Friday, April 06, 2007

THIS JUST IN! DICK'S NEW LIE!

 
 
IN THE FACE OF THE JUST RELEASED DEFENSE DEPARTMENT REPORT THAT STATES THE C.I.A. AND THE DEFENSE INTELLIGENCE AGENCY FOUND NO LINK BETWEEN SADDAM HUSSEIN AND AL QAEDA BEFORE THE U.S. ADMINISTRATION LAUNCHED THEIR ILLEGAL WAR ON IRAQ JUST AS  PRESIDENT OF VICE DICK CHENEY WAS TELLING RUSH LIMBAUGH AND HIS FEW HUNDRED LISTNERS THAT AL QAEDA WAS IN IRAQ "BEFORE WE EVER LAUNCHED" THE ILLEGAL WAR, THE DICKSTER IS NOW TRYING A NEW TACTIC.
 
VICE TOLD THESE REPORTERS, "I WAS NOT SAYING THAT SADDAM HUSSEIN AND AL QAEDA HAD A BUSINESS RELATIONSHIP.  IT WAS A PERSONAL RELATIONSHIP.  A SEXUAL RELATIONSHIP.  THEY WERE HIS HAREM.  AND NANCY PELOSI'S HUSBAND IS AN UNDERCOVER C.I.A. AGENT -- BE SURE TO CREDIT THAT LAST PART TO HARRY REID'S OFFICE."
 
 
Starting with war resistance, approximately 40 US war resisters have self-checked out, moved to Canada and filed paperwork to be legally granted asylumn in Canada.  (Approximately 40 have filed papers, hundreds have gone to Canada and are not attempting to go through the legal process.)  Reuben Apple (Eye Weekly) notes that war resisters appearing before the Immigration and Refugee Board to argue their case are prevented from saying "We think this killing is unlawful" and they "are asking our Federal Court of Appeal for the right to say" those six words.  Apple notes that attorney Jeffry House -- who represents many war resisters -- is a Canadian citizen today because of the country's policies during an earlier illegal war (Vietnam) when a real prime minister, Pierre Elliot Trudeau, didn't cower before Tricky Dick Nixon but instead declared, "Canada should be a refuge from militarism."  Tricky Dick's response to that statement and policy was to call the Canadian prime minister an "asshole" and Trudeau's comeback was that he'd "been called worse things by better people." 
 
Apple notes war resisters Ryan Johnson ("wake up and get involved with something, nuclear disarmament, the Canadian Peace Alliance, the War Resisters Support Campaign, anything, because it's the people that can end this"), Jeremy Hinzman, Joshua Key: "Two weeks ago, three big men in trench coats, claiming to be 'Toronto police,' came with questions to the home of Winnie Ng, a campaigner who once hosted Key.  According to Toronto Star reports of the incident, it seems American military authorities would like to speak with Key.  If they want to discuss The Deserter's Tale with its author, they can go to his next talk, or they can call his lawyer, Jeffrey House.  Key has legal status in Canada as a refugee claimant, and officials should tell the American government that our police, if those men were our police, are not their messengers."
 
 
Earlier this week, Monday, on Canada's  Gorilla Radio, host Chris Cook interviewed the War Resisters Support Campaign's Lee Zaslofsky on the topic of US war resisters in Canada. Zaslofsky spoke of what was known and what wasn't known -- such as Kyle Snyder was detained by Canadian police (and that was on the US military's orders though Zaslofsky didn't note that) but he was not deported.  During this "mistaken arrest," Snyder was told he was being deported. (He legally cannot be deported.)  Cook noted that when a war resister appears before the Refugee and Immigration Board, they are not appearing before a group of people, the board has one person designated to hear that case.  Like attorney Jeffry House, Zaslofsky came to Canada during Vietnam as a war resister.  Zaslofsky noted that Synder's status in Canada has changed as a result of the fact that he is now married.  (That would be to Maleah Friesen, whom Zaslofsky didn't note.)  As Friesen's spouse, Snyder has more avenues available to Canadian citizenship.  March 19th, Zaslofsky noted, Jeremy Hinzman and Brandon Hughey were before the Federarl Court of Appeals and are awaiting a decision which, if necesarry, Zasolfsky states, "We'll appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada."
 
Snyder, Key, Hinzman and Hughey are part of a movement of resistance within the military that also includes Ehren Watada  Robert Zabala, Darrell Anderson,  Corey Glass, Ricky Clousing, Mark Wilkerson, Agustin Aguayo, Camilo Mejia, Dean Walcott, Patrick Hart, Ivan Brobeck, Aidan Delgado, Pablo Paredes, Carl Webb, Stephen Funk, David Sanders, Dan Felushko, Clifford Cornell, Joshua Despain, Katherine Jashinski, Chris Teske, Matt Lowell, Jimmy Massey, Tim Richard, Hart Viges, Michael Blake and Kevin Benderman. In total, thirty-eight US war resisters in Canada have applied for asylum.


Information on war resistance within the military can be found at Center on Conscience & War, The Objector, The G.I. Rights Hotline, and the War Resisters Support Campaign. Courage to Resist offers information on all public war resisters.
 
From war resistance to reality as we dig into some of the lies of the illegal war.  From yesterday's Flashpoints:
 
 
 
Robert Knight: Also in Iraq, a spokesperson for Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani is today denying reports that Sistani rejected a new draft law that would allow former members of the Baath party to retain or regain government employment.  Sistani's Beriut based representive, Hamed al-Kafaf said, "What some news agencies said, quoting who they described as an aide to al-Sistani about his position on the de-Baathification law was not true."  Recent reports that Sistani was against the draft law can be traced to a meeting earlier this week between Sistani and the prevaracating US intelligence asset Ahmed Chalabi who heads the so-called de-Baathification commission and who remains dead set against an easment of the anti-Baath legislation imposed by the occupation forces.  Sistani's representative added, "We are surprised by attempts trying to get the Shia clerical establisment involved in a case which is the speciality of constitutional organizations."
And in other news, the overnight release of 15 British sailors by the Iranian government has generated mixed signals in what some say was a quid pro quo that in regard to the 5 Iranian diplomats who were seized last Janurary by American forces in Iraq.  Iranian media reported overnight that an Iranian diplomatic official would be allowed to meet with the five diplomatic detainees.  But Secreatary of Defense Robert Gates said today that the Bush administration was not planning to release the five who were abducted in a raid on the Iranian consulate's office in the northern Iraqi city of Ibril.
And in a related note, a captain among the detained British sailors who were released was revealed to have admitted that there mission the Shaw al abray waterway between Ira1 and Iran, unsurprisingly did indeed involve elements of intelligence gathering Britain' s Murdoch owned Sky News is reporting today that Sky News went on patrol with Captain Chris Air and his team in Iraqi waters close to the area where they were arrested and just five days
before the crisis began, in an interview recorded the Thursday before the seizure that happened two weeks ago,  Captain Air stated to the interviewer that his crew's assignment was "To gather intelligence.  If they do not have any information because they're there for days at a time, the people on the boats can share it with us.  Whether it's about piracy or any sort of Iranian activity in the area  obviously we're right by the bufferzone with Iran."  And that's some of the news of this Thursday April 5, 2007.  From exile in New York, I'm Robert Knight for Flashpoinsts.
 
Amy Goodman (Democracy Now!) notes today that "British Defense Secretary Des Browne defended the intelligence operation.  Browne said it was important to gather intelligence to 'keep our people safe'."  Goodman also noted that Sky News sat on the story "until the release of the sailors."
 
 
Turning to other lies of war, R. Jeffrey Smith (Washington Post) reports today that a US Defense Department report (declassifired yesterday and written by Inspector General Thomas F. Gimble) states the obvious -- in 2002 the CIA and the Defense Intelligence Agency both knew the claims that Saddam Hussein had a links to al Qaeda were incorrect.  Smith notes the report was released yesterday, "on the same day that Vice President Cheney, appearing on Rush Limbaugh's radio program, repeated his allegation that al-Qaeda was operating inside Iraq 'before we ever launched' the war".  Dick Cheney's remarks are not merely 'incorrect,' they are lies. Peter Speigel (Los Angeles Times) reports that "The Defense Intelligence Agency and the CIA each 'published reports that disavowed any "mature, symbiotic" cooperation between Iraq and Al Qaeda,' the inspector general's report found."  AP notes that US Senator Carl Levin "requested that the Pentagon declassify the report prepared by acting Defense Department Inspector General Thomas F. Gimble.  In a statement Thursday, Levin said the declassified document showed why a Defense Department investigation had concluded that some Pentagon prewar intelligence work was inappropriate."  Strangely in the face of Cheney's lies about terrorism, Michael Ware (CNN) reports that the US military is currently protecting a non al Qaeda group in Iraq that the US State Department has "labeled a terrorist organization"  -- Mujahedeen-e-Khalq (MEK) -- and that "[t]he U.S. military . . . regularly escorts MEK supply runs between Baghdad and its base, Camp Ashraf."  Why?  MEK is an anti-Iranian group.  Ware reports that the Iraqis government wants the group out and quotes Iraq's National Security Minister Shirwan al-Wa'eli stating, "We gave this organization a six-month deadline to leave Iraq, and we informed the Red Cross. And presumably our friends the Americans will respect our decision and they will not stay on Iraqi land."
 
 


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