News Release Archive - War: Info, Analysis, Policy Options

Obama on Mideast — Chomsky: More Deceptive Rhetoric?

The Huffington Post reports of Obama’s speech tomorrow: “Obama will outline ‘a single standard’ to apply to Hamas, the Muslim Brotherhood and other parties that seek to engage with the United States, the official said.

“‘He will say we are happy to engage with any group that renounces violence as a tool for political change,’ the official said. The key factor will be whether a group can work in a ‘more concerted and constructive way’ that commits it to the ideals of equal rights for women and minorities, pluralism and tolerance.”

Noam Chomsky noted to the Institute for Public Accuracy: “According to the report, Obama will say that we are happy to engage with any group that renounces violence as a tool for political change (or, if he is serious, to resist political change) and is committed to equal rights for women and minorities. It follows that the U.S. will no longer engage with Israel which has long relied on violence to impose its will and has highly discriminatory laws and practices targeting the Palestinian minority in Israel, of course much more extreme in the occupied territories. And the U.S. will not engage with itself, given its longstanding commitment to violence to impose the domestic arrangements of its choice, including political change. Since Obama doesn’t mean that, the ‘single standard’ is just more of the familiar deceptive rhetoric.”

TOBY C. JONES, tobycjones@yahoo.com, @tobycraigjones
Jones is an assistant professor of history at Rutgers University and author of the book “Desert Kingdom: How Oil and Water Forged Modern Saudi Arabia.” He said today: “Obama’s principled rhetoric is exactly what U.S. policy should be. The problem is that it is not true. Peaceful Bahrainis, Yemenis, Syrians and Palestinians have received no support from the Obama administration. American silence and support for the political status quo in much of the Middle East has crippled pro-democracy movements rather than strengthened them. The most obvious gap in U.S. policy is Saudi Arabia, where Obama’s administration has not only condoned, but supported the forces of counterrevolution, anti-Shiism, and gender apartheid.”

ALI ABUNIMAH, ali  at abunimah.org, @avinunu
Abunimah is co-founder of the Electronic Intifada website and author of the book “One Country: A Bold Proposal to End the Israeli-Palestinian Impasse.” He said today: “Regardless of what finely-tuned words Obama utters, there is no sign and no chance that Obama is willing to confront Israel’s intransigence — especially over settlements — in practical and effective ways that would actually advance the chances of a just peace. Let’s recall that in his famous Cairo speech, Obama called on Palestinians to use nonviolence. Yet when they did that by marching peacefully for the right of return to Palestine, Israel gunned them down. What was the White House response? Full support for Israel once again. Each one of Obama’s big set piece speeches has less and less impact because when it comes down to action, there is nothing there.”

HUSAIN ABDULLA,  mohajer12@comcast.net
Abdulla is director of Americans for Democracy and Human Rights in Bahrain. He said today: “President Obama needs to clarify in his speech that his administration supports the people of Bahrain’s right to protest peacefully and change their government as long as violence is not the means. Such a declaration will make it clear to the people of Bahrain especially, and the region in general, that the U.S. does not have a double standard when it comes to dealing with the uprisings in the region. Failing to do that will send a negative message to the people in the  Middle East. This is the time for the Obama administration to be on the side of the people not the despots.”

SAM HUSSEINI, samhusseini at gmail.com, @samhusseini
Communications director for the Institute for Public Accuracy, Husseini recently wrote the piece “U.S. Not Guilty of Double Standards.”

For more information, contact at the Institute for Public Accuracy:
Sam Husseini, (202) 347-0020; or David Zupan, (541) 484-9167

The New Yorker’s “Damning” Investigation of NSA Whistleblower Case

The Government Accountability Project released a statement today: “This week, GAP client Thomas Drake is prominently featured in the May 23 issue of The New Yorker magazine, in an explosive article on widespread corruption and wrongdoing within the National Security Agency. The piece, ‘The Secret Sharer,’ highlights Drake’s legal and proper attempts to expose massive NSA waste, mismanagement, and illegality regarding the agency’s use of a data collection program that was more costly, more threatening to American citizens’ privacy rights, and less effective than a legal alternative.

“The article describes several areas of widespread gross waste, fraud, abuse, and illegality at the NSA, including: the implementation of a warrantless, domestic surveillance and data mining system; the agency’s attempt to hide information about the surveillance from Congress and the Supreme Court; the squandering of billions of taxpayer dollars on an undeveloped data collection program that violated American privacy rights; the NSA’s failure to give other intelligence agencies critical information it had obtained prior to 9/11; and the overreaching prosecution of Drake.”

The New Yorker article was written by Jane Mayer: “The Secret Sharer: Is Thomas Drake an enemy of the state?

JESSELYN RADACK, via Lindsay Bigda, lindsayb at whistleblower.org
GAP Homeland Security and Human Rights Director Radack said today: “It is abhorrent that the Obama administration, which routinely pledges openness and transparency, is prosecuting brave federal employees who stand up against wrongdoing inside government agencies. Tom Drake went through all of the appropriate channels for bringing information to Congress and the Defense Department Inspector General. Drake did not leak classified information to the media and, tellingly, is not charged with disclosing classified information to the media.

“Drake has been charged under the Espionage Act with retaining, not leaking, allegedly classified information. His trial is slated to begin June 13. GAP represents Drake on whistleblower issues. He has a separate criminal defense team.

“Drake’s prosecution sends a chilling message to would-be national security and intelligence whistleblowers: Not only can you lose your career for reporting corruption, but also your very liberty.”

Radack just wrote the piece “The New Yorker’s Damning Dissection of ‘Leak’ Prosecution of Thomas Drake.”

For more information, contact at the Institute for Public Accuracy:
Sam Husseini, (202) 347-0020; or David Zupan, (541) 484-9167

Israel Firing on Refugee Protesters

AFP is reporting: “Thousands of bereaved Palestinians in camps in south Lebanon on Monday laid to rest victims of a cross-border Israeli shooting, as shops and schools in the camps closed for a day of mourning.

“In the Al-Bass refugee camp, thousands of people gathered for the burial of 17-year-old Mohammed Salem, one of 10 protesters shot dead by Israeli troops on Sunday at the Lebanese border.

“More than 100 others were wounded when the crowd of thousands of refugees came under fire from Israeli troops near the Lebanese border town of Maroun al-Ras during a rally to mark the 1948 ‘nakba,’ Arabic for catastrophe.”

MATTHEW CASSEL, justimage@gmail.com, @justimage
A journalist and photographer based in Beirut, Cassel was at the Lebanese-Israeli border yesterday and just wrote the piece “Palestinians in Lebanon, at the lonely end of the Arab uprisings: Never is a refugee’s right to return brought into question — except when that refugee is a Palestinian,” which states: “Climbing up the mountain to reach the Palestinian right-of-return protest in Maroun al-Ras in south Lebanon on Sunday felt a bit like being back in Tahrir Square.”

Cassel’s report on Al-Jazeera English yesterday

ILAN PAPPE, I.Pappe@exeter.ac.uk
An Israel historian, Pappe’s books include A History of Modern Palestine: One Land, Two Peoples and The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine. He said today: “In 1948, the newly founded state of Israel committed a crime against humanity; it ethnically cleansed half of Palestine’s Arab population, destroyed half of its villages and demolished half of its urban centers. The crime was never acknowledged by Israel or the Western world. Because of this, the ethnic cleansing in Palestine continues to this very day. Only the acknowledgement of the crime, the return of its victims to their homeland and the end to the current ethnic cleansing will bring peace and reconciliation to the land of Israel and Palestine.”

Pappe’s articles include “The ’48 Nakba & The Zionist Quest for its Completion.”

He is professor with the College of Social Sciences and International Studies at the University of Exeter in the UK.

For more information, contact at the Institute for Public Accuracy:
Sam Husseini, (202) 347-0020; or David Zupan, (541) 484-9167

Beyond bin Laden Killing: Drone Strikes the “New Norm”

Reuters is reporting this morning: “A U.S. drone aircraft fired missiles at militants in Pakistan on Thursday, killing eight of them, Pakistani officials said, the third such attack since U.S. forces found and killed Osama bin Laden in his Pakistani hideout.”

KATHY KELLY, kathy  at vcnv.org
Kelly is with Voices for Creative Nonviolence and was recently in Afghanistan. She wrote the piece “The Predators: Where is Your Democracy?” which states: “World attention has been focused, however briefly, on questions of legality regarding the killing of Osama bin Laden. But, with the increasing use of Predator drones to kill suspected ‘high value targets’ in Pakistan and Afghanistan, extrajudicial killings by U.S. military forces have become the new norm.

“Just three days after Osama bin Laden was killed, an attack employing remote-control aerial drones killed fifteen people in Pakistan and wounded four. CNN reports that their Islamabad bureau has counted four drone strikes over the last month and a half since the March 17 drone attack which killed 44 people in Pakistan’s tribal region. This most recent suspected strike was the 21st this year. There were 111 strikes in 2010. The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan estimated that 957 innocent civilians were killed in 2010.”

For more information, contact at the Institute for Public Accuracy:
Sam Husseini, (202) 347-0020; or David Zupan, (541) 484-9167

U.S. Drone Strikes Kill in Pakistan and Yemen

Voice of America is reporting: “Pakistani intelligence officials say a U.S. missile attack close to the Afghan border has killed at least 15 people.” Other media are reporting that a U.S. drone strike has killed individuals in Yemen.

David Dayen writes: “Trifling about legality of raids on bin Laden when the U.S. routinely carries out assassinations from unmanned planes seems a little misplaced.”

MARJORIE COHN, marjorielegal at gmail.com, marjoriecohn.com
Cohn is a professor at Thomas Jefferson School of Law and editor and co-author of the new book The United States and Torture: Interrogation, Incarceration and Abuse. She said today: “Targeted or political assassinations, or summary executions, are carried out outside of any judicial framework. They violate the Geneva Conventions and the U.S. War Crimes Act, even in times of war. President Gerald Ford also signed an executive order outlawing assassinations, but George W. Bush and Barack Obama have engaged in assassinations through unmanned drone attacks, in violation of international and U.S. law.”

SHEILA CARAPICO, [in Cairo, 6 hours ahead of U.S. ET] scarapic at richmond.edu
Professor of political science and international studies at Richmond University and currently visiting at the American University in Cairo, Carapico said today: “In light of the coincidental confluence of events on May 1, with Ali Abdallah Salih nixing the GCC-brokered exit plan hours before Bin Laden’s execution, this was predictable. (I actually told colleagues earlier this week to expect it.) The Yemeni government has very strong incentives to demonstrate to the U.S. and Saudi Arabia their cooperation in counter-terror operations and to remind domestic opponents of the American military presence, and thus to produce actionable intelligence or otherwise encourage a strike. From Washington’s perspective attacks on unknown al-Qaida suspects underscore that this is an on-going military operation, and might also be seen to have deterrent value; and could also be related to U.S. anxieties about pending instability in Yemen.”

Carapico is author of Civil Society in Yemen: The Political Economy of Activism in Modern Arabia.

Background: From November 28, 2010: “WikiLeaks: Yemen covered up U.S. drone strikes: The Yemeni government covered up U.S. drone strikes against al-Qaeda there and claimed the bombs were its own, according to the WikiLeaks documents,” which states: “according to a leaked document from January, Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh told Gen David Petraeus, then commander of U.S. forces in the Middle East, that: ‘We’ll continue saying the bombs are ours, not yours.’ The conversation was reported in a diplomatic cable sent back to Washington by a U.S. diplomat in Yemen.”

For more information, contact at the Institute for Public Accuracy:
Sam Husseini, (202) 347-0020; or David Zupan, (541) 484-9167

Bahrain-Saudi Crackdown Targets Doctors; Demonizing Iran

RICHARD SOLLOM, via Megan Prock, mprock at phrusa.org, bahrain.phrblog.org
Sollom is deputy director of Physicians for Human Rights and was recently in Bahrain, which was invaded by Saudi Arabia on March 14 to help the monarchy put down protesters. Sollom is co-author of the new report, “Do No Harm: A Call for Bahrain to End Systematic Attacks on Doctors and Patients.”

He said today: “The government authorities are systematically abducting and disappearing medical personnel for simply having given medical care to protesters who were hurt by government forces. … We documented deaths in custody due to torture, we documented severe abuse, including torture of patients inside the hospitals. …

“People were forced into making false confessions: that they were instructed by the Iranian government to lead these protests, to carry weapons, that they received military training from Iran. These ‘confessions’ were apparently videotaped. I wouldn’t be surprised if we started seeing some of these ‘confessions’ on TV.”

The Bahrain and Saudi regimes are close U.S. allies. Sollom said: “The [Obama] administration needs to speak up on this issue forcefully. … Since the Saudi troops arrived, the violations have increased. … In my 20 years of looking at violations of medical neutrality and violations of human rights in times of war, I’ve not seen such egregious violations.”

See interview with Sollom:  democracynow.org

For more information, contact at the Institute for Public Accuracy:
Sam Husseini, (202) 347-0020; or David Zupan, (541) 484-9167


Institute for Public Accuracy
980 National Press Building, Washington, D.C. 20045
___________________________________________________
Thursday, May 5, 2011
Bahrain-Saudi Crackdown Targets Doctors; Demonizing Iran
Interviews Available
Sollom is deputy director of Physicians for Human Rights and was recently in Bahrain, which was invaded by Saudi Arabia on March 14 to help the monarchy put down protesters. Sollom is co-author of the new report, “Do No Harm: A Call for Bahrain to End Systematic Attacks on Doctors and Patients.”
He said today: “The government authorities are systematically abducting and disappearing medical personnel for simply having given medical care to protesters who were hurt by government forces. … We documented deaths in custody due to torture, we documented severe abuse, including torture of patients inside the hospitals. …
“People were forced into making false confessions: that they were instructed by the Iranian government to lead these protests, to carry weapons, that they received military training from Iran. These ‘confessions’ were apparently videotaped. I wouldn’t be surprised if we started seeing some of these ‘confessions’ on TV.”
Bahrain and Saudi regimes are close U.S. allies. Sollom said: “The [Obama] administration needs to speak up on this issue forcefully. … Since the Saudi troops arrived, the violations have increased. … In my 20 years of looking at violations of medical neutrality and violations of human rights in times of war, I’ve not seen such egregious violations.”
For more information, contact at the Institute for Public Accuracy:
Sam Husseini, (202) 347-0020, (202) 421-6858; or David Zupan, (541) 484-9167


Release bin Laden Photo? “Instead Release Afghanistan and Iraq”

The Washington Post is reporting: “The Obama administration is seeking to use the killing of Osama bin Laden to accelerate a negotiated settlement with the Taliban and hasten the end of the Afghanistan war, according to U.S. officials involved in war policy.”

SONALI KOLHATKAR, sonali at afghanwomensmission.org
Kolhatkar is co-author of Bleeding Afghanistan: Washington, Warlords, and the Propaganda of Silence and is co-director of the Afghan Women’s Mission.

Kolhatkar was recently interviewed on GRITtv.

KATHY KELLY, kathy@vcnv.org, http://vcnv.org
Kelly is with Voices for Creative Nonviolence. She was recently in Afghanistan and just wrote the piece “Beyond Retaliation.”

ANAND GOPAL, anandgopal80 at gmail.com, @Anand_Gopal_
Gopal is an independent journalist based in Afghanistan and has reported for the Christian Science Monitor and the Wall Street Journal.

ROBERT NAIMAN, (217) 979-2857, naiman@justforeignpolicy.org
Naiman is policy director of Just Foreign Policy. He recently wrote the piece “The War is Over. Kiss a Nurse and Start Packing.”

He said today: “Matthew Cassel put it nicely in a recent tweet: ‘I got an idea. How about instead of Obama releasing the photo, he releases Iraq and Afghanistan?’ ”

GARETH PORTER, porter.gareth50 at gmail.com
Porter is an investigative journalist and historian specializing in U.S. national security policy who just wrote the piece “U.S. Refusal of 2001 Taliban Offer Gave bin Laden a Free Pass.”

For more information, contact at the Institute for Public Accuracy:
Sam Husseini, (202) 347-0020; or David Zupan, (541) 484-9167

Views of Pakistanis

Politico reports: “The White House backed away Monday evening from key details in its narrative about the raid that killed Osama bin Laden, including claims by senior U.S. officials that the Al Qaeda leader had a weapon and may have fired it during a gun battle with U.S. forces.

“Officials also retreated from claims that one of bin Laden’s wives was killed in the raid and that bin Laden was using her as a human shield before she was shot by U.S. forces.”

PERVEZ HOODBHOY, hoodbhoy at lns.mit.edu
Hoodbhoy is professor of physics at Quaid-i-Azam University and just wrote the piece “The curious case of Osama bin Laden.”

JUNAID AHMAD,  junaidsahmad at gmail.com
Ahmad is assistant professor of law at Lahore University of Management Sciences in Pakistan. He said today: “Bin Laden was was not the cause of the radical escalation of American militarism after 9/11, simply the pretext. … The Pakistani military and the U.S. have been playing a cat and mouse game at least since the Raymond Davis affair, and this is a part of it. … All the propaganda coming from the account: He lived in a mansion, he used women as human shields etc. is meant to discredit him and show his remaining followers that he lived as a king while he sent others to die.”

SAMEER DOSSANI, sameer.dossani at gmail.com
Asia policy coordinator at ActionAid International, Dossani is now traveling in Asia. He said today: “I doubt this will be a blow for jihadism. This [Afghanistan] is a tribal conflict. When one side scores a blow, the other will seek to take revenge ten times over. Without some kind of mediation process between Pashto and non-Pashto Afghans, this is going to get worse before it gets better.”

For more information, contact at the Institute for Public Accuracy:
Sam Husseini, (202) 347-0020; or David Zupan, (541) 484-9167

Bin Laden: Celebrating Death, or End of War?

TARIQ ALI, tariq.ali3 at btinternet.com, tariqali.org
Ali is author of numerous books including “The Duel: Pakistan on the Flight Path of American Power” and “The Obama Syndrome: Surrender at Home, War Abroad.” He just wrote the piece “Who told them where he was?

ALLAN NAIRN, allan.nairn at yahoo.com, http://www.allannairn.com
A noted journalist, Nairn said today: “Bin Laden is dead, but the world is still governed by bin Ladens. … Every day, the U.S., directly with its own forces, or indirectly through its proxy forces, its clients, is killing, at a minimum, dozens of people. I mean, just since Obama came in, in the one limited area of drone strikes in Pakistan, something like 1,900 have been killed just under Obama. And that started decades before 9/11. We have to stop these people, these powerful people like Obama, like Bush, like those who run the Pentagon, who think it’s OK to take civilian life.”

G. SIMON HARAK, Simon at Jesuits.net
A member of the Marquette University Jesuit Community, Harak said today: “I believe that violence breeds violence, and that this killing will not end violence, but begin a new circle of harm and retaliation. Did the killing of Saddam Hussein end the violence in Iraq? … Ezekiel 18:23 states: ‘Have I any pleasure in the death of the wicked, declares the Lord GOD, and not rather that he should turn from his way and live?’”

Rabbi ARTHUR WASKOW, awaskow@aol.com
Waskow is director of The Shalom Center and just wrote the piece “Let Us Rejoice Over Peace, Not Death.”

ROBERT NAIMAN, naiman at justforeignpolicy.org
Naiman is policy director of Just Foreign Policy. He just wrote the piece “The War is Over. Kiss a Nurse and Start Packing,” which states: “We got our man. Wave the flag, kiss a nurse, and start packing the equipment. It’s time to plan to bring all our boys and girls home from Afghanistan. When the 10th anniversary of the September 11 attacks rolls around, let the world see that we are on a clear path to bringing home our troops from Afghanistan and handing back sovereignty to the Afghan people.”

For more information, contact at the Institute for Public Accuracy:
Sam Husseini, (202) 347-0020; or David Zupan, (541) 484-9167

Bin Laden Killing

GARETH PORTER, porter.gareth50 at gmail.com, ipsnews.net
Porter is an investigative journalist and historian specializing in U.S. national security policy. He said today: “The U.S. could have had bin Laden delivered to another Islamic country or to the Organization of Islamic Conference in Saudi Arabia for a trial in mid-October 2001 but wouldn’t deal with the Taliban at that point. The Afghanistan war could have been avoided by negotiating with the Taliban for the ejection of al Qaeda from Afghanistan at that point.” See: IPA release “Are Obama and Clinton Being Honest About How Afghan War Began?

MOSHARRAF ZAIDI, mosharraf at gmail.com, @mosharrafzaidi
Zaidi is a writer in Pakistan who was just in Abbottabad. Seven hours before Obama’s announcement, he tweeted: “What was a low-flying heli doing flying around Abottabad Cantt at 0130 hrs?”

He said today: “Just getting back from Abbottabad. The response of people there was bewilderment. Sleepy little Abbottabad, with its picket-fenced, tree-lined streets, was home to Osama bin Laden. It is a most incredible revelation for most everyone I spoke to there. Unwitting pawns in a strange and complex global drama that is far from over for Pakistan’s poor people.”

ANAND GOPAL, anandgopal80 at gmail.com, anandgopal.com, @Anand_Gopal_
Gopal is an independent journalist based in Afghanistan and has reported for the Christian Science Monitor and the Wall Street Journal.

CHRISTOPHER DAVIDSON, cmd at christopherdavidson.net, christopherdavidson.net, http://www.dur.ac.uk, @dr_davidson
A scholar in Middle East politics at Durham University, Davidson’s books include Power and Politics in the Persian Gulf Monarchies. He wrote the piece “Lords of the Realm: The wealthy, unaccountable monarchs of the Persian Gulf have long thought themselves exempt from Middle East turmoil. No longer.”

He said today: “The apparent demise of bin Laden should really be a non-story, given the highly fragmented nature of present-day Al-Qaeda and the consensus view that bin Laden was little more than a figurehead. However the impact of his death on authoritarian regimes in Middle Eastern and other Islamic countries will be significant, as he served an important and valuable role as a ‘bogeyman’ that could be wheeled out to justify … why brutal crackdowns and limits on political expression were often needed.”

For more information, contact at the Institute for Public Accuracy:
Sam Husseini, (202) 347-0020; or David Zupan, (541) 484-9167