Archive for May, 2006

A Few Bad Apples

It is being widely reported that US officials are preparing public opinion for the fact that American marines did deliberately murder a number of unarmed civilians in Haditha last November in retaliation for an IED killing of Miguel Terrazas, one of their colleagues. It seems clear that US government investigations have uncovered substantial evidence that these murders did take place.

The Whitehouse are going to release full details of the inquiries into the killings in an attempt to fend off allegations of a cover-up. But a cursory consideration of the reason why an investigation even occurred makes a mockery of any attempt to deny that this was initially covered up by the US military.

It is clear that it was the reporting of this event by Time magazine which belatedly provoked a grudging US military into considering the circumstances surrounding the deaths of these Iraqi civilians.

The day after the incident, Time notes:

[A] Marine communiqué from Camp Blue Diamond in Ramadi reported that Terrazas and 15 Iraqi civilians were killed by the blast and that “gunmen attacked the convoy with small-arms fire,” prompting the Marines to return fire, killing eight insurgents and wounding one other.

This is very much the stock military line and reports like these are issued on an almost daily basis as the violence continues unabated in Iraq. There was no hint in the initial statement that US marines had deliberately killed innocent civilians in a cold blooded revenge attack. That was the end of the matter as far as the military were concerned.

It was only in January, after Time had investigated and reported on the incident, that the US military grudgingly opened an inquiry themselves and withdrew their spurious claim that civilian casualties were caused by the roadside bomb.

In January, after TIME presented military officials in Baghdad with the Iraqis’ accounts of the Marines’ actions, the U.S. opened its own investigation, interviewing 28 people, including the Marines, the families of the victims and local doctors. According to military officials, the inquiry acknowledged that, contrary to the military’s initial report, the 15 civilians killed on Nov. 19 died at the hands of the Marines, not the insurgents.

They maintained, however, that the civilians had died as a result of collateral damage during a gunfight. It now appears clear that this wasn’t true either and that no such gunfight took place.

The fact that Time magazine have forced the issue says much about the importance of a free press in a democratic society.

The fact that the US military had to be forced to investigate says much about the priorities of the democratic government of the United States of America.

There’ll be lots of talk about the differences between the ways the US government handles these crimes as compared to the way Saddam operated as this gruesome story unfolds. It’ll be as accurate as a communiqué from Camp Blue Diamond,

In truth, the real difference between US democracy (and British for that matter) and dictatorship in these cases is that democratic government’s can on occasion be forced, kicking and screaming all the while, to investigate human rights abuses perpetrated by their representatives when confronted with damning evidence collated by the free press. Show trials and scapegoats to distance the leadership from the failings of their own policies are par for the course in both cases however.

The idea that the US government can be trusted to effectively investigate abuses by their own military personal voluntarily is, it should be clear by now if it wasn’t already, utterly fallacious. How many more reported IED casualties were killed by US troops un-noticed by Time magazine or anyone else in the West? More many more dead “insurgents” were innocent civilians gunned down in cold blood out of sight of the world’s press? It’s impossible to tell and you can be sure that the US government is not making any effort to find out. Given what we know about US military training, morale, strategies and political leadership, it is highly improbable that this slaughter was an “isolated incident”.

Here’s one other example, also from the area round Haditha. In June 2005, five months before the attack above, US troops conducted a raid on the village of al-Shaikh Hadid. During that raid, US marines shot dead an Iraqi by the name of Mohammed al-Sumaidaie. He’d have been passed off as “just another dead insurgent” but for the fact that he was related to Samir Sumaidaie, Iraq’s ambassador to the UN.

Ambassador Sumaidaie said:

All indications point to a killing of an unarmed innocent civilian - a cold-blooded murder.

A US military statement was issued in response:

We take these allegations seriously and will thoroughly investigate this incident to determine what happened.

The seriousness and thoroughness of the investigation into this apparent murder can be seen by the fact that as of May 2006, almost a year later, no details of the findings of this investigation have been made public.

A few bad apples? How many bad apples do there need to be before for it to becomes clear that the managers of the orchard are the root of problem?

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An opportunity to purchase the genuine professional contact details for Alistair Campbell on ebay? Outstanding.

I wonder if he’d be interested in autographing a new artwork so it can be autioned for charidee.

Dr.Kelly and the Hutton Report

It’s called “Dr.Kelly and the Hutton Enquiry”.

Buy Alistair Campbell’s details here.

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Plans to give all 50m NHS patients in England a full electronic medical record are running at least two to two-and-a-half years late, Lord Warner, the health minister who oversees the project, has confirmed.

He also admitted that the full cost of the programme was likely to be nearer £20bn than the widely quoted figure of £6.2bn.
Read more…

What’s particularly noteworthy is Lord Warner’s insistence that the project is still on budget. He says the £20bn figure merely reflects the full expense of the new system. Oh I see. That’s alright then. It’s not like we expected them to tell us the full expense from the start. I mean, why would they?

Perhaps someone ought to ask the government whether the government’s £5.8bn figure for the cost of the ID card and national database travesty reflects the full expense of that scheme.

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Allies

Blair, it won’t have escaped your attention, is very keen on the “special relationship”. So keen is he, in fact, that the Whitehouse appears to be quite literally setting the limits to British foreign policy (via). There’s the full horror of the George Bush’s “with us or against us” rhetoric. Blair, although he may talk a good game on occasion, just doesn’t have the strength of character to challenge the Whitehouse on pretty much anything. It’s almost embarrassing.

In the Whitehouse today, the great new threat to world security is the Iranian nuclear programme. This, despite the fact that there’s really no evidence of any sort of illicit nuclear weapons work being done in Iran.

Blair has, unsurprisingly, echoed the US government line at every opportunity including refusing to rule out military action. It has even been suggested that Jack Straw was removed from the post of foreign secretary because his assertion that military action was “inconceivable” provoked displeasure in the Whitehouse. Given the link above, it hardly seems beyond the realms of possibility.

I wonder then, what the US government makes of the new Iraqi foreign minister? (Via.)

BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) — Iran has a right to develop nuclear technology and the international community should drop its demands that Tehran prove it’s not trying to build a nuclear weapon, Iraq’s foreign minister said Friday.

“Iran doesn’t claim that they want to obtain a nuclear weapon or a nuclear bomb, so there is no need that we ask them for any guarantee now,” Hoshyar Zebari said after meeting with his Iranian counterpart, Manouchehr Mottaki.

You can see the problem, I think.

Interestingly, Zebari is a Kurd, not a Shiite. The US government assisted in the creation and protection of the Kurdish autonomous zone in the north after the first Gulf war and the Kurds are generally regarded as Washington’s strongest ally in Iraq. It seems likely that Zebari is stating the position of the Shiite dominated Iraqi government rather than representing his own faction.

Whatever, you think of the position, it’s clear that Iraq’s foreign minister has broken from US policy to a far greater degree than Blair or Straw ever would. You can say what you like about Iraq but at least they’ve got politicians of courage and conviction who refuse to kowtow to the Whitehouse. Wouldn’t it be great if we had some of them here too?

And then there’s the serious matter of the substance of this new Iraqi government’s foreign policy. This is the government we send our troops out there to die for, remember. And for what?

To create a new ally for the Iranian mullahs. Oh goody.

Can anyone tell me whether George thinks this new Iraqi government is “with us or against us”?

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Anyone for Tennis?

This year, the male and female French Open winners will receive equal prize money for the first time. Wimbledon is now the only grand slam event where the award for winning the men’s title is larger than the award for the winner of the ladies tournament.

I’m all for equal rights. But are the ladies going to be playing best of five sets at the French Open from now on? No, they are not.

It’s at times like this that the whole political correctness thing gets a bit annoying. Some people have probably been a bit taken aback that I even raised the issue.

But, it is a statement of fact that in Grand Slam events, the women’s game is best of three sets and the men’s best of five. Men’s games take longer. Spectators get more tennis and broadcasters get more footage. It hardly seems “indefensible” therefore that the prize for winning the men’s event is larger.

So, let’s have equal rights. Let’s have equal prize money and best of five sets for both genders. Proper equality. I’m all for that.

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Attempted bribery of witnesses during a police investigation? Perverting the course of justice?

I couldn’t possibly comment.

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That Friday Feeling

The Scum reports on some breaking news:

COPS are desperately hunting FIVE HUNDRED foreign prisoners set free from mental hospitals, it was sensationally revealed yesterday.

The shock figure — on TOP of the 1,019 who have been released from jails without being booted out of Britain — sparked uproar last night.

Reid alluded to this in the vaguest of terms in his written statement on Tuesday but the details behind his weasel words were not revealed until yesterday. A Friday.

I bet you’re completely taken aback that this embarrassing news wasn’t made public till Friday afternoon. I mean, what are the chances of that happening?

Now, because of the incompetence of the Home Office, they’ll undoibtedly launch a reactionary witchhunt for mentally ill people. We’re so lucky to have a progressive government in this country…

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The Ultra-Moonbat Strikes Again

Caution - swearing*.

The Litigious One says he is anti-war but pro-killing.

George Galloway has said the assassination of Tony Blair would be “morally justified” given his support for the war in Iraq.

The man is a fuckwit. Indefatigably irredeemable. An arse.

He says:

Yes, it would be morally justified. I am not calling for it, but if it happened I believe it would be of a wholly different moral order to the events of 7/7. It would be entirely logical and explicable. And morally equivalent to ordering the deaths of thousands of innocent people in Iraq as Blair did.

Did you get that? Let’s just look at it again.

The assasination of Blair is justifed, according to Galloway, because it is morally equivalent to ordering the deaths of thousands of innocent people in Iraq. In other words, he believes one action is morally justified because it is equivalent to another action which he believes to be morally reprehensible. Dear o fucking dear.

George Galloway, you are a fucking hypocrite. I’m sure I speak for the majority of people who opposed the invasion of Iraq when I say “shut your stupid indefatigable mouth, you odious egotistical fuckwit”.

He doesn’t represent my views. At all.

* Not feeling well today. Perhaps that explains my need to resort to profanities. Or perhaps its because GG is such an enormous fuckwit that there really is no other option. Anyway, this rant over, I’m going back to bed.)

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Blair’s Britain

An Early Day Motion has been put forward to express concern at the proposed deportation of Ernesto Leal. You can lobby your MP to support the EDM courtesy of a handy interweb tool at the Friends of Ernesto website. A short video report of Ernesto Leal’s story is available from Scotland Today.

Mr Leal was arrested while Charles Clarke was under intense pressure over the failures of the Home Office and this attempt to deport him is clearly politically motivated.

And you thought it was only evil tin-pot dictators who persecuted people to further their own political ends.

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Nudes and Prudes

In 2004, Janet Jackson’s wardrobe malfunction at the SuperBowl caused an enormous amount of controversy in the United States. A section of the US public was outraged that something as disgusting as a woman’s breast had been shown on television. Large fines and the introduction of time delays on live events were the result of this scandalous boob (heh, sorry).

In Europe, even in stuffy old Britain, we mostly adopted that slightly condescending “Americans, what are they like, eh?” attitude. It’s only a breast, for goodness sake. I think you’ll find that most people have seen breasts before.

Not everyone in the UK is so open-minded about the naked human body though. Mr Jones from Wales for example, isn’t keen on nudity at all. His next door neighbour had the front (and back) to sunbath naked in her own garden. Mr Jones, who filmed this incident, was not happy.

I have been extremely shaken by this. It has been very upsetting and worrying. I don’t want to bring up my children in such an environment.

Not happy.

And the prosecutor, yes this went to court, said sunbathing nude “could be grossly offensive to normal decent persons in society”. Grossly offensive? Calm down dears.

Fortunately, the law states that you must intend to cause harm and distress before you can be convicted of indecent exposure and the magistrates threw out the case. It’s slightly odd that it ever came to court and but I’d say justice has been done.

And the reaction from the great British public, judging from the Beeb’s HYS, has been supportive of the right to get naked in your own garden. People are more concerned about why someone would video their naked next door neighbour and then complain to the police.

So we really aren’t a nation of prudes. Splendid. To celebrate, I suggest we all get naked and have a great big game of volleyball.

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