Archive for June 15, 2012


NATO preparing vast disinformation campaign against Syria

Thierry Meyssan
Voltaire Network

Member States of NATO and the GCC are preparing a coup d’état and a sectarian genocide in Syria. If you want to prevent these crimes, you should act now: circulate this article on the Internet and alert your elected officials.

In a few days, perhaps as early as Friday, June 15, at noon, the Syrians wanting to watch their national TV stations will see them replaced on their screens by TV programs created by the CIA. Studio-shot images will show massacres that are blamed on the Syrian Government, people demonstrating, ministers and generals resigning from their posts, President Al-Assad fleeing, the rebels gathering in the big city centers, and a new government installing itself in the presidential palace.

This operation of disinformation, directly managed from Washington by Ben Rhodes, the US deputy national security adviser for strategic communication, aims at demoralizing the Syrians in order to pave the way for a coup d’etat. NATO, discontent about the double veto of Russia and China, will thus succeed in conquering Syria without attacking the country illegally. Whichever judgment you might have formed on the actual events in Syria, a coup d’etat will end all hopes of democratization.

The Arab League has officially asked the satellite operators Arabsat and Nilesat to stop broadcasting Syrian media, either public or private (Syria TV, Al-Ekbariya, Ad-Dounia, Cham TV, etc.) A precedent already exists because the Arab League had managed to censure Libyan TV in order to keep the leaders of the Jamahiriya from communicating with their people. There is no Hertz network in Syria, where TV works exclusively with satellites. The cut, however, will not leave the screens black.

Actually, this public decision is only the tip of the iceberg. According to our information several international meetings were organized during the past week to coordinate the disinformation campaign. The first two were technical meetings, held in Doha (Qatar); the third was a political meeting and took place in Riyad (Saudi Arabia).

The first meeting assembled PSYOP officers, embedded in the satellite TV channels of Al-Arabiya, Al-Jazeera, BBC, CNN, Fox, France 24, Future TV and MTV. It is known that since 1998, the officers of the US Army Psychological Operations Unit (PSYOP) have been incorporated in CNN. Since then this practice has been extended by NATO to other strategic media as well.

They fabricated false information in advance, on the basis of a “story-telling” script devised by Ben Rhodes’s team at the White House. A procedure of reciprocal validation was installed, with each media quoting the lies of the other media to render them plausible for TV spectators. The participants also decided not only to requisition the TV channels of the CIA for Syria and Lebanon (Barada, Future TV, MTV, Orient News, Syria Chaab, Syria Alghad) but also about 40 religious Wahhabi TV channels to call for confessional massacres to the cry of “Christians to Beyrouth, Alawites into the grave!.”

The second meeting was held for engineers and technicians to fabricate fictitious images, mixing one part in an outdoor studio, the other part with computer generated images. During the past weeks, studios in Saudi Arabia have been set up to build replicas of the two presidential palaces in Syria and the main squares of Damascus, Aleppo and Homs. Studios of this type already exist in Doha (Qatar), but they are not sufficient.

The third meeting was held by General James B. Smith, the US ambassador, a representative of the UK, prince Bandar Bin Sultan (whom former U.S. president George Bush named his adopted son so that the U.S. press called him “Bandar Bush”). In this meeting the media actions were coordinated with those of the Free “Syrian” Army, in which prince Bandar’s mercenaries play a decisive role.

The operation had been in the making for several months, but the U.S. National Security Council decided to accelerate the action after the Russian President, Vladimir Putin, notified the White House that he would oppose by all means, even by force, any illegal NATO military intervention in Syria.

The operation has a double intent: the first is to spread false information, the second aims at censuring all possible responses.

The hampering of TV satellites for military purposes is not new. Under pressure from Israel, the USA and the EU blocked Lebanese, Palestinian, Iraqi, Libyan and Iranian TV channels, one after the other. However, no satellite channels from other parts of the world were censured.

The broadcast of false news is also not new, but four significant steps have been taken in the art of propaganda during the last decade.

- In 1994, a pop music station named “Free Radio of the Thousand Hills” (RTML) gave the signal for genocide in Rwanda with the cry, “Kill the cockroaches!”

- In 2001, NATO used the media to impose an interpretation of the 9/11 attacks and to justify its own aggression against Afghanistan and Iraq. At that time already, it was Ben Rhodes who had been commissioned by the Bush administration to concoct the Kean/Hamilton Commission report on the attacks.

- In 2002, the CIA used five TV channels (Televen, Globovision, ValeTV and CMT) to make the public in Venezuela believe that phantom demonstrators had captured the elected president, Hugo Chávez, forcing him to resign. In reality he was the victim of a military coup d’etat.

- In 2011, France 24 served as information ministry for the Libyan CNT, according to a signed contract. During the battle of Tripoli, NATO produced fake studio films, then transmitted them via Al-Jazeera and Al-Arabiya, showing phantom images of Libyan rebels on the central square of the capital city, while in reality they were still far away. As a consequence, the inhabitants of Tripoli were persuaded that the war was lost and gave up all resistance.

Nowadays the media do not only support a war, they produce it themselves.

This procedure violates the principles of International Law, first of all Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights relating to the fact of receiving and imparting information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.” Above all, the procedure violates the United Nations General Assembly resolution, adopted after the end of World War II, to prevent further wars. Resolutions 110, 381 and 819 forbid “to set obstacles to free exchange of information and ideas” (like cutting off Syrian TV channels) and “all propaganda provoking or encouraging threats to peace, breaking peace, and all acts of aggression”. By law, war propaganda is a crime against peace, the worst of crimes, because it facilitates war crimes and genocide.

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Niger farmland threatened by locusts: official

by Staff Writers
Niamey (AFP)

Large swathes of farmland are threatened by locusts in Niger even as the drought-prone African nation is grappling with a severe food crisis, a pest-control official said Wednesday.

“Unless swarms are destroyed very early, locusts will reproduce and reach the cropland,” Yahaya Garba, director of the CNLA agency in charge of pest-control, said in the latest bulletin of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in Niger.

At least 500,000 hectares (1.2 million acres) of farmland and one million hectares (2.5 million acres) of pasture land could be devastated.

“Locusts are about to reach the Sahel (region), and notably northern Mali and Niger,” Garba said adding that the migratory species was invading the area from southeast Algeria and neighbouring Libya.

The first swarms were spotted in northern Niger late last month and have started to migrate south where most Niger farmland is concentrated.

More than 80 percent of Niger’s population of 15 million live on farm produce and six million are facing a new food crisis already, out of 18 million in the entire Sahel belt, according to United Nations figures.

“The fight (against the locusts) must be fought intensively and immediately,” warned Garba, appealing for international assistance.

There was a major risk that locusts invade the area from Mali where state agencies do not have access to locust reproduction zones as the north is under the control of armed rebel groups.

The UN’s Rome-based food agency said earlier this month that political insecurity and conflicts in North Africa were hindering efforts to control the swarms of desert locusts.

Niger last faced desert locust swarms in 2003-05.

 

Related Links
Farming Today – Suppliers and Technology

 

Quake-hit Afghan village could become mass grave

by Staff Writers
Mullah Jan, Afghanistan (AFP)

An Afghan village where more than 70 people are believed to have been buried in an earthquake-triggered landslide could be declared a mass grave, an official said Wednesday.

Two shallow tremors less than half an hour apart on Monday unleashed a deluge of rock and earth that smashed into the remote village of Mullah Jan, in the mountainous Hindu Kush region.

Villagers say 71 people, all women and children, were trapped in the landslide, and a disaster management official has described the chances of anyone surviving as “slim or non-existent”.

Mechanical diggers were at the site trying to clear rubble to find bodies or survivors, but Nasir Kohzad, the head of the natural disaster agency of Baghlan province, said the scale of the task made it difficult.

“Part of a mountain has collapsed on a part of Mullah Jan village and there is over 60 metres of dirt to remove,” he told AFP.

Pictures from the scene showed earthmovers digging through mounds of brown dirt and rock with no visible signs of buried buildings.

Only three bodies have been recovered from Mullah Jan, Kohzad said, while a fourth was found in a neighbouring district.

Mullah Jan, the chief of the eponymous village, suggested declaring the site a mass grave and leaving the other victims’ bodies to rest, Kohzad said.

The first quake on Monday, with a magnitude of 5.4, struck at 9:32 am (0502 GMT) at a depth of 15 kilometres (10 miles) with the epicentre around 160 kilometres southwest of the town of Faizabad.

A more powerful tremor, measured at 5.7 magnitude, hit around 25 minutes later in almost exactly the same place, the US Geological Survey (USGS) said.

Northern Afghanistan and Pakistan are frequently hit by earthquakes, especially around the Hindu Kush range, which lies near the collision of the Eurasian and Indian tectonic plates.

A 7.6-magnitude earthquake in Pakistan in October 2005 killed 74,000 people and displaced 3.5 million.

Mystery ‘forest boy’ identified as Dutch runaway

Suggestions emerge of 20-year-old’s troubled life after stepmother recognizes photo released by German police

Forest boy

A German police photo of the ‘forest boy’, who has been identified as Robin van Helsum. Photograph: Police handout/EPA

A mysterious young man who fooled German authorities into thinking he had spent years living wild in a forest has been identified as Robin van Helsum, 20, a Dutch runaway thought to have been trying to escape a troubled family life.

Van Helsum was waiting to be reunited with his family in Berlin on Friday night after relatives identified a photograph of him circulated by German police earlier in the week.

Dubbed der Waldjunge, or the forest boy, Van Helsum turned up on the steps of Berlin’s town hall last September claiming he had spent five days trekking to the city after burying the corpse of his dead father in a forest. He said his mother had died some years before in a car accident.

He was given refuge at a supervised centre for homeless youths, appointed a legal guardian and given regular health checks while psychologists tried to coax the truth out of the apparently traumatised teenager. But the boy said very little and even his nationality could not be ascertained. DNA tests were carried out to try to establish his identity.

A spokesman for the youth welfare office that took care of him said on Friday that his carers had been shocked to hear that he was an imposter rather than the orphaned boy who appeared to have lost his memory that he had made himself out to be.

“By all accounts he was a really nice, friendly young man who didn’t give anyone any trouble but who, as we now know, was in fact a fraudster,” Ed Koch of the Tempelhof-Schöneberg youth welfare office in southern Berlin told the Guardian. “Of course that comes as a shock to those who have spent time and effort looking after him over the past months.”

Koch said the welfare office was continuing to take care of Van Helsum while he waited for his family to pick him up.

Chantal Westerhoff, spokeswoman for the regional police in Twente, eastern Netherlands, said Van Helsum had been reported missing soon after his departure from his hometown of Hengelo on September 2 last year.

“We are 100 per cent certain that this is the 20-year-old youth whose stepmother has identified him beyond doubt,” Westerhoff said. “We are very happy that he has been found.” She said his stepmother had initially recognised him from the amulet he wore round his neck. But she expressed the frustration of authorities in Germany and the Netherlands.

“This boy has caused many people a lot of trouble, and has a lot to answer for,” she added.

Michael Maass, a spokesman for the Berlin police, told the Guardian that Van Helsum was free to leave Berlin, but may face charges of identity falsification and social security benefit fraud. “Having sponged off a lot of people and taken many of us for a ride he may well find he is presented with the bill for his costs, which amounted to several thousand euros a month.

“We have ensured that we now know where to contact him in case there are moves to prosecute him.”

Van Helsum told police little about his origins. But, identifying himself as Ray, and his parents as Ryan and Doreen, he painted a picture that was elaborate enough to capture the imagination of the German public and led to comparisons with the true 19th-century tale of Kaspar Hauser, a boy who walked out of a forest in southern Germany but could never make himself understood and later killed himself. The story was turned into a film by Werner Herzog.

Van Helsum said he and his father had lived in a forest, sleeping in caves and a tent, and fed off berries and mushrooms. He said his father had died in August last year and given his son instructions to bury him and “walk north until you reach civilisation and then ask for help”.

But on Friday details of Van Helsum’s more prosaic and troubled childhood started to come to light. His parents are believed to have separated when he was two years old, and to have engaged in a protracted battle for his custody which lasted several years. His father, Jan, won custody, but family members told the local paper that the row overshadowed the youth’s life.

When he disappeared last year, his parents issued an appeal on Twitter, saying “Missing Robin … 19 years from Hengelo, urgently contact us, missing since September 2.”

Westerhoff said his parents had registered him as missing, “but there was no official search launched, as he was of legal age and was not in danger of hurting himself or others”.

Because the Berlin police had registered him via Interpol as a minor, no connection was made between “Ray” and Robin.

On Friday his stepmother wept on the telephone to local reporters, saying she would decide whether she went public with her version of events only after she had visited a psychologist.

Van Helsum’s father died in February this year, although it was not known if the youth knew of his death. He reportedly wrote to the family from Berlin telling them he was safe.

On his Facebook page, Van Helsum, who worked in marketing and communication, describes himself as an entrepreneur, and writes that he completed an internship at a telephone company in Hengelo last year which he did not complete. He lists amongst his hobbies reading and video games and cites as his “favourite quotation”: “All men’s souls are immortal, but the souls of the righteous are immortal and divine”. His favourite books include The Hobbit and The Little Prince, and among those who have inspired him are John F Kennedy, Erasmus and St Nicholas.

A schoolfriend told the Dutch broadcaster NOS that Van Helsum had had a troubled childhood and he thought he had undertaken the Berlin adventure to escape his problems. “Robin had personal problems and so probably found a way that suited him to begin a new life.”

Enigmas

Frédéric Bourdin was born in 1974. He assumed 39 identities throughout childhood and into adulthood, including impersonating three missing teenagers, adopting the voice and gait of teenage boys and using depilatory creams to look young and smooth-skinned. His last known impersonation was in 2005. In an interview that year Bourdin, who was known as the chameleon, said he had been looking for love and affection having been neglected in childhood.

Andreas Grassl was dubbed the “Piano Man” after he was initially identified as a virtuoso pianist after washing up on a Kent beach in 2005. Grassl (born 1984) triggered worldwide public reaction of sympathy and fascination.He turned out to be a 20-year old Bavarian with unexceptional musical ability. Some said he was a hoaxer while others maintained he had had a blackout or had been trying to escape a repressive Catholic family.

Kasper Hauser was arguably the original “Forest Boy”. He turned up in the southern German city of Nuremberg in 1828 with very little ability to communicate and seemingly no idea as to who he was. It was initially assumed he had been raised in the woods, but he later described being brought up in a dark cell. It is thought he stabbed himself and subsequently died of his injuries, but there are still conspiracy theories around the mystery which spawned a classic film by Werner Herzog and continues to this day to feed the German fascination with primeval forests as typically featured in Grimms’ fairy tales.

One  would  wonder why  no one is talking  about  compassion  for the  troubles  that  drove   this  young  man to leave  his home and perpetrate  this hoax?  Simply  by the  elaborate  ruse one  would  be hard  pressed not  to believe  that  he was indeed  traumatized  by  whatever events took  place in his life  leading up to the  day  he ran away.  He is indeed   20 years  old now ,  however how long were the  issues that drove him  to this take  place?  His family   being torn  apart  and the  custody  battle that  ensued placing  him squarely in the  center  of  the struggle.  Why is  it  so  difficult  for  adults  to understand  how traumatizing  that  can  actually  be  to  a child?  Perhaps they  should be  more  concerned about   what  drove him to it.  Rather than  focus  on their   outrage  at  having been  duped.  There  is no shame   in helping someone  who needs  help. If they  lie it is on he that  lied  not  on he  who sincerely outstretched  his  hand in unconditional  kindness.  However , this is  simply  my opinion.  I am  sure  many  would  not agree.  I believe  in doing onto others  as I  would have done  onto me.  Judge  not  lest  you be  judged  by the  same  measure. These are  not   simply  Christian   values  they are   human  values.   Unconditional Acceptance of the Human Condition and our responsibility to Lift Up One Another.   ~ Desert Rose ~

Dr. Cornel West Speaks in Arizona

Uploaded by on Oct 10, 2010

“Justice is what Love looks like in public.” -Brother Cornel West
A Conversation with Cornel West – How We Got Here: Historical Roots of SB1070
Saturday, October 2, 2010 North High School Auditorium, Phoenix, AZ

Puente Movement & NDLON hosted a Panel Discussion and Lecture by the distinguished Dr. Cornel West, Professor at Princeton University. Dr. West is an African American philosopher, author, critic, actor, and civil rights activist. He is known for his combination of political and moral insight and criticism, and his contribution to the post-60s civil rights movement.

Shot by:
Dennis Gilman, http://www.youtube.com/humanleague002 & Puente
J.M. Aragon, PanLeft & Derechos Humanos
Shot & Edited by:
Barni Qaasim, Iftiin Productions & Puente

HIV may have returned in ‘cured’ patient: scientists

by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP)

An American man whose HIV seemed to disappear after a blood marrow transplant for leukemia may be showing new hints of the disease, sparking debate over whether a cure was really achieved.

Scientists disagree over the latest findings on Timothy Brown, also known as the “Berlin patient,” presented at a conference in Spain last week, according to a report in the journal Science’s ScienceInsider blog.

Brown was given bone marrow transplants in 2006 that appeared to eradicate the human immunodeficiency virus from his body, leading his doctors to declare a “cure of HIV has been achieved” in the peer-reviewed journal Blood in 2010.

The transplants came from a donor with an unusual genetic mutation that is naturally resistant to HIV. About one in 100 Caucasian people have this mutation which prevents the molecule CCR5 from appearing on the cell surface.

The latest debate arose after virologist Steven Yukl of the University of California, San Francisco, gave a talk on June 8 at the International Workshop on HIV & Hepatitis Virus.

Yukl “highlighted the difficulties that they and several labs they collaborated with have had determining if Brown truly had eradicated the virus from his body,” said the ScienceInsider report.

“There are some signals of the virus and we don’t know if they are real or contamination, and, at this point, we can’t say for sure whether there’s been complete eradication of HIV,” Yukl was quoted as saying by ScienceInsider.

“The point of the presentation was to raise the question of how do we define a cure and, at this level of detection, how do we know the signal is real?”

However, some scientists interpreted the presentation to mean that a cure was not actually achieved, and that Brown may even have been re-infected with the virus that causes AIDS.

Alain Lafeuillade of the General Hospital in Toulon, France, issued a press release that described how Yukl and colleagues “challenged these results as they showed persistence of low levels of HIV viremia in this patient, and HIV DNA in his rectal cells.”

He noted that “these HIV strains were found to be different from those initially present in this patient back in 2006, and different from each other.”

While that could mean the HIV has “evolved and persist(ed) over the last 5 years, these data also raise the possibility that the patient has been re-infected,” Lafeuillade wrote.

“More studies are in progress to know if this seronegative HIV individual can infect other subjects if he has unsafe sex,” he concluded.

Yukl, quoted by ScienceInsider, said Lafeuillade misinterpreted the presentation.

“”We weren’t trying to say HIV was still there or he hadn’t been cured,” he said, noting the talk centered on how to interpret very sensitive test results on Brown’s blood cells, plasma and rectal tissue.

One of his collaborators, Douglas Richman of the University of California, San Diego, said he believes researchers have picked up contaminants.

“If you do enough cycles of PCR (polymerase chain reaction), you can get a signal in water for pink elephants,” Richman was quoted as saying.

 

Related Links
Epidemics on Earth – Bird Flu, HIV/AIDS, Ebola

Spain house prices fall at steepest rate on record

MADRID

(Reuters) – Spanish house prices fell at the sharpest pace since current records began in the first quarter, data showed on Thursday, deepening a property market slump and serving up more bad news for the country’s battered banks.

Prices dropped 12.6 percent year on year, national statistics institute INE said. The fall was the biggest since the data series began in 2007, easily beating the previous trough of 7.7 percent in the second quarter of 2009.

Spain’s banks were left high and dry after a housing boom collapsed four years ago, saddled with billions of euros in bad debts related to the property sector, while sky-high unemployment has driven a sharp climb in unpaid loan rates.

The government said last weekend it will borrow up to 100 billion euros from Europe to help recapitalize the lenders, though many economists believe the aid will not be enough to avert a full sovereign bailout.

With the banks struggling to stay afloat, loans for anyone wishing to buy a new home are declining rapidly, with mortgage lending suffering its largest fall in over six years in February.

In a report earlier this month, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) said Spanish house prices could drop by almost 20 percent this year under an adverse scenario.

(Reporting by Paul Day; Editing by Fiona Ortiz, John Stonestreet)

 

 

Yemeni army advances on third rebel-held town; 40 militants killed near Shaqra

 

Yemeni troops and tribesmen advanced on the southern coastal town of Shaqra. (Reuters)

Yemeni troops and tribesmen advanced on the southern coastal town of Shaqra. (Reuters)
 Alarabiya.net English

By Reuters
ADEN Yemen

Yemeni soldiers killed 40 Islamist militants and captured one of their outposts in heavy fighting in southern Yemen on Thursday, local Defense Ministry officials said.

The Interior Ministry warned in a statement it had put security forces on alert following warnings al Qaeda-linked militants might try to launch attacks against civilian and government targets following their defeat in southern Yemen.

The Yemeni army is pushing ahead with a U.S.-backed offensive against the last stronghold held by the al-Qaeda-linked Ansar al-Sharia (Partisans of Islamic Law) in Abyan province after they were driven out from the cities of Jaar and Zinjibar on Tuesday.

A local Yemeni official said heavy fighting had taken place during the capture of the outpost at Wadi Salam, some 20 kilometers (16 miles) west of Shaqra. An estimated 300 Islamist militants were besieged by the army after the outpost fell.

The report could not be independently verified.

Earlier on Thursday, a local Yemeni official and residents said Islamist militants were seen fleeing from the advancing Yemeni army.

Government troops and allied tribal fighters were a few kilometers from Shaqra after retaking an area held by the insurgents on the outskirts on Wednesday.

Many insurgents fled at dawn and headed towards the town of Azzan after setting fire to two tanks and other military equipment, Shaqra residents said.

The militants were forced out of their strongholds of Zinjibar and Jaar on Tuesday in the army’s most significant victory against them in more than a year of turmoil that has taken Yemen to the brink of civil war.

Thousands of soldiers backed by tanks and war planes launched the offensive last month and were joined by local tribesmen opposed to the militants.

The United States has provided training and other support, including drone strikes, concerned its Islamist foes have gained a new foothold in the Middle East.

Their advance has fuelled fears about al Qaeda’s presence in a country next to Saudi Arabia, the world’s biggest oil exporter, and close to shipping lanes.

In Sana’a, the Yemeni Interior Ministry warned that Islamist militants could resort to attacks following its defeat in southern Yemen and said it was beefing up security in the capital and other cities against such attacks.

“Security forces have warned that al-Qaeda, in light of the humiliating defeat, could resort to terrorist operations to take revenge for the great victory achieved by the armed forces in destroying the dens of terror in Jaar and Zinjibar,” it said in a statement.

Ansar al-Sharia had earlier said it would seek to spread the war across Yemen after it was forced to abandon the towns, according to the SITE Intelligence Group which monitors militant websites.

We are sleepwalking into the Drone Age, and few people are debating the dire consequences.
 

Last October I was at a jirga in Islamabad where 80 people from Waziristan had assembled to talk about the US Predator drones that buzz around overhead, periodically delivering death by Hellfire missile. A jirga is the traditional forum for discussing and resolving disputes, part parliament, part court of law. The turbaned tribal elders were joined by their young sons on a rare foray out of their region to meet outsiders and discuss the killing. The isolation of the Waziris is almost total – no western journalist has been to Miranshah for several years.

At our meeting I spoke as the representative westerner. I reported the CIA claim that not one single innocent civilian had been killed in over a year. I did not need to understand Pashtu to translate the snorts of derision when this claim was translated.

During the day I shook the hand of a 16-year-old kid from Waziristan named Tariq Aziz. One of his cousins had died in a missile strike, and he wanted to know what he could do to bring the truth to the west. At the Reprieve charity, we have a transparency project: importing cameras to the region to try to export the truth back out. Tariq wanted to take part, but I thought him too young.

Then, three days later, the CIA announced that it had eliminated “four militants”. In truth there were only two victims: Tariq had been driving his 12-year-old cousin to their aunt’s house when the Hellfire missile killed them both. This came just 24 hours after the CIA boasted of eliminating six other “militants” – actually, four chromite workers driving home from work. In both cases a local informant apparently tagged the car with a GPS monitor and lied to earn his fee.

A few weeks back officials in the Obama administration talked to the New York Times about the “Secret Kill List” drawn up for drone assassinations. Democratic strategists in an election year calculate that the article will prove a vote-winner, dispelling any notion that Barack Obama is soft on terror. The administration voices wanted to leave the impression of an involved and committed president who reads Thomas Aquinas’s theory of the “just war” in between personally vetting the kill list.

Mitt Romney dubbed Obama “Dr Strangelove” back in 2007. It may have been a rare, perceptive insight. A decision by the smartest man in the room is only as good as the information that he receives, and no matter how accurate the shiny new missile, if it’s aimed at the wrong person it will hit the wrong target.

It is easy to understand how the CIA slaughtered Tariq and many other innocent victims. Those who press the Hellfire buttons are 8,000 miles away in Nevada and are dependent on local “intelligence”. Just as with Guantánamo Bay, the CIA is paying bounties to those who will identify “terrorists”. Five thousand dollars is an enormous sum for a Waziri informant, translating to perhaps £250,000 in London terms. The informant has a calculation to make: is it safer to place a GPS tag on the car of a truly dangerous terrorist, or to call down death on a Nobody (with the beginnings of a beard), reporting that he is a militant? Too many “militants” are just young men with stubble. At least 174 have been children.

The New York Times reports that Obama first embraced a policy of taking no prisoners in order to avoid the embarrassing sore of Guantánamo. Then he accepted a method for assessing casualties that “counts all military-age males in a strike zone as combatants” unless there is explicit posthumous proof of their innocence – because they are probably “up to no good”.

While Obama’s policies may go down a treat in the US, they are fomenting radicalism abroad, the very policy not only undermining our way of life but provoking an extremist hydra with many more heads.

Published on Jun 14, 2012 by

Britain’s Sreme Court has rejected a request to reopen the extradition case of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange. It brings him one step closer to being sent to Sweden, where he’s wanted for questioning on sex crime allegations. Assange denies all accusations against him, saying they’re politically motivated. There are fears his extradition could eventually see him being handed over to the US. For more on the developments in the Assange case RT talks to Afshin Rattansi, an author and award-winning journalist based in London.

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