village voice
RSS/Podcast feed for Village Voice News Status Ain't Hood
Eerie Misanthropic Wednesday
by Ward Harkavy | email: wharkavy@villagevoice.com
Main
posted: 9:04 AM, October 2, 2007 by Harkavy

Bad karma: Pitcher's wife gave cash to Bush campaign.

glavine-final399.jpg

"Admit Nothing" ducat courtesy of Wendy Cook

After the worst performance of his career personally guaranteed the worst collapse by a team in baseball history, New York Mets pitcher Tom Glavine was practically blasé — he talked about "we" this and "we" that.

Glavine told the Bergen (N.J.) Record's Steve Popper:

"Where do you want to start? You can point a finger at everything and anything really."

His refusal to stand up and personally take at least some of the blame is reminiscent of George W. Bush's well-known refusal to personally admit mistakes, even in light of the Iraq debacle.

Why be so oxymoronic as to bring up Bush? Back in 2004, Glavine's wife, Christine, gave $500 to the Bush-Cheney campaign. Federal records show that it's the couple's only contribution to any candidate.

That's nothing but bad karma.

Yankee fans had better beware. Alex Rodriguez is another Bush supporter. Records show that star third-baseman A-Rod gave the Bush-Cheney campaign $2,000 in August 2003.

We'll see whether A-Rod comes through in the playoffs and, if not, whether he'll take the heat.

We already know that Glavine, like Bush, is not a stand-up guy. As the Record's Bob Klapisch wrote:

The [Mets'] front office was appalled at Tom Glavine's attitude after the shellacking he took from the Marlins on Sunday. Despite allowing seven runs in one-third of an inning, dooming the season, the veteran left-hander all but ended his Met career when he refused to say he was devastated.

Instead, Glavine prattled on about moving on and learning from the experience, as if he'd just pitched in a mid-July game against the Pirates. "It was an incredibly stupid thing to say. Everyone was shocked to hear that from him," said one member of the organization. [General Manager Omar] Minaya said he would huddle with Glavine in the near future, setting the stage for the left-hander's inevitable return to the [Atlanta] Braves in 2008.

Contrast Glavine's reaction to that of San Diego Padres relief pitcher Trevor Hoffman, also a sure-fire Hall of Famer, whose miserable performance Monday night gave a playoff spot to the Colorado Rockies. Hoffman was all over the news this morning, saying:

"You can't really point to any other factor than my performance tonight."

Mets manager Willie Randolph, whose job is now in jeopardy, had no problem standing up, as the Record's Popper noted:

"I'm the manager of the team," said Randolph, who has spent nearly his entire life in New York, a market that he knows can be demanding. "I'm a big boy. I take full responsibility. I have no problem with that."

Glavine, though, had already cleaned out his locker on Sunday night and was headed home to his mansion in Alpharetta, Georgia — Atlanta's most exclusive suburb — where he's protected in the gated community of Country Club of the South. (His celeb neighbors in Alpharetta have included Jeff Foxworthy, Usher, Morris Day, Greg Maddux, and Damon Stoudamire.)

Glavine won his historic 300th game this season. Mission accomplished. An avid golfer, he'll stroke himself all winter and then possibly return to the Braves, with whom he spent his entire career before joining the Mets a few seasons ago as an aging baseball mercenary.

But it's up to Glavine. He was paid $7.5 million this season and has an option to return to the Mets for $9 million in 2008 — yes, that's a 20 percent raise after pitching the worst inning of his career in the biggest game of the season.

We New Yorkers have probably seen the last of Glavine's TV commercials on behalf of union workers. A leader of baseball's players union last decade, Glavine has earned lavish praise by the AFL-CIO for standing up for his union brothers in other, less glamorous, trades.

At some point, at least, Glavine was a stand-up millionaire guy.

Posted by wharkavy at 9:04 AM
posted: 9:15 AM, September 27, 2007 by Harkavy

Rehnquist is dead, but his spirit lives. The Supreme Court and Rove's man at the FEC pump life into "voter fraud" scheme.

A snapshot of current American electoral politics is one of the ugliest pictures of the year, now that the increasingly conservative Supreme Court has decided to hear a major voter-fraud/national photo ID case before next year's elections.

The GOP-engineered presidential-vote debacle in 2000 has developed into what may become a major scandal involving the use of photo IDs, which the GOP has been trying to engineer in time for next year.

"Voter fraud" — a purported invasion of polling places by illegitimate voters — is the battle cry of Republican officials hoping to stem turnout by likely Democratic voters in battleground states.

And "voter fraud" is right: The requirement that voters present photo IDs is their scheme, and Hans von Spakovsky is their standard-bearer at the Federal Election Commission. That uncomfortable sensation felt by small-d democrats is their cherished poll being shoved up a place where the sun don't shine.

Who said Karl Rove left the building? Coupled with the appointment of Michael Mukasey to oversee the Justice Department and its Civil Rights Division, the GOP is setting itself up well for '08, fighting a winnable war against U.S. voters while it fights an impossible war overseas. Rove's fingerprints are all over this, whether or not he's still using his White House keyboard.

Iraq has left the Republicans flaccid, but their "voter fraud" canard and accompanying strategy threaten to give the GOP yet another election.

Shades of Bill Rehnquist! Before he was chief justice of the U.S., Rehnquist personally blocked black people from voting in Phoenix in 1964, using "voter fraud" as his excuse. I wrote about that in September 2005 ("Rehnquist Death Gives Bush Chance to Deepen American Crisis"), recalling Dennis Roddy's riveting column in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette that itself recalled Rehnquist's totalitarian behavior in Arizona as a GOP operative.

Rehnquist died in September 2005, but that didn't help because John Roberts, who favors corporate citizens over human citizens, took his place. An event that may turn out to be equally vital to the GOP occurred three months later, when Bush made a recess appointment to the FEC of von Spakovsky, a former Republican county chairman in Georgia. Before his FEC appointment, von Spakovsky was the chief civil-rights violator in the Justice Department's civil-rights division, leading the move to suppress minority and poor voters.

Von Spakovsky is up for confirmation to another FEC term. And the Roberts Supreme Court announced yesterday that it will hear the issue involving national photo IDs and voting — just in time for next year's election. This is dangerous, because it will likely bollix up '08 voting in key states.

There's plenty to read on this topic. From Paul Kiel at Talking Points Memo this past June:

A group of former voting rights attorneys in the Division put it most succinctly in a letter to Sen. [Dianne] Feinstein … urging rejection of his nomination: von Spakovsky was "the point person for undermining the Civil Rights Division's mandate to protect voting rights." Von Spakovsky reported to [the division's Bradley] Schlozman, and the two worked together to purge voters from the rolls, ensure that voter ID laws were approved with no fuss, and punish lawyers who did not toe the line.

Kiel refers to a 2004 piece by Jeffrey Toobin in the New Yorker whose headline says it all: "Poll Position: Is the Justice Department poised to stop voter fraud — or to keep voters from voting?"

See Lou Dubose's 2006 account of how von Spakovsky collaborated with Rove to scheme Tom Delay's crooked redistricting in Texas earlier this century. More to the current point, Dubose noted at the time:

The White House human resources shop found [von Spakovsky] on a county board overseeing elections in Atlanta and appointed him director of the Civil Rights Division at the Department of Justice.

He had additional voting rights experience that qualified him for his DOJ job. He had served on the board of the Voting Integrity Project, a regional franchise in the Republican Party’s national voter-suppression ancillary operation.

In 2000, while von Spakovsky was on the board of Voting Integrity, the group worked to cleanse Florida voting roles of African-American "felons." Unfortunately, their felons list included the names of thousands of innocent people.

Dahlia Lithwick's piece two days ago in Slate is also vital for understanding the back story on von Spakovsky.

Legal beagles can parse Bob Bauer's analysis yesterday of the politics swirling around the vote case the Supreme Court has now agreed to hear.

For a very recent story hinting at the bad smell emanating from the Justice Department, see "The Stooge," by David Martin of Kansas City's The Pitch.

As for following this issue, though, nothing beats wonk lawyer Rick Hasen's Election Law site, though Hasen is perhaps too hopeful that the high court will protect the rights of voters.

As I've pointed out before, in a September 2004 piece about dubious electronic-voting machines, Hasen is always a captivating and current legal-news live wire.

Those who can't live without the New York Times can learn some things from an April 12 story, "In 5-Year Effort, Scant Evidence of Voter Fraud," co-bylined by Ian Urbina, whose copy I used to have the pleasure of editing.

But you must keep clicking on the excellent McClatchy home page (formerly the Knight-Ridder D.C. Bureau), and definitely read Greg Gordon's story last April, "Administration pursued aggressive legal effort to restrict voter turnout." Gordon noted:

For six years, the Bush administration, aided by Justice Department political appointees, has pursued an aggressive legal effort to restrict voter turnout in key battleground states in ways that favor Republican political candidates.

The administration intensified its efforts last year as President Bush's popularity and Republican support eroded heading into a midterm battle for control of Congress, which the Democrats won.

Facing nationwide voter registration drives by Democratic-leaning groups, the administration alleged widespread election fraud and endorsed proposals for tougher state and federal voter identification laws. Presidential political adviser Karl Rove alluded to the strategy in April 2006 when he railed about voter fraud in a speech to the Republican National Lawyers Association.

Next year those of you who can vote might want to vote early and vote often.

Posted by wharkavy at 9:15 AM
posted: 9:32 AM, September 21, 2007 by Harkavy

This oily business of dealing with evil foreign leaders.

reagan-taliban399.jpg

Cold War, warm feelings: Reagan chats with the Taliban in the White House in 1983.

New York's tabloids and assorted pols came unglued yesterday about the very idea of Iran's crackpot hardliner Mahmoud Ahmedinejad wanting to visit Ground Zero.

Where were they when Uzbek dictator Islam Karimov, whose regime boils people to death, was courted by George W. Bush and Mayor Mike Bloomberg?

Don't let your own blood boil at the thought of a bad guy visiting our sacralized 9/11 site. Condemn it, if you want, but Ahmedinejad was just trying to score political points, as our own pols do all the time at Ground Zero. He got what he wanted: The angry U.S. reaction will play well back home in Tehran, especially with the radical mullahs who really run Iran and like to stir up hatred for the "Great Satan."

Do we even have to say that in international politics, enemies today are pals tomorrow, and vice versa, and that the reasons almost always have to do with greed for money and natural resources?

On the other hand, it would be nice if our press at least reported these events. The Uzbek despot Karimov laid a wreath at Ground Zero in 2002, and there was literally not one word in the U.S. press about it at the time — I'm not talking about criticism or praise but any words at all. Nothing.

So Karimov is not a bad enough guy to get you worked up? Saddam Hussein was brown-nosed by Don Rumsfeld in December 1983. There's no reason to condemn Rumsfeld for that; it was just oil politics — just like the oil politics that Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney played when they seized upon the 9/11 attacks to justify invading Iraq.

After all, when Texas oil execs questioned Cheney in 1998, when he was still at Halliburton, about the physical dangers of pursuing oil in turbulent parts of Asia, the future vice president and de facto commander in chief told them:

"You've got to go where the oil is. I don't worry about it a lot."

Saddam is gone, but we still don't really have Iraq's oil. We do, however, have such evil people as the Taliban to deal with, right? Well, the Taliban were hailed as Afghan freedom fighters by Ronald Reagan during their triumphant visit to the White House on March 21, 1983. Reagan said at the time:

"To watch the courageous Afghan freedom fighters battle modern arsenals with simple hand-held weapons is an inspiration to those who love freedom. Their courage teaches us a great lesson - that there are things in this world worth defending.

"To the Afghan people, I say on behalf of all Americans that we admire your heroism, your devotion to freedom, and your relentless struggle against your oppressors."

That's ancient history, huh? In fact, they were still our pals 14 years later. In late 1997, the Taliban were wined and dined at the homes of Bush's pals, the Houston oil execs, during Dubya's reign as the hangingest governor in U.S. history.

The oil schnooks were buttering up the Taliban for pipelines and other bidness, of course. See Wayne Madsen's "Afghanistan, the Taliban, and the Bush Oil Team" for details.

At least that courting of the Taliban less than 10 years ago was reported at the time. Of the many words in the mainstream press, my favorites are from a December 14, 1997, story by Caroline Lees in the Telegraph (U.K.), in which she describes the Taliban officials' visit to Unocal vice president Martin Miller's palatial Houston home:

After a meal of specially prepared halal meat, rice and Coca-Cola, the hardline fundamentalists — who have banned women from working and girls from going to school — asked Mr Miller about his Christmas tree.

Posted by wharkavy at 9:32 AM
posted: 10:03 AM, September 13, 2007 by Harkavy

Fore! More Years! At Least!

golf-camp-victoryjun06-399.jpg

U.S. Army/Staff Sgt. Jacob Boyer
No grunts, please: A sergeant and a captain tee off at the Camp Victory driving range.

While Americans were being shelled Tuesday by White-House-driven propaganda from General David Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan Crocker in D.C., rebels bombed our Camp Victory in Baghdad, a little-noticed Xanadu that illustrates the golf between us and the Iraqis.

Five years ago we "liberated" Saddam Hussein's sumptuous Al Faw Palace and planted the Pentagon's flag there.

camp-victory-swim229.jpgBy now we could have returned the palace to Iraq's citizens, who are dying of the heat, among other things. But all we've done is given it a friendlier second name, Camp Al-Nasr, for PR purposes aimed at Iraq's surviving Arab populace.

The only lifeguards with a good track record at Camp Victory are probably those at its pool — here's a photo of the actual palace swimmin' hole.

On Tuesday, the sixth anniversary of 9/11, Camp Victory, the U.S. military HQ, was shelled. Here's an AP report from this morning:

A fatal attack launched two days ago against the sprawling headquarters base of the American military in Iraq was carried out with a 240 mm rocket — a type of weapon provided to Shiite extremists by Iran, a U.S. general said Thursday.

One person was killed and 11 were wounded during the "indirect fire" attack Tuesday against Camp Victory, which includes the headquarters of Multinational Forces-Iraq. …

The attacks came despite the start of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, which began Thursday for Iraq's Sunni Muslims, and Friday for the country's majority Shiites. Tradition requires faithful to abstain from eating and drinking from sunrise to sunset during the monthlong observance. …

The attack was overshadowed by congressional appearances by Gen. David Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan Crocker in Washington.

And talk about surges and track records: How about that Christopher Harris! I still remember his Ironman Triathlon at Camp Victory in October 2005. The U.S. Army captain conducted his one-man surge while his wife competed in Hawaii's Ironman Triathlon.

But Iraqis are pretty fortunate, too. Praise Allah for good timing: Ramadan's month-long fasting coincides perfectly with the current food crisis. As IRIN reports:

The monthly food rationing system on which millions of Iraqis depend is not working properly, according to officials. They warn that delays in food deliveries will have a serious impact on those fasting during the upcoming holy Islamic month of Ramadan (beginning around 13 September), when Muslims go without food and drink from dawn to sunset.

The shortage of food can't be that serious if they're already fasting. Mind if we play through?

Posted by wharkavy at 10:03 AM
posted: 9:45 PM, September 11, 2007 by Harkavy

Why Uzbekistan is something to think about on this day.

karimov-wreath-ground-zero3.jpg

Past offense: Uzbek despot Karimov lays a wreath at Ground Zero in 2002

By this time on the sixth anniversary of the 9/11 horror, you will have seen plenty of images of pols trying to launch themselves from the sacralized Ground Zero — though Rudy Giuliani got scorched on his latest takeoff when some victims' families accused him of exploiting the tragedy now that he's a presidential candidate.

Giuliani, who would never have been a presidential candidate if not for 9/11, was the first pol to exploit Ground Zero, but he's not the last, of course, and he's probably not even the most worrisome. In 2002, Uzbek dictator Islam Karimov used the sacralized 9/11 site as a photo-op — with the blessing of Giuliani's successor, Mike Bloomberg.

Why bring up Karimov's Ground Zero visit five years after the fact? Who cares if a foreign pol desecrated what has become sacred ground? The reason is that Uzbekistan is nothing but an Iran in the making, Karimov is its shah, and we're the dupes who have helped prop him up. All that in a world that's more dangerous than it was six years ago.

Iraq has become a training ground for terrorists since our 2003 invasion. Uzbekistan, which is about as geopolitically strategic (see map below), is liable to become such a training ground for terrorists even without a U.S. invasion.

uzbekistan-map.jpg

Our fairly warm relationship with Karimov grew warmer after 9/11, when we enlisted in our "war on terror" this dictator who conducts a war of terror on his own people. Dangerous move by the Bush regime, because the radical Muslims who will probably take over undemocratic Uzbekistan when the aging despot dies or is deposed will also have long memories. They're sure to remember that, under the once-secret "rendition" scheme, we shipped Muslim prisoners to his jails for interrogation. They'll also remember how our government stood by and did nothing during Karimov's notorious Andijan massacre of dissidents in the spring of 2005 and then tried to suppress an independent investigation of the slaughter.

Expect to see those images of Karimov at Ground Zero and cuddling with Bush used eventually as devices to stir up hatred of the U.S.

The Central Asian "republic" is destined to be the next "-stan" to push its way into headlines, and the news will be bad. Am I crazy? Yes. Am I wrong about Uzbekistan? I don't think so. Here's how the mainstream International Crisis Group summed things up late last month:

Uzbekistan remains a serious risk to itself and its region. While 69-year-old President Islam Karimov shows no signs of relinquishing power, despite the end of his legal term of office more than half a year ago, his eventual departure may lead to a violent power struggle.

The economy remains tightly controlled, with regime stalwarts, including the security services and Karimov’s daughter Gulnora, exerting excessive influence, which drives away investors and exacerbates poverty. The human rights situation is grave, and those who seek to flee abroad live in constant danger of attempts to return them forcibly.

While the government cites the "war on terror" to justify many policies, its repression may in fact be creating greater future danger. Efforts at international engagement have been stymied by its refusal to reform and to allow an independent investigation of the May 2005 Andijan uprising. Little can be done presently to influence Tashkent, but it is important to help ordinary Uzbeks as much as possible and to assist the country’s neighbours build their capacity to cope with the instability that is likely to develop when Karimov goes.

If understanding our history with Karimov and Uzbekistan is important, then recalling how we "handled" the shah and Iran is instructive.

Yes, Karimov is following right in the footsteps of Shah Reza Pahlavi. What's worse is that our government is traipsing down the same garden path with Uzbek's dictator as we did with the shah. And our relationship with Karimov and his NSS is similar to our relationship with the shah and his dreaded secret service, SAVAK, which was shaped by the CIA. Alfred McCoy, in A Question of Torture: CIA Interrogation, from the Cold War to the War on Terror, wrote:

There was little public reaction in the United States to revelations about the CIA's ties to the Shah's secret police.

Yet Iran provided an important cautionary tale. By buttressing the shah's rule with riot police and ruthless interrogation, the CIA unwittingly contributed to the rising opposition that eventually toppled his regime. After training his police, Washington underestimated the stigma attached to torture and stood by, confused, while its key Persian Gulf ally lost legitimacy. The lesson was clear: Torture introduced to defend the shah had instead destroyed the shah.

Karimov rules the same way the shah did. We haven't been as close to Karimov as we were to the shah, but our allowing Karimov to use 9/11 as a symbol back in 2002 was cynical: The Bush regime buttered him up as an ally, and Bloomberg was careful not to offend him because of New York's large number of Bukharan Jewish emigres, many of whom supported him.

Karimov himself is pretty cynical: In his own nation, he generally tolerates Jews and even protects them, because the Bukharan Jews have lived there for a thousand years and pose no threat to his power. But he harshly represses Christians — and even the Muslims who make up nearly 90 percent of the California-sized country of 27 million people.

As I pointed out a couple of years ago, New York's Jewish Week described the strange embrace of Karimov by the city's Bukharan Jews:

Most of the estimated 40,000-strong Bukharan Jews living in the New York area appear to be maintaining their community’s longstanding support for Islam Karimov, the beleaguered president of their native Uzbekistan, despite international media reports that Karimov’s army responded to an uprising and prison break by firing on protesters and killing 500 or more people, including innocent civilians.

That support comes with a caution, though.

The United States, several prominent Bukharan leaders said, should stand by Karimov in this crisis for fear that Islamists might take over the country and persecute the estimated 30,000 to 50,000 Jews remaining there. But these leaders contend that Karimov must change course and allow more democracy and economic liberalization.

George W. Bush's relationship with Karimov isn't quite as old as Karimov's relationship with Uzbek Jews. Bush's dealings with Karimov date back to 1997, when Dubya was still the hangingest governor in U.S. history: Enron's Ken Lay, Bush's biggest campaign contributor, wanted to make a deal with Uzbekistan so Lay instructed Dubya to meet with one of Karimov's minions to grease the skids.

By 2002, the Bush regime wanted to curry favor with Karimov because Uzbekistan borders on Afghanistan. When Karimov visited the States, he got the royal treatment. At Ground Zero, the dictator looked like the religious type, right? I mean, he laid a wreath and even signed his name on a memorial wall.

Bloomberg gave Karimov freer rein in New York City than he gave the 500,000 Americans protesting at the Republican National Convention in 2004. And in December 2005, Bloomberg blasted a New York transit strike as "morally reprehensible." But it was OK for the mayor to roll out the red carpet three years earlier for a morally reprehensible dictator.

Anyway, by the time of the 2002 visit, Karimov was already known as a harsh despot, and Bloomberg tried to keep the news pretty quiet that he was schlepping a dictator around town. You couldn't find on the mayor's website the photos of him and Karimov in the mayor's office or of Karimov at Ground Zero. But the pix were trumpeted on the Uzbekistan government site.

Five years after his visit to Ground Zero, Karimov is surely nearing the end of his 20-year reign — one sign is that there's more and more repression in Uzbekistan. Forum 18, an Oslo-based religious-freedom group that snoops on repressive regimes around the world, noted just the other day that Karimov and his secret police, the National Security Service, have stepped up their spying on religious communities. Forum 18's Felix Corley wrote on September 5:

Members of a variety of religious communities have told Forum 18 News Service of hidden microphones in places of worship, the presence of NSS agents during worship and the recruitment of spies within communities. … "Two secret police officers sit in each church across the country — but not just churches, they are there in mosques and in other places of worship," one Protestant who preferred not to be identified for fear of reprisals told Forum 18 News Service.

But the NSS has also stepped up its covert spying on and within religious communities of all faiths in recent years as the climate in the country has grown more repressive. Few religious leaders are prepared to talk to outsiders about such spying, fearing reprisals if they do so.

It's one thing for a predominantly Muslim country to spy on Christians or for a predominantly Christian nation to spy on Muslims — that happens in many places. But Karimov is playing with fire, just as the shah did in Iran, because he's hassling Muslims in a Muslim country. Forum 18's Corley noted:

The NSS keeps a very close eye on imams and future imams. The independent news website Uznews.net reported on 1 February that the NSS keeps the Islamic University in Tashkent under close scrutiny. The university was opened with great ceremony by President Islam Karimov in April 1999 and is the flagship educational institution for Muslim students, some of whom go on to become imams.

Uznews said that students complain that the authorities regard them with mistrust. They know that each one is being closely monitored by the NSS. One first-year student was quoted by Uznews as reporting that as soon as they join the university, all students without exception face meetings with NSS officers. "During the meetings, you are given to understand that from now on we are under the constant surveillance of this service," the student reported, "and they have to approve all the steps we take in advance."

Students that are too pious, too devoted to their studies or who question any aspects of the teaching they are being given are regarded with the most suspicion and face "serious problems". Those who questioned the teachers' approach, citing the hadiths (oral traditions attributed to the Muslim prophet Muhammed), faced pressure not only from senior university officials but from NSS officers, Uznews reported.

Uznews notes that this NSS surveillance and intimidation leaves students as "frightened shadows" who have received only a superficial Islamic education.

Karimov's day of reckoning with his country's Muslim radicals is approaching. And it won't help Americans worried about the spread of terrorists that our government is supporting him till the bitter end.

Posted by wharkavy at 9:45 PM
posted: 10:22 AM, June 19, 2007 by Harkavy

It figures that the unnecessary and unjustified invasion of Iraq would lead to a host of other horrors, including a bunch of operations that are like so much cosmetic surgery on an open wound.

John Pike's excellent and exhaustive site, globalsecurity.org, lists the "Iraq Pacification Operations." It's not a complete list — for example, right now the latest "surge" is Operation Arrowhead Ripper, directed at rebels in Diyala province, northeast of Baghdad.

What's in a name? Armies always do this kind of thing. Back in 2004, there was even an Operation Giuliani. No, it wasn't a series of high-paying motivational speeches playing off 9/11. It was this:

Soldiers of 1st platoon, 3rd Battalion, 327th Infantry Regiment, A Company, 101st Airborne Division swept through Mosul in Operation Giuliani. This operation was designed to seize weapons and munitions to prevent them from being used against coalition forces. Soldiers engaged in cordon searches and moved from house to house in the city.

Wow.

Back to today: Operation Arrowhead Ripper was deemed necessary because the surge in Baghdead drove rebels out of the capital and into the hinterlands. While all eyes — well, most eyes — were on Diyala today, terrorists blew up a huge Shiite mosque in central Baghdad. More than 75 were killed and hundreds wounded.

Anyway, here's the list of operations and sub-operations and sub-sub-operations — including the December 6, 2004, Operation Soprano Sunset:

Task Force Baghdad soldiers conducted a raid on a sports complex at 4 p.m., Dec. 6 in eastern Baghdad, capturing several suspected senior level transnational terrorists, including key leaders, operatives, and financiers.

Operation Soprano Sunset targeted the sports complex, which was suspected as the base of operations for transnational terrorist members. Records and computers were also seized in the raid. The names and exact number of insurgent suspects were not released at the time, pending legal processing.

Sounds about as exciting as the actual Sopranos sunset.

Go to globalsecurity.org for links to each and every operation:

Operation Planet X (15 May 2003)

Operation Peninsula Strike (09 June 2003 - 12 June 2003)

Operation Desert Scorpion (15 June 2003 - 29 June 2003)

Operation Scorpion Sting

Operation Spartan Scorpion

Operation Rifles Scorpion

Operation Sidewinder (29 June 2003 - 07 July 2003)

Operation Soda Mountain (12 July 2003 - 17 July 2003)

Operation Ivy Serpent (12 July 2003 - 21 July 2003)

Operation Iron Bullet (July 2003)

Operation Tyr (July 2004)

Operation Ivy Lightning (12 August 2003)

Operation Silverado (16 August 2003)

Operation Ivy Needle (26 August 2003 - ?)

Operation Longstreet (September 2003)

Operation Tiger Clean Sweep (07 September 2003)

Operation Industrial Sweep (October 2003)

Operation Chamberlain (15 October 2003 - ?)

Operation Sweeney (15 October 2003 - ?)

Operation O.K. Corral (19 October 2003)

Operation Iron Hammer (November 2003)

Operation Eagle Curtain (November 2003)

Operation All American Tiger (06 November 2003 - ?)

Operation Ivy Cyclone (07 November 2003 - ?)

Operation Ivy Cyclone II (17 November 2003 - ?)

Operation Boothill (10 November 2003)

Operation Rifles Blitz (20 November 2003 - ?)

Operation Rifle Sweep(26 November 2003)

Operation Bayonet Lightning (02 December 2003)

Operation Bulldog Mammoth (04 December 2003 - ?)

Operation Clear Area (06 December 2003)

Operation Abilene (08 December 2003)

Operation Panther Squeeze (10 December 2003)

Operation Red Dawn (13 December 2003)

Operation Panther Backroads (15 December 2003)

Operation Ivy Blizzard (17 December 2003 - ?)

Operation Arrowhead Blizzard (17 December 2003 - ?)

Operation Iron Justice (18 December 2003 - ?)

Operation Rifles Fury (21 December 2003 - ?)

Operation Salm (23 December 2003)

Operation Devil Siphon (23 December 2003 - ?)

Operation Iron Grip (24 December 2003 - ?)

Operation Iron Force (24 December 2003 - ?)

Operation Choke Hold (30 December 2003)

Operation Warhorse Whirlwind (January 2004)

Operation Iron Resolve (January 2004)

Operation Market Sweep (13 January 2004)

Operation Saloon (14 January 2004)

Operation Rock Slide (15 January 2004)

Operation Final Cut (28 January 2004 - ?)

Operation Saber Turner II (February 2004)

Operation Tomahawk (February 2004)

Operation Trailblazer (February 2004)

Operation Eagle Liberty 3 (19 February 2004)

Operation Devil Clinch (21 February 2004)

Operation Rocketman (26 February 2004)

Operation Iron Promise (March 2004)

Operation Shillelagh (March 2004)

Operation Devil Thrust (March 2004)

Operation Aloha (March 2004)

Operation Centaur Rodeo (March 2004)

Operation Warrior (03 March 2004)

Operation Suicide Kings (17 March 2004)

Operation Tiger Fury (30 March 2004 - ?)

Operation Iron Saber (April 2004 - June 2004)

Operation Duke Fortitude (April 2004)

Operation Lancer Fury (April 2004)

Operation Lancer Lightning

Operation Vigilant Resolve (05 April 2004)

Operation Resolute Sword (08 April 2004)

Operation Danger Fortitude (11 April 2004 - 17 April 2004)

Operation Ripper Sweep (12 April 2004 - ?)

Operation Yellow Stone (23 April 2004)

Operation Rapier Thrust (May 2004)

Operation Spring Clean-up (May 2004)

Operation Striker Hurricane (1 May 2004)

Operation Wolfpack Crunch (4 May 2004)

Operation Disarm (19 May 2004)

Operation Giuliani (June 2004)

Operation Slim Shady (June 2004)

Operation Striker Tornado (June 2004)

Operation Rocketman III (June 2004)

Operation Dragon Victory (19 June 2004 - ?)

Operation Gimlet Crusader (24 June 2004)

Operation Gimlet Silent Sniper (July 2004)

Operation Outlaw Destroyer (July 2004)

Operation Haifa Street (July 2004)

Operation Mutual Security (02 July 2004 - ?)

Operation Tombstone Pile Driver (15 July 2004)

Operation Mayfield III (19 July 2004)

Operation Cobra Sweep (28 July 2004)

Operation Showdown (August 2004)

Operation Grizzly Forced Entry (August 2004)

Operation Warrior Resolve (August 2004)

Operation Quarterhorse Rides (August 2004)

Operation Phantom Linebacker (04 August 2004)

Operation Cajun Mousetrap II (05 August 2004 - ?)

Operation Cajun Mousetrap III (13 August 2004 - 15 August 2004)

Operation Iron Fury (17 August 2004 - ?)

Operation Iron Fury II

Operation Wolverine (19 August 2004)

Operation Clean Sweep (23-24 August 2004)

Operation True Grit (23-24 August 2004)

Operation Black Typhoon (09 September 2004 - ?)

Operation Hurricane (16 September 2004)

Operation Hurricane II (18 September 2004)

Operation Iron Fist 2 (23 September 2004 - ?)

Operation Longhorn (30 September 2004 - ?)

Operation Blue Tiger (October 2004)

Operation Baton Rouge (01 October 2004 - ?)

Operation Phantom Fury (05 October 2004 - ?)

Operation Bulldog (06 October 2004 - ?)

Operation Centaur Strike II (11 October 2004)

Operation Centaur Strike III (13 October 2004)

Operation Mandarin Squeeze (14 October 2004)

Operations in Fallujah (14 October 2004 - ?)

Operation Dallas (29 October 2004)

Operation al-Fajr (Dawn) / Phantom Fury [Fallujah] (8 November 2004 - ?)

Operation Plymouth Rock (23 November 2004 - ?)

Operation Tobruk [UK] (28 November 2004)

Operation Rock Bottom (24 November 2004 - ?)

Operation Falcon Freedom (5 December 2004)

Operation Soprano Sunset (6 December 2004)

Operation Wonderland (24 December 2004)

Operation Powder River (December 31, 2004-January 14, 2005)

Operation Triple Play (December 31, 2004 - January 2, 2005)

Operation Therapist (~January 9, 2005 - ?)

Operation Lanthonid (~January 9, 2005 - ?)

Operation Copperas Cove (January 12, 2005)

Operation Checkmate (January 19, 2005 - ?)

Operation River Blitz (February 20, 2005 - )

Operation Fontana (2-6 April 2005)

Operation Badlands (April 12, 2005 - ? )

Operation Forsyth Park (April 17, 2005 - ?)

Operation Cobweb [MND-CS] (May 6-10, 2005)

Operation Matador (May 7-14, 2005)

Operation Peninsula [MND-CS] (May 19-20, 2005)

Operation Squeeze Play (May 23(?), 2005 - ? )

Operation Hudson (?, 2005)

Operation New Market (Souk Jadeed) (May 25-29, 2005)

Operation Lightning (May 29, 2005 - ? )

Operation Moon River Dragon (May 29, 2005 )

Operation Spear (Rohme) (June 17, 2005 - June 22, 2005)

Operation Sword (Saif) (June 28, 2005 - July 6, 2005)

Operation Muthana Strike (July 4, 2005)

Operation Bow Country (July 5, 2005)

Operation Scimitar (Qmtia) (July 7, 2005 - ? )

Operation Warrior's Rage (July 18, 2005)

Operation Thunder (July 2005 ?)

Operation Thunder Cat (July 26, 2005 - July 30, 2005)

Operation Hunter (Sayaid) (July 2005 ?)

Operation Iron Fist (Kabda Bil Hadid) (October 1, 2005 - October 6, 2005)

Operation Steel Curtain (Al Hajip Elfulathi) (November 5, 2005 - ?)

Operation Quick Strike (August 3, 2005 - ? )

Operation Able Warrior (August 4, 2005)

Operation Restoring Rights (August 26, 2005 - ?)

Operation Cyclone (Zoba'a) (September 11, 2005 - ?)

Operation Flea Flicker (September 14, 2005)

Operation National Unity (September 29, 2005 - ?)

Operation Mountaineers (October 2005)

Operation Carentan (October - December 2005)

Operation River Gate (October 4, 2005 - ?)

Operation Wolf Stalk 2 (November 2005)

Operation Open Window (November 2005)

Operation Knockout (November 2005)

Operation Clean Sweep (November 2005)

Operation Kennesaw Dragon (November 14, - November 15, 2005)

Operation Panthers (Numur) (November 16, - November 18, 2005)

Operation Bruins (Dibbah) (November 19, - November 2005)

Operation Lions (Asad) (November 22, November 24, 2005)

Operation Tigers (Nimur) (November 26, 2005 - ?)

Operation Iron Hammer (Matraqa Hadidia) (November 30 - December 3, 2005)

Operation Shank (Harba) (December 2 - December 3, 2005)

Operation Rams (Tallie) (December 4 - December 7, 2005)

Operation Able Rising Force (December 2005)

Operation Skinner (Gashshaar) (December 7 - December 10, 2005)

Operation Bull Dawg Chariot (December 8, 2005)

Operation Moonlight (Alkamra Almaner) (December 19 - December 21, 2005)

Operation Falcon Sweep (January 2006)

Operation Wadi Aljundi (Koa Canyon) (January 15 - January 27, 2006)

Operation Al Dharba Al Nihaa’ya (Final Strike) (January 29, 2006)

Operation Smokewagon (February 2 - February 5, 2006)

Operation Ala Allah (February 13, 2006)

Operation Minotaur (February 26, 2006)

Operation Dirty Harry (February 2006)

Operation Raging Bull (March 2006)

Operation Swamp Fox (March 2006)

Operation Scales of Justice (March 12 - ? 2006)

Operation Glory Light (March 2-9 2006)

Operation Swarmer (March 16 - March 22, 2006)

Operation Cowpens (March 19 - April 14, 2006)

Operation Northern Lights (March 22, 2006)

Operation Scorpion (March 24 - 26 2006)

Operation Red Light II (March 31, 2006)

Operation Cobra Strike (April 2006)

Operation Money Worth (April 2006)

Operation Sterling (April 2006)

Operation Bold Action (April 10, 2006)

Operation Swift Sword (April 26-29, 2006)

Operation Babil Perimeter (April 28, 2006)

Operation Lion's Hunt (April 29 - ?, 2006)

Operation Lofty Summit (May 2006)

Operation Stallion Run (May 2006)

Operation Lightning Blitz (May 5-7, 2006)

Operation United Front (May 6, 2006)

Operation Cool Spring VIII (? - May 9, 2006)

Operation Iron Triangle (May 9-11, 2006)

Operation Dragon's Breath (May 15, 2006)

Operation Chepultepec (May 24, 2006)

Operation Roaring Tiger (June 3, 2006)

Operation Forward Together (June 14 - ?, 2006)

Operation River Falcon (June 25-27, 2006)

Posted by wharkavy at 10:22 AM
posted: 11:33 AM, May 19, 2005 by Harkavy
Gutless diplomacy will cost us when Karimov regime falls

robin-williams-at-K2-uzbeki.jpg

Defense Supply Center—Philadelphia

Torture in Uzbekistan, then and now: Above, stand-up guy Robin Williams, flanked by majors Paul Kennedy (right) and Mark Stubbs (left), mugs for the camera in December 2002 at the U.S. base in Karshi-Khanabad. Below, Uzbeks who ran for their lives earlier this week take a break at a refugee camp across the border in Kyrgyzstan.

uzbek-refugees-in-kyrgyz-IR.jpg

© IRIN

Now that Uzbekistan is finally boiling over, it's heartening to know that millions of U.S. taxpayer dollars are being used by dictator Islam Karimov to kill his rebelling citizens.

You didn't know that? It's old news. In 2002, British ambassador to Tashkent Craig Murray publicized Karimov's appalling torture—and the fact that the U.S. and Great Britain used Uzbekistan to torture terrorism suspects—and the British Foreign Office fired him and tried to silence him. But the press picked up on Murray's courageous rendition of Karimov's sordid abuses. Back in May 2003, Nick Paton Walsh of the Guardian (U.K.) pointed out the hell that Uzbeks endure:

    Independent human rights groups estimate that there are more than 600 politically motivated arrests a year in Uzbekistan, and 6,500 political prisoners, some tortured to death. According to a forensic report commissioned by the British embassy, in August two prisoners were even boiled to death.

    The U.S. condemned this repression for many years. But since September 11 rewrote America's strategic interests in Central Asia, the government of President Islam Karimov has become Washington's new best friend in the region.

    The U.S. is funding those it once condemned. Last year Washington gave Uzbekistan $500 million in aid. The police and intelligence services—which the State Department's website says use "torture as a routine investigation technique"—received $79 million of this sum.

    Mr. Karimov was President Bush's guest in Washington in March [2002]. They signed a "declaration" which gave Uzbekistan security guarantees and promised to strengthen "the material and technical base of [their] law enforcement agencies."

You didn't know about Karimov's visit? EurasiaNet's Kenan Aliyev explained at the time:

    Uzbek President Islam Karimov is maintaining a low profile during his visit to the United States, apparently out of a desire to keep controversy over Uzbekistan’s human-rights record to a minimum.

    Karimov was scheduled to meet with U..S Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld early March 13, then travel to New York for several appointments, including a discussion with Mayor Michael Bloomberg.

    On March 12, Karimov had a 45-minute White House meeting with President George W. Bush. After the meeting, Karimov left the White House without pausing to speak with gathered journalists. In general, Uzbek Embassy representatives have been reluctant to divulge information about the visit, and media access to members of the visiting Uzbek delegation has been extremely limited. U.S. officials have likewise provided only general information concerning the Karimov visit, declining to reveal specifics about discussions.

You can be sure that the next regime in charge of Uzbekistan will remember not only that Karimov's government has boiled prisoners to death but also how the Bush regime has propped him up. Bill Clinton's crew would occasionally condemn human-rights abuses in Uzbekistan, but our military help to Karimov began during Clinton's regime, as Bob Kaiser of the Washington Post reported back in August 2002 in a prescient piece titled "U.S. Plants Footprint in Shaky Central Asia":

    During the 1990s the United States began to quietly build influence in the area. Washington established significant military-to-military relationships with Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, and Kazakhstan. Soldiers from those countries have been trained by Americans. Uzbekistan alone will receive $43 million in U.S. military aid this year. The militaries of all three have an ongoing relationship with the National Guard of a U.S. state—Kazakhstan with Arizona, Kyrgyzstan with Montana, Uzbekistan with Louisiana. The countries also participated in NATO's Partnership for Peace program.

    "We wanted to extend our influence in the region, and promote American values, too," said Jeffrey Starr, a Pentagon official who was responsible for these relationships during the second Clinton administration as deputy assistant secretary of defense.

Under Bush's handlers, any half-hearted attempts to pressure Karimov were forgotten after 9/11, and we stepped up our training of Karimov's military.

The Uzbek people will remember that—in their nightmares. As the U.N. news service IRIN reports from a refugee camp (see photo) across the border in Kyrgyzstan:

    The refugees told IRIN they wanted to stay in Kyrgyzstan in order to escape persecution in Uzbekistan.

    "What we witnessed in Andijan was slaughter—a regime capable of that is capable of anything," said a woman who had left her two children behind in the city when she fled for her life early on Saturday morning.

The next government of Uzbekistan will be Islamic—you can bet on it. As Bagila Bukharbayeva of the Associated Press writes this morning from Korasuv:

    The leader of a group of rebels claiming to control this Uzbek border town said Wednesday that he and his supporters intend to build an Islamic state and would fight back if government troops attempt to crush their revolt.

    "We will be building an Islamic state here in accordance with the Koran," Bakhtiyor Rakhimov told The Associated Press while leaning down from the back of a horse.

That's just one town and one horseman. But this is no game. Robin Williams (see photo) won't be back here any time soon. This is just another chapter in the Great Game, and we're on the wrong side, in a more obvious way than we were in the recent (and successful) populist revolt against Kyrgyz dictator Askar Akayev. Akayev didn't get our strong support because he balked at cooperating with the Bush regime's War of Terror. Karimov, on the other hand, has been one of our stalwarts, a part of the "coalition of the willing."

That must be troubling to the thousands of U.S. soldiers stationed in Uzbekistan, especially at Karshi-Khanabad, where the New York-flavored troops have given the "streets," where they pitch their tents and build permanent structures, such names as Fifth Avenue, Wall Street, and the Long Island Expressway. (That's old news, too, reported by the Washington Post's Kaiser.)

Here in America, New Yorkers complain about the traffic jams on the L.I.E. as they go to the Hamptons for polo matches. But in Uzbekistan, the New York-based soldiers from the 10th Mountain Division, who proudly travel on their own L.I.E., are faced with horsemen of a different color.

How much longer will we be keeping our permanent-looking base at Karshi-Khanabad? Will it survive if Uzbekistan, currently ruled by a hardline secular regime, is taken over by a hardline Islamic regime?

Our soldiers sit in the midst of 25 million angry Muslims long repressed by a dictator we're arming and have kept in power. A question for Don Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney: Will you dispatch troops from the base to help Karimov "maintain order"?

The dictator is keeping his usual tight grip on information, so we don't know what's happening with this inevitable, bloody revolt against his rule. As IRIN puts it:

    A Western diplomat, who wished to remain anonymous, told IRIN that a government-organized trip to Andijan—the scene of mass killings by Uzbek forces on Friday—had been "completely stage managed by Tashkent" in order to prevent foreigners and journalists from gaining information to support claims that more than 500 people were gunned down in and around the city's central square. "We were not allowed to talk to local people, see hospitals or morgues, or move freely around the city," the diplomat said.

Sooner or later, though, Karimov will fall, and we may still be clutching at his coattails as he plummets.

Posted by wharkavy at 11:33 AM
posted: 7:24 PM, May 15, 2005 by Harkavy
Speechless for so long about Uzbek torture, U.S. helpless while Karimov hunts peasants

uzbek-protesters-US-embassy.jpg

© IRIN

Starving for attention: Uzbek peasants camp outside the U.S. embassy in Tashkent during a recent protest. Hours later, Uzbek troops waded into them and busted heads.

Our high-priced spread of "democracy" is leaving a bitter taste in the mouths of 25 million angry Muslims in Uzbekistan as an ominous revolt spreads across Central Asia.

Not even a major clampdown on information by Uzbek dictator Islam Karimov can stop the news of his goonish behavior—CNN reports tonight about the blood in the streets, with 500 corpses laid out on the pavement in the city of Andijan, in the fertile Fergana Valley in eastern Uzbekistan.

By the way, in the coming months, as Central Asia's corrupt "republics" crumble, you'll be reading all about the strategically key Fergana Valley, by the way.

Neighboring Kyrgyzstan's dictator, Askar Akayev, has already been driven out. Karimov is thrashing in the final throes of his torturous and tortured reign and, wouldn't you know it, we've been his richest uncle lately.

What's worse for our future credibility with Uzbekistan's next generation of leaders is that Karimov's goons have been cracking heads in the act of defending the U.S. embassy in the capital, Tashkent, according to death-defying dispatches filed by the Institute of War & Peace Reporting's project director in Uzbekistan, Galima Bukharbaeva.

Every new report from Uzbekistan presages the likely overthrow of Karimov—he's unlikely to be hanging with Don Rumsfeld any more—not that Karimov won't be hanging.

For evidence backing that observation, go back a few days to the intrepid IWPR journalist Bukharbaeva's report of the cruel, vindictive, and sorry-ass behavior of the dictator's domos.

It was May 4, and a group of about 70 peasants—mostly women, and some with children—had trekked to Tashkent to demand that the government return a farm it wrongly seized—they were also incensed about having to live in poverty, and they called for government officials to resign. The peasants headed to the U.S. embassy and camped right outside, hoping to stir the U.S. State Department into action. Good luck. The U.S. ambassador, Jon Purnell, has said barely anything about Karimov's insane tortures of the citizenry—unlike his former British counterpart, Craig Murray. On the scene of the protest, Bukharbaeva wrote:

    The group set up tents on the pavement outside the embassy compound and said they would remain there until their demands were met. They chose the venue because they said they would seek asylum in the U.S. if their own government refused to respond.

    Placards and banners called on government officials to resign and called for an end to poverty.

    Although the protest clearly reflected local concerns rather than opposition politics, and there were so many women and children present, the authorities resorted to tough measures.

No surprise, considering that Karimov's government has been known to boil people to death.

Anyway, 50 plainclothes cops and an array of fire trucks, ambulances, and police vans converged on the scene. Here's Bukharbaeva again:

    At 11:20 in the evening, when some of the adults and children were asleep inside the tents, two buses drew up and about 50 people armed with truncheons jumped out. Some were in police uniform and others in camouflage, but most were in plain clothes.

    The demonstrators were so intimidated that they put their hands in the air and called out that they would stop their protest action and go home immediately.

    Their pleas were ignored and the security forces waded in, beating people apparently indiscriminately.

Reports of various broken bones couldn't be confirmed, but the protesters were dragged away, and so were some journalists. A Tashkent cop rescued the journalists. The farmers, who had traveled a long way from their homes in southwestern Uzbekistan, were sent back home. The IWPR report continued:

    A spokesman for the Uzbek interior ministry, Vyacheslav Tutin, said the following day that all the participants in the protest had been put on buses and sent back home. The spokesman said 11 men, 13 women, and 19 children were detained in all.

    Tutin said it was the protesters’ own fault if security forces behaved in a heavy-handed way, because earlier in the day, police and National Security Service officers had been stoned by the crowd.

    Speaking before the evening police assault, protesters said they had thrown stones that morning, but only when members of the security forces attempted to grab a 9-month-old baby from its mother’s arms. They said police retreated after this initial intervention.

Caught in the middle was the U.S. embassy, which issued a statement saying the protesters were simply "exercising their rights to freedom of expression and assembly accorded them in United Nations conventions," as the IWPR reporter put it. women in the war zone.

That's funny. No such message was forthcoming last summer from U.S. officials when Americans were prevented from protesting at Republican Square Garden during the GOP convention.

Karimov always insists that he's fighting terrorists, but the whole damn country wants to give him the bum's rush. As a United Press International story after the Tashkent protest noted:

    "Having trusted Karimov's promises, we were left with nothing," one protester said. "We can't study. We have no food to eat. We were left on the street with nothing."

    After the group threatened to set up a tent city, police encircled them, and soon after, several protesters were beaten and bloodied by batons, the report said.

The Tashkent protesters were probably lucky that they were merely sent home—if, indeed, that's what happened to them. They had come to Tashkent hungry and stayed that way. As the IWPR's Bukharbaeva wrote:

    It did appear that the protesters were an unusually vulnerable group. They began their action without providing themselves with food and water. For the first few hours, residents of a nearby apartment block supplied them with tea and water until police ordered them to stop, so by the evening they were in no fit state to go on.

    A foreign observer present on the scene said it made no sense to use crude force against such an unthreatening group of people who could easily have been persuaded to end their protest.

    "Brute force against a group of women and children and the deployment of resources en masse may, on the one hand, demonstrate the power of the state. On the other hand, it may be a sign of cowardice," said the Westerner, who asked not to be named.

Karimov's regime won't last much longer, unless the U.S. intervenes in his behalf—there's a huge U.S. base in the country. But even Rumsfeld and the other handlers of George W. Bush are unlikely to overtly offer the dictator support at this point. Uzbekistan is headed for a major revolution, if the Uzbeks who talked to Bukharbaeva are correct: Tolib Yakubov of Human Rights Society of Uzbekistan condemned the way the police had acted, and said it seemed inevitable both that the regime would grow ever more repressive and that people would continue protesting against it.

"There’s no other option—either for them or for us," he said.

Posted by wharkavy at 7:24 PM
posted: 10:54 AM, May 13, 2005 by Harkavy
Meddle faster, Bush, before the rest of the world catches you

bush-biking-july-2004-crawf.jpg

White House

A Schwinn-Schwinn situation: Bush on his mountain bike last year in Crawford

Whatever plans George W. Bush's handlers have for the rest of the world, they'd better get it in gear.

We don't know how many revolutions per minute the POTUS was spinning Wednesday on his bike ride while that Cessna, unbeknownst to him, was heading for the White House. But on the other side of the planet, it's no joke: Things are spinning out of control in the dictatorships we've embraced.

Their revolutions, in other words, may trump Bush's, and his helmet (see photo above) won't protect him when he crashes.

Anti-American rioting has spread from Afghanistan into Pakistan, as the Washington Post reports:

    The unrest was triggered by a brief report in the May 9 edition of Newsweek that interrogators at Guantánamo had placed Korans in bathrooms and "flushed a holy book down the toilet." Desecration of the Koran is punishable by death in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Pakistan protested to the U.S. government last weekend about the alleged abuse.

    Diplomats and officials have been taken aback by the intense reaction, which was exacerbated by a police crackdown on anti-U.S. protesters in the eastern Afghan city of Jalalabad on Wednesday that left four dead and more than 70 wounded.

How in the world could they be taken aback?

Anyway, there's more. The long-oppressed people of Uzbekistan, one of the Bush regime's key allies, are starting to openly rebel against dictator Islam Karimov, whose 15 years of arresting people for practicing Islam are surely coming to an end.

Prisoners in Uzbekistan are beaten and boiled to death and their family members are raped in front of them. Meanwhile, Karimov's strictly controlled press celebrates his reign, and he proudly shows himself off with celebrities like Don Rumsfeld.

rumsfeld-karimov-nov01-copy.jpg

Defense Dept.

Take a picture; it'll last longer than Karimov: Rumsfeld chats with the Uzbek dictator in November 2001, happier times for both of them.

U.S. officials have had many chances to speak out against Karimov's outrageous human-rights violations—as the U.K.'s Craig Murray courageously did when he was ambassador to Tashkent—but we pointedly haven't. Our ambassador, Jon Purnell, has barely opened his mouth.

Forget the hype from the Bush regime. When it comes to democracy, this administration is usually on the wrong side.

That's certainly true in Asia. In a February 24, 2004, press conference in Tashkent starring Rumsfeld, Karimov, and Purnell, a Reuters reporter had this exchange with Rumsfeld:

    Reuters: You spoke of this strategic framework, of the relationship between two countries. Uzbekistan said yesterday they’re going to free a 62-year-old woman from jail, who human rights activists say was jailed on trumped-up charges because she revealed that her son had been tortured to death in prison. Do you welcome this, sir, and to what extent will improvements in human rights in this country deal with continued U.S. military aid to Uzbekistan?

    Rumsfeld: Well, obviously our relationship with this country and other countries is multi-faceted. I mentioned the military-to-military relationship because I’m involved with the Department of Defense, but it’s also a political and economic relationship. Needless to say the United States and the other NATO countries are always interested in seeing reform not just in the military, but also in the political and economic areas. I’m not intimately knowledgeable about the statement you just made, but my understanding is that from the Ambassador that—that is in fact the case and that the Embassy has expressed their awareness of that and I forget what the phrase was but—the Ambassador pointed out that they were pleased that the decision was made.

No wonder we're seen by common folk the world over as a defender of human rights and democracy. The Reuters reporter pressed the issue:

    Reuters: Sir, did you discuss human rights with the President and the other officials?

    Rumsfeld: In all of our meetings, the broad range of topics were discussed, the political and human-rights issues, as well as, economic issues and military-to-military issues. Yes—

A little more than a year later, Karimov had better get on his own bicycle and pedal his way out of the country as fast as he can. Peter Finn of the Washington Post explains why:

    Resentment over a government campaign against alleged Islamic extremists exploded into violence in the Central Asian republic of Uzbekistan Friday when protesters stormed a local prison in the eastern city of Andijan, freeing thousands of inmates and triggering protests that left at least nine people dead, according to government officials and telephone interviews with local residents.

We've got a big military base in Uzbekistan—built by Halliburton, of course. If we have to start packing it up, why not hire Halliburton to do it for us?

The fact is that the enmity we've sowed in the Muslim world is just about ready for harvest.

Meanwhile, Bush pedals away, and if anyone needed more proof that he's merely a prop for Dick Cheney et al., the Cessna scare the other day in D.C. was it.

A testy press briefing by White House flack Scott McClellan yesterday reads like a "Who's on First Alert?" routine. (Thanks to colleague Syd Schanberg for the tip.) Editor & Publisher scooped it up, publishing choice excerpts and saying:

    On the day after more than 30,000 people—including the vice president, the first lady, and a former first lady—were evacuated from their offices or homes in Washington, D.C., but the president, who was biking in Maryland, was not notified until the threat passed, reporters grilled Press Secretary Scott McClellan at his daily briefing.

    For those who might have missed it on TV—that is, nearly everyone— … McClellan continually refers to "protocols" and reporters essentially ask, "Wouldn't most men like to know when their home is evacuated and their wife is hustled to a secure bunker?" They also wonder about the small matter of the president being commander in chief and the capital, theoretically, coming under attack.

What's even more bizarre is that Cheney was evacuated and taken away from the place while Laura Bush and Nancy Reagan, who was visiting the White House at the time, weren't. Meanwhile, George W. Bush, who was riding his bike outside the city, wasn't even notified about the Cessna incident until after it was over. Sure, he was riding his little bike and he had his little helmet on, but c'mon.

Now we're told there's an investigation of this "47-minute delay" in notifying the president. Can't wait for the results of that probe.

Meanwhile, here's part of the exchange between reporters and McClellan, from the White House site:

    Q: I'm just finishing up the timeline. Mrs. Bush and Mrs. Reagan were put in a secure location in the White House—so the bunker, I assume?

    McClellan: I will just leave it at that they were taken to a secure location.

    Q: In the White House?

    Q: On the grounds?

    McClellan: They were here at the White House and they were taken to a secure location.

    Q: You can't say on the grounds or off the grounds? All right. But you're saying that—but the Vice President was actually evacuated—

    McClellan: That's right.

    Q: —off the grounds?

    McClellan: That's correct.

    Q: That's correct. Why the distinction, given the history of this?

    McClellan: Well, the Secret Service has security precaution protocols that are in place. And as I mentioned at the beginning, those precautions were followed. That's what they have in place. And it was consistent with the protocols that were in place.

In other words, if Bush is pedaling his bike, don't bother the little feller. Let him play. We'll put him before the cameras when we need him. But for God's sake, protect Cheney. He's the one who made all the decisions, such as they were, on 9/11. As long as there's oil underneath other countries, protect Cheney.

In the unlikely event that Bush isn't biking but is reading—say, The Pet Goat—don't disturb him then either. The grownups have everything under control. Except for the billions of Muslims angry at us.

Posted by wharkavy at 10:54 AM
posted: 10:24 AM, May 3, 2005 by Harkavy
Ex-ambassador Murray exposed terror in Uzbekistan, now battles U.K.'s war of error

new-craig-murray-tashkent.jpg

Foreign Office

People are getting kilt: Craig Murray at a reception during his days as the British ambassador to Tashkent

Thursday's British election will cap a delightfully raucous campaign—delightful even if you forget about the underlying issues of the Bush-Blair war of terror.

No one puts this in clearer focus than Craig Murray, who was hounded out of his post as U.K. ambassador to Uzbekistan after he publicly rebuked that dictatorship for torture, including boiling people to death. Now Murray is running for Parliament in Thursday's election against his former boss, Foreign Secretary Jack Straw.

Murray's a key figure in exposing the evil practice of "rendition," in which the U.S. and Great Britain send detainees to Uzbekistan and other countries to be literally squeezed for information. The CIA, in fact, has done this.

Since the Bush regime's deadly combination of neocons and profiteers decided to use 9/11 as an excuse to launch a "war on terror," Uzbekistan's dictator, Islam Karimov, has become a big buddy of ours.

And for all the God talk by the Bush regime, it's supporting a dictator who tortures people for practicing their religion—in Karimov's case, the main religion he persecutes is Islam, so I guess it's OK. Here's how Guardian (U.K.) columnist George Monbiot wrote about it in '03:

    There are over 6,000 political and religious prisoners in Uzbekistan. Every year, some of them are tortured to death. Sometimes the policemen or intelligence agents simply break their fingers, their ribs and then their skulls with hammers, or stab them with screwdrivers, or rip off bits of skin and flesh with pliers, or drive needles under their fingernails, or leave them standing for a fortnight, up to their knees in freezing water. Sometimes they are a little more inventive. The body of one prisoner was delivered to his relatives last year, with a curious red tidemark around the middle of his torso. He had been boiled to death.

    His crime, like that of many of the country's prisoners, was practising his religion.

Strictly by coincidence, Halliburton "won" a $22.1 million contract to build something called Camp Stronghold Freedom in Uzbekistan.

Karimov is a harsh, repressive schmuck, like Saddam Hussein, who, as you may recall, was once our pal. In the '80s, Don Rumsfeld traveled to Iraq to pal around with Saddam. Now he does the same thing with Karimov (see photo below).

Rumsfeld-Karimov-march-02-.jpg

Defense Dept.

Just friends: Rumsfeld and Uzbek dictator Karimov talk business in March 2002, just about the same time that prisoners were being boiled to death in Karimov's jails.

Don Van Natta of the New York Times wrote a lengthy piece about the U.S.'s "rough ally" a couple of days ago, including this passage:

    Uzbekistan's role as a surrogate jailer for the United States was confirmed by a half-dozen current and former intelligence officials working in Europe, the Middle East and the United States. The C.I.A. declined to comment on the prisoner transfer program, but an intelligence official estimated that the number of terrorism suspects sent by the United States to Tashkent was in the dozens.

Big surprise. Murray has been talking about this for a couple of years, making headlines everywhere in the world except the U.S.

Not until the jump did Van Natta's May 1 story mention Murray:

    "If you talk to anyone there, Uzbeks know that torture is used—it's common even in run-of-the-mill criminal cases," said Allison Gill, a researcher for Human Rights Watch who is working inside Uzbekistan. "Anyone in the United States or Europe who does not know the extent of the torture problem in Uzbekistan is being willfully ignorant."

    Craig Murray, a former British ambassador to Uzbekistan, said he learned during his posting to Tashkent that the C.I.A. used Uzbekistan as a place to hold foreign terrorism suspects. During 2003 and early 2004, Mr. Murray said in an interview, "C.I.A. flights flew to Tashkent often, usually twice a week."

    In July 2004, Mr. Murray wrote a confidential memo to the British Foreign Office accusing the C.I.A. of violating the United Nations' Prohibition Against Torture. He urged his colleagues to stop using intelligence gleaned in Uzbekistan from terrorism suspects because it had been elicited through torture and other coercive means. Mr. Murray said he knew about the practice through his own investigation and interviews with scores of people who claimed to have been brutally treated inside Uzbekistan's jails.

    "We should cease all cooperation with the Uzbek security services—they are beyond the pale," Mr. Murray wrote in the memo, which was obtained by the Times.

Well, they didn't. In fact, Murray got into trouble with his bosses. Van Natta glossed over it, writing:

    Mr. Murray, who has previously spoken publicly about prisoner transfers to Uzbekistan, said his superiors in London were furious with his questions, and he was told that the intelligence gleaned in Uzbekistan could still be used by British officials, even if it was elicited by torture, as long as the mistreatment was not at the hands of British interrogators. "I was astonished," Mr. Murray said in an interview. "It was as if the goal posts had moved. Their perspective had changed since Sept. 11."

    A Foreign Office spokesman declined to address Mr. Murray's allegations. Last year, Mr. Murray resigned from the Foreign Office, which had investigated accusations that he mismanaged the embassy in Tashkent. An inquiry into those allegations was closed without any disciplinary action being taken against him.

Actually, the Foreign Office went to war on Murray. They fired his staff and then Murray was accused of sexual hijinks—selling visas for sex. He was chewed out a few times by his bosses, collapsed of a nervous breakdown, suffered a near-fatal pulmonary embolism, and finally was cleared of all allegations.

After he rested up, he traveled from his home in Scotland to Blackburn, where he's challenging Jack Straw's seat in Parliament. Could he upset Straw? Murray thinks it's possible.

He's been charting his campaign progress in a column in the Guardian (U.K.). Murray refuses to let the Blair government "move on" from its disastrous decision to tag along with the Bush regime and invade Iraq. Here's a snatch from Murray's April 21 column:

    I could actually win this election. The realization came as something of a shock. It was not really part of the original game plan. Two months ago I arrived here alone, standing forlornly with my rucksack on Blackburn railway station, in the midnight snow. I wanted to make a stand on principle against illegal war, and against Jack Straw's decision that we should use intelligence obtained under torture. I wanted to get some national publicity for these issues during the campaign, to counter Tony Blair's mantra: "Let's move on" from the war.

    (Am I the only one to find this mantra insulting? I think I'll rob a bank to get some campaign funds. When the police come to take me away, I'll say, "Hey, let's move on. OK, so I robbed a bank. Whatever the rights and wrongs, that phase is over. What is important is that we all come together now and get behind the really great things I'm going to do with the money.")

Sorry, Craig, but Paul Wolfowitz got to the bank ahead of you.

Posted by wharkavy at 10:24 AM
posted: 10:53 AM, March 25, 2005 by Harkavy
March madness: The democrats—and the Bush regime—win an away game

kyrgyz-protest-red-banners.jpg

Go, team! Beat state! Seeing red, protesters in Bishkek yesterday storm government buildings(© IRIN)

The Bush regime got a regime change yesterday in Kyrgyzstan for far less than the going rate. The cost of an oil change in Iraq, for instance, is at least $200 billion and thousands of uncounted corpses and, damn it, they're still not finished.

One small steppe for man, one giant leap for oilmankind.

That doesn't mean the U.S. had a hand in wiping that annoying grin off Askar Akayev's face. We have no idea whether that's true. But Akayev, as I noted yesterday, was drifting away from the U.S. and toward Russia in this 21st century version of the "Great Game."

The original Great Game was the 19th century struggle between the British Empire and Imperial Russia for control of Central Asia. This is a new century, so the players are different and considerably bulked up, and oil has made an already slick game more slippery. Lutz Kleveman, author of The New Great Game: Blood and Oil in Central Asia, explains, in an article posted by the Zurich-based Center for Security Studies's ISN Security Watch:

    The U.S. has taken over the leading role from the British. Along with the ever-present Russians, new regional powers such as China, Iran, Turkey, and Pakistan have entered the arena, and transnational oil corporations are also pursuing their own interests in a brash, Wild East style.

    Since 11 September 2001, the Bush Administration has undertaken a massive military buildup in Central Asia, deploying thousands of U.S. troops, not only in Afghanistan but also in the republics of Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Georgia. These first U.S. combat troops on former Soviet territory have dramatically altered the geo-strategic power equations in the region, with Washington trying to seal the Cold War victory against Russia, contain Chinese influence, and tighten the noose around Iran.

And here's a shocker: It's about oil. Kyrgyzstan doesn't have any, but the country's a vital piece of the jigsaw puzzle of power politics in Central Asia.

After 9/11, Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz (always an interest-bearing figure) and the other Bush handlers assiduously cultivated Akayev's regime (see photo below), getting the OK to plant a strategic U.S. air base (named after New York City fallen firefighter Peter Ganci) in Bishkek.

wolfie-kyrgyz.jpg

Central Asian steps: Wolfowitz escorts Kyrgyz Foreign Minister Askar Aitmatov through a Pentagon "honor cordon" in June 2003. They met "to discuss a broad range of regional security issues." (DOD photo)

No wonder Wolfie gave Aitmatov the star treatment. As Elizabeth Wishnick of ISN Security Watch explained in July 2003, shortly after they huddled at the Pentagon:

    With the announcement on 5 June 2003 of a three-year extension of the U.S. abase in Kyrgyzstan, with Russia’s decision to station its own forces in Kant [an air base only 15 miles from the U.S. base], and with China’s new interest in boosting security ties with Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan has become a focal point for great power rivalry in Central Asia.

But as Justin Raimondo at antiwar.com now points out, Akayev "did not take direction well." In other words, he knew how to play the Great Game—by playin' the playas. And lately, Akayev wasn't playing the game the way the U.S. wanted him to.

Raimondo notes a smart Eurasianet story from mid-February, in which Gulnoza Saidazimova reported:

    Kyrgyz Foreign Minister Askar Aitmatov said yesterday that American AWACS reconnaissance planes will not be deployed at the Ganci air base outside the Kyrgyz capital, Bishkek. Aitmatov made the statement after a trip to Moscow. Some observers say the Kyrgyz government’s decision was made to please Russia, with the aim of gaining the Kremlin’s support ahead of February 27 parliamentary elections and the presidential election in October.

    Aitmatov’s visit to Moscow resulted in two decisions.

    The first—announced on February 11—was to send more Russian military equipment and weaponry to the Russian Kant air base near the Kyrgyz capital, Bishkek. The other decision was to deny the U.S. request to deploy the AWACS reconnaissance planes at the U.S. Ganci air base, which is also near Bishkek.

Hey, Akayev, you can piss off your people by crushing dissent and having the cops beat them, but don't piss off the big oil companies. Akayev's increasingly despotic rule, which included his rigging the aforementioned parliamentary elections, didn't keep Bush and Don Rumsfeld from sharing grins with him, but as he drifted toward Russia (which has now offered him asylum, by the way), he was no longer of use to us.

For those of you ready to celebrate this as a victory of democracy, Justin Raimondo details the sordid pasts of Kyrgyzstan's new leaders and adds a cautionary note:

    The idea that the people of Kyrgyzstan have risen up, all on their own, to establish "democracy" and the "rule of law" in a land that has never known either, is the sort of fairy tale that even the most naïve will probably greet with a considerable degree of skepticism.

As for Foreign Minister Aitmatov? Interfax just reported that he has been dism