism by blocking any vote on the current nominee to the court, Merrick Garland, who is accused of supporting rational gun regulation.

Meanwhile, in the House of Representatives, Rep. Barbara Lee of Oakland is again proposing amendments to a Pentagon spending bill calling on our government to consider serious questions of war and peace. It’s been a long road of irresponsibility at the highest levels of government. As Rep. Lee wrote in a June 21 email:

“Nearly 15 years ago, I cast the lone vote against the authorization for use of military force. The authorization was a blank check for any president to wage endless war and it has been used to justify war in 14 countries since 2001….

It is way past time for this debate. No president should have unchecked power to wage war and put our dedicated servicemen and women in danger. Congress must debate war, its costs and its consequences.”

Rep. Lee is not alone in her effort to restore constitutional authority over the president’s power to make war at will. She has bipartisan support, but she and her allies are in the minority. The Democrat does not have the support of her party. In May, when she offered a similar amendment, the vote against it was 285 to 138. Before the vote, President Obama issued a 17-page explanation of why, if the amendment passed, he would veto it. Democrats and Republicans alike refuse to interfere with the President’s freedom to use assault weapons, or drones, or any other means of killing people.



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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