The USA invaded Iraq … to bring them “democracy.”
Posted by click at 9:47 PM
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<a href=www.vheadline.com>Venezuela's Electronic News
Posted: Monday, April 14, 2003
By: Oscar Heck
VHeadline commentarist Oscar Heck writes: True democracy no longer exists.
Now, the USA is thinking of invading Syria … and bring them “democracy.”
Will they invade Venezuela … and bring “democracy”?
According to Jim Krane, from the Associated Press, a USA-based information buyer/seller called ChoicePoint Inc., is collecting and selling personal information from people in Central America and South America, including Venezuela. This information is being sold to some three-dozen US government agencies, without the consent or knowledge of the people.
Democracy?
Krane states: “ChoicePoint says it buys the files from subcontractors in Mexico, Colombia, Venezuela, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador and Nicaragua. But it refuses to name the sellers or say where those parties obtained the data.“
and:
“If ChoicePoint can sell foreigners' details to Washington, it is also in the position to sell data on US citizens to foreign governments. It won't, for policy reasons. We don't think it's the right thing to do, so we're not doing it.”
Democracy?
Krane goes on to say: “In Colombia, ChoicePoint buys the entire country's citizen ID database, including each resident's date and place of birth, passport and national ID number, parentage and physical description”. (31 million Colombians)
What would Colombians say if they knew this? What would Venezuelans say if they knew that their private information is being sold to the US government?
Is this what the opposition wants as a “democracy”?
- A “democracy” that allows for unleashed purchase and re-sale of other people’s privacy? A “democracy” with double-standards?
Meanwhile, the Venezuelan Episcopal Conference (Bishops?), are criticizing the present Venezuelan government … claiming that the rule of law and political coexistence has been damaged by the struggle centering on the government's legitimacy and institutionality … "Polarization has paralyzed the country sinking us into growing poverty and an increase in division and social violence …violations of the right to life, citizen security and property have become so apparent that everyone can see them as they develop.”
Do these bishops (?) have short memories? (about poverty in Venezuela).
Maybe they never went to the slums in the 1970s? In general, the slums of today, have water, sewage systems and electricity (25 years ago, most didn’t). The homes in today’s slums are mostly made of red brick (25 years ago they were mostly made of cardboard and sheet metal). The slum area I usually live in has daily garbage collection! (25 years ago, there was no garbage collection ú and where I am in Canada at the moment, we have garbage collection once weekly).
In the 1970s, about 80% of the population was under the poverty line. (You can get statistics from the US government State Department) Today, the figure is about the same. Even if the per-capita income has decreased, the drop has not affected the 80%. The people that have been affected are the middle to upper-middle classes. Of course the poverty (?) level has increased amongst these classes! (They can no longer afford to take vacations to Disney World!).
In addition, these bishops (?) mention that citizen and property security (lack of) are evident. Yes, they are correct when speaking about the middle classes. Personal and property security in the slums is today no different than in the past. In fact, I find certain slum areas to be safer than ever.
Why do I bring this up?
Because 80% of the Venezuelan population live in slum-like conditions or worse. Therefore, when the bishops (?) make their statements, they are addressing a problem that in affecting the minority of the people, not the majority! They are manipulating opinions in favor of the minority classes that have always abused the 80%. (Typical!) In addition, there has always existed a class difference. What has changed is that a good portion of the 80% will no longer sheepishly accept to be squashed by the 20% … and rightly so!
Democracy?
Is this what “all” Venezuelans want … a “democracy” (such as the one implied by these bishops(?)) … that neglects and ignores a clear and real class difference, as if it did not exist?
In other words, a “democracy” that would continue to allow the 20% to abuse of the 80% and where the 80% continues to smile sheepishly and says “yes sir, yes sir”, like the American slaves did in the USA!
Democracy?
- A “democracy” where opinion and event manipulation is propagated as fact?
I do not want to be insensitive here, but I feel that I must mention the following:
Kayla Markert, in a letter to VHeadline.com, writes about the assassination of her friend’s father. S/he states, “…Gustavo recognized he was being taken to a place where those who oppose President Chavez are murdered, so he fought back…”
I read and re-read her letter and I am still not clear as to the “facts.”
Did Gustavo have a gun? How was he able to have a shoot-out with the kidnappers? Why was this person kidnapped? By whom? Was she there? Was her friend there (the son)? Did the kidnappers say, “ We are taking you away to kill you because you are against Chavez?” I bring up these points because what Kayla says is typical of opposition rhetoric … assumptions and manipulations that are transmitted as facts! She certainly forgets to mention that rich Venezuelans are sometimes kidnapping targets, and have been for years. She forgets to mention that many deaths in Venezuela are due to “resisting muggings or kidnappings!”
A few weeks ago another government person got kidnapped (along with a businessman) and their car was hijacked. They were taken away to the mountain. They did not resist, and lived to tell the story (a factual one). I encountered a person in Merida who was kidnapped at 7 a.m. on a Sunday in January 2003. He was also taken up to the mountain (at gun point), he was dropped off there, and the thieves left with his brand new Jeep. He did not resist, and came away only with injured pride (as he has just bought the Jeep).
The above are examples of the kind of manipulation that occurs on a daily and regular basis at: Globovision, Venevision, RCTV and TeleVen … the four privately-owned Venezuelan television stations that are in full support of the supposed “democratic” opposition!
If they (the opposition) are “democratic,” then what are the pro-Chavez people?
What are the anti-opposition people such as myself?
True democracy no longer exists.
Oscar Heck
oscar@vheadline.com
Note: Choice Point’s home page contains the following statements:
- Choice Point has assisted in the recovery of 777 missing children
- Choice Point honors the brave men and women of the coalition armed forces
How many children were murdered and/or injured in Iraq due to the USA “democratic” invasion?
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Chavez Frias is blazing an alternative model to globalization and towards a unipolar world order
Posted by click at 9:37 PM
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<a href=www.vheadline.com>Venezuela's Electronic News
Posted: Monday, April 14, 2003
By: Patrick J. O'Donoghue
British journalist, Richard Gott was called on to read out the conclusions of the " Solidarity with the Bolivarian Revolution" conference, highlighting the fact that the " unity of the Latin American peoples and the full exercise of their autonomy are part of the bases of a new multi-polar global order."
Conference participants, Gott said, believe that President Hugo Chavez Frias and his political project is an alternative model to neoliberal globalization and Yankee imperialism.
A practical conclusion was agreed upon, namely to help create solidarity networks to defend Venezuela and at the same time, promote resistance against the onslaught of globalization and temptations of US Imperialism.
Recognizing the existence of an opposition in Venezuela, the conference concludes that its " political practices smack of fascism, racism and anti-patriotism."
At a press conference with alternative media, President Chavez Frias countered criticism from aporrea.org and other popular organizations about the "elite character" of the conference dominated by intellectuals (mostly foreign) and forgetting the people who came out to risk all last year, arguing that international solidarity is indispensable for the survival of the Process but agreed that a parallel act was in order.
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Fascist bash, USA bashing...
Posted by click at 9:24 PM
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<a href=www.vheadline.com>Venezuela's Electronic News
Posted: Monday, April 14, 2003
By: Gustavo Coronel
VHeadline.com commentarist Gustavo Coronel writes: For four days some 800 foreign and 1500 local revolutionaries met at the Teresa Carreno Theater and Parque Central in Caracas to celebrate the first year of Chavez' return to power, after being eased out by the current Interior Minister, General Lucas Rincon, in a very strange Palace coup.
This grotesque meeting would have been just a laughable extravagance if it had not been for the fact that the government also celebrated the killing of innocent Venezuelans at the hands of Chavez' followers. Part of the celebration included setting these killers free, leaving no doubt, among the relatives of the victims, that these crimes would never be punished by this government.
The event was very irritating for the millions of decent Venezuelans who saw it from a safe moral distance. The 800 foreign guests were a varied menagerie. There were some notorious visitors, like Ignacio Ramonet, the high priest of neofascism; Professor Jaime Petras; Daniel Ortega, the former President of Nicaragua and indicted rapist; the odd looking and un-maternal mother of the Plaza de Mayo, Hebe Bonafini; a British film maker named Alex Cox who seemed to be completely lost in that environment; a 10-year-old Cuban girl already full of hate at such an early stage of life. However, most of the cast was made up of unknown extras, all very happy to be there, all expenses paid by the financially bankrupt Venezuelan government.
There were Ecuadorian military, Araucano indians, ultra-leftist editors, a true "who is who" of international vagrancy.
The event merits a few comments:
- I wonder if the $25 million which the government shelled out for the event could not have been better utilized to do something about the 250000 plus street children of Venezuela. Just outside the place of the event the visitors could not fail to see the miserable Amacuro Indian women begging for a few coins, or the street children sleeping in the sidewalks, or the buhoneros trying to sell anything from condoms to cigarettes to porno movies to bring some food home. To spend $25 million to finance the intellectual diarrhea that took place in Caracas, seems to be clearly immoral, when compared to the social degradation existing in Caracas and the rest of the country, due to the lack of sensibility of our verbose President.
I would have developed some respect for this government if they had decided to dedicate the $25 million to do something about the starving Venezuelan population, rather than spending it in this fascist bash.
-
Although the stated purpose of the event was the celebration of the first anniversary of the so called counter-coup, the main purpose became clear from day one: a bashing of the US. During the three days of the event, Bush was frequently compared to Hitler and all speakers made a point of condemning the War in Iraq, not so much because they were concerned about the people of that country but because one of their ideological icons, Saddam Hussein, had been expelled from power. The event had the misfortune to be held after the war was practically over and the people of Iraq could be seen in the streets showing their relief at getting rid of a monster who lived in abundance while his people suffered horrible poverty.
-
We heard very sad things for democratic ears. Daniel Ortega, accused of rape by a member of his own family, came to say that Chavez represented the hope of Latin America. Hebe Bonafini said that she had been happy at the tragedy of September 11 because the towers included "powerful people" plotting against the poor. Jaime Petras at least showed flashes of intellectual honesty, when he defined Chavez Law regulating Media Content as "protofascist." Alan Cox said that he did not know much about Venezuela but he assumed all leftists were with Chavez (the opposite is true). The pathetic Cuban girl sounded like a programmed robot, talking against US imperialism and other cliches.
Even more damaging for Venezuela, this event put the government of Hugo Chavez in a clear collision course with the government of the US.
Chavez brought to Caracas, all expenses paid, the most violent anti US fauna of the Americas. For a country like the US, which has already shown a short fuse when dealing with perceived enemies, this can easily be interpreted as a conscious and no longer harmless effort on the part of Hugo Chavez to antagonize them.
When combined with the obvious support Chavez has shown to the Colombian terrorist guerrillas and with his incontinent verbal abuses against the country which is our main client and our traditional political ally, it is easy to see that Chavez has now been included in the US list of undesirable characters.
- When Ramonet spoke about Venezuela being a future target for US military action, he was probably starting on the road of the self-fulfilling prophecies.
The reason for this challenging attitude on the part of Chavez is obvious. I have said before and now say again that the only road left open to Chavez is martyrdom. He is incompetent as a President and he does not know how to govern. He is incapable of solving our problems. The only way an inept politician can find a place in history is by becoming a martyr.
I suggest there is a much less traumatic way for Mr. Chavez: Please resign and make us happy so that we can have, at least, a kind memory of you...
Gustavo Coronel is the founder and president of Agrupacion Pro Calidad de Vida (The Pro-Quality of Life Alliance), a Caracas-based organization devoted to fighting corruption and the promotion of civic education in Latin America, primarily Venezuela. A member of the first board of directors (1975-1979) of Petroleos de Venezuela (PDVSA), following nationalization of Venezuela's oil industry, Coronel has worked in the oil industry for 28 years in the United States, Holland, Indonesia, Algiers and in Venezuela. He is a Distinguished alumnus of the University of Tulsa (USA) where he was a Trustee from 1987 to 1999. Coronel led the Hydrocarbons Division of the Inter-American Development Bank (IADB) in Washington DC for 5 years. The author of three books and many articles on Venezuela ("Curbing Corruption in Venezuela." Journal of Democracy, Vol. 7, No. 3, July, 1996, pp. 157-163), he is a fellow of Harvard University and a member of the Harvard faculty from 1981 to 1983. In 1998, he was presidential election campaign manager for Henrique Salas Romer and now lives in retirement on the Caribbean island of Margarita where he runs a leading Hotel-Resort. You may contact Gustavo Coronel at email gustavo@vheadline.com
Referendum 2003
discuss the pros and cons of a revocatory referendum
President Hugo Chavez Frias
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Venezuela's Opposition
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Houston's International Scene
Posted by click at 2:11 AM
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April 13, 2003, 7:33PM
By MAE GHALWASH
Copyright 2003 Houston Chronicle
Indonesian group woos Americans
It was a tourism road show, complete with tourism officials and videos of sites in Indonesia. To this 12-man Indonesian delegation, however, it was much more: It was an opportunity to improve relations between the American and the Indonesian people.
"We want to maintain a relationship with the American people even though our governments have an up-and-down relationship," Faisal Saleh, head of the Alumni of Permias, an organization for Indonesians who graduated from U.S. universities, said Friday.
U.S.-Indonesian relations have been strained since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks against America. Washington has in the past criticized Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim nation, as having taken limited actions against terrorists. Indonesia was disappointed when Washington included its citizens in the groups of foreigners who must register with the Immigration and Naturalization Service as part of a national security operation.
The Alumni members organized this tourism road show to four U.S. cities -- Houston is their third stop -- because of what they saw as a growing gap between the two sides, said Saleh, a 1988 political science graduate from the University of California.
They were concerned that Americans had lumped Indonesians together with the Sept. 11 terrorists, especially after the October bombing by suspected Muslim militants in Bali that killed some 200 people, mainly Western tourists, Saleh said. The group was also concerned that Indonesians in turn viewed Americans as being tough on Muslims, he added.
On Friday, the delegation met with more than 90 Houstonians who had either been schooled or worked in Indonesia and members of the trade industry to tell them that Indonesia has not changed, Saleh said, calling the social, ethnic and religious strife in his homeland all part of his country's transition to democracy.
In turn, Saleh said the delegation was reassured that Americans still respect and like Indonesians, a thought he said he will relay to his countrymen.
The Friday meeting secured some trips to Indonesia, although Saleh would not say how many. Indonesia's tourism industry has been hurting since the Bali bomb attack. Indonesia has since passed emergency anti-terrorist laws and beefed up security around its tourist sites and hotels.
The outbreak in Asia of severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS, has also slowed the tourist flows.
International calendar
· Latin America: Ambassador Diego Arria of Venezuela, who is special adviser to the U.N. secretary general, will discuss Latin America's struggle toward democracy while facing economic crises and a U.S. administration preoccupied with the Middle East. He will be speaking in his capacity as director of the Columbus Group, which promotes Latin American interests. The event is at 11:30 a.m. Tuesday at the Westin Galleria Hotel, 5060 W. Alabama. Reservations are required. Call the Houston World Affairs Council at 713-522-7811.
· Iraq: Shaden Yousef from the Arab-American Anti-Discrimination Committee and Lt. Col. Gordon Fowkes, a Vietnam veteran, will join professors from the University of Houston in a round-table discussion with audience participation on the meaning and consequences of the attack on Iraq. The event is at 7 p.m. today in Room 101 of the Social Work Building, University of Houston, (Behind Agnes Arnold building. Use Entrance 14, off Cullen Boulevard). For information, contact buzz@uh.edu, or call 713-376-2328.
· Muslim women: Azizah Al-Hibri, a professor of law at the University of Richmond's T.C. Williams School of Law, will lecture on "The Qur'anic Worldview: A Woman's Perspective." The lecture, the last part of the "Women and Gender in Islamic Societies" lecture series, starts at 7 p.m. April 21 at the James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy, Rice University, University Boulevard, Entrance 8. Reservations are required. Call 713-348-5794 by noon Friday.
U.S. And Turkish Forces Out Of Iraqi Kurdistan!
Posted by click at 7:28 AM
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sf.indymedia.org
Original article is at sf.indymedia.org Print comments.
U.S. And Turkish Forces Out Of Iraqi Kurdistan!
by STEVE ARGUE Saturday April 12, 2003 at 05:39 PM
steveargue2@yahoo.com
END THE OCCUPATION! BRING THE TROOPS HOME NOW! FULL RIGHTS FOR THE LONG SUFFERING KURDISH PEOPLE!
Stop The Ethnic Killing!
U.S. And Turkish Forces Out Of Iraqi Kurdistan!
lists.riseup.net
By STEVE ARGUE
The celebrations of Iraqi Kurds in Kirkuk are now marred by bloodshed. According to KurdishMedia.Com, “Pro-Turkish Turkmens in Kirkuk City are said to be killing Kurds celebrating the downfall of the Iraqi regime. According to a reliable source in the city, pro-Turkish Turkmen militias have killed at least 15 Kurds who have joined the Thursday celebrations of Kirkuk’s liberation. The source added that the Turkmen militias also engaged in wide spread looting of Kurdish houses and properties after the forced retreat of Kurdish Peshmarga forces from Kirkuk earlier today.” (April 11)
This follows an April 10 statement by U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell saying he had reached an agreement with Turkey to have Kurdish forces pull back from Kirkuk. Kirkuk is an oil rich city that would be an essential economic pillar in the establishment of a free and independent Kurdistan in Iraqi territory. Turkey, a country that carries out discrimination and genocide against its own Kurdish population, has made very clear its opposition to an independent Kurdistan in Iraqi territory, especially if it includes Kirkuk. Turkey fears that such a liberated Kurdistan would inspire Kurdish aspirations for national self-determination within Turkey.
Colin Powel’s intervention in Kirkuk is just one in a long line of anti-Kurd actions by the United States government. While the U.S. government cried crocodile tears for Iraqi Kurds the U.S. government supplied the military hardware to kill Turkish Kurds as well as the poison gas to kill Iraqi Kurds before Persian Gulf War #1.
In addition to these proxy genocides on the Kurdish people the U.S. government has participated directly in the war on Kurds. This occurred on February 15, 1999 when U.S. forces kidnapped Kurdish Worker’s Party (PKK) leader Abdullah Ocalan and turned him over to the genocidal Turkish government. Subsequently Abdullah Ocalan was sentenced to death for his role in defending Kurdish territory in Turkey from the murderous Turkish military. This U.S. kidnapping was admitted on CNN TV by former Turkish President and ethnic cleanser Suleyman Demiral.
Powel’s assurances to Turkey on Kirkuk are a violation of the national rights of the Kurdish nation and should be resisted by all Kurdish armies. Anything less will be a vile capitulation to the interests of the Turkish capitalists and U.S. imperialism and a betrayal of the Kurdish people.
As Dr Kamal Mirawdeli has stated, “Kirkuk is the test of patriotism or treason, of being peshmarga of people or Jash of Turkey. Those who are ready to surrender are not leaders. They are ready to sell their honor and reputation as well as the dignity of our people. The masses of Kurdistan and Kurds in Diaspora will not accept and forgive this unforgivable capital treason. No one has right to trample upon our martyrs and sell our honor and dignity for a job in Baghdad.”
The good doctor continues, “These people do not represent any one but their own selfish interests and small ideas. The Kurdish people everywhere will oppose them and dishonor them if they surrender to a simple threat by Turkish fascists. We must be ready to fight the Turks or anyone else for our natural justice to return to our homes and organize our affairs by ourselves. We shall not accept any role for Turkey in any circumstances. Stay in Kirkuk. Occupy and fortify all strategic positions. Ask tens of thousands of Kurds to join Kurdish people in Kirkuk.”
Such a stand by the Kurds would run up against the Turkish interests of seeing Kurds silent by oppression or death, and the U.S. corporate interest in stealing the profits made off of Kurdistan’s oil. By taking such a necessary stand the Kurdish people will be forced to resist an all out invasion of Turkey into Kurdistan (Turkey already has thousands of troops operating in Kurdistan) and Kurds will be forced to resist the U.S. occupation of Iraq.
Under these conditions it is essential that a united socialist resistance to the Anglo-American occupation be formed that:
- Fights for the right of the Kurdish national minority to control their land and resources, and to speak their own language.
- Fights for the rights of all religious minorities and majorities to practice their religion without discrimination.
- Opposes U.S. control of the economy and fights against the privatization of shipping and oil so that the profits made can continue to be used for social programs as they were under the regime of Saddam Hussein. Those programs should be greatly expanded under a planned socialist economy that does not exclude national and religious groups.
- For a continuation of the liberated role Iraqi women have played in Iraqi society under Saddam Hussein in opposition to the puppet government the U.S. is setting up as well as in opposition to any anti-occupation forces who may not have an enlightened view on the rights of women.
- Fights against the occupation of all Iraqi territories by American, British, and Turkish militaries as a primary first step in the liberation of Iraq, and in doing so recognizes those imperialist forces, as well as any participating puppet leaders they install, as military targets.
In adopting such a program the opposition would be following in the best traditions of Tito who united the diverse ethnic and religious groups of Yugoslavia in the partisan resistance that drove the Nazi occupiers out of their country during World War 2.
Such a socialist opposition would see a commonality with Dr. Kamal Mirawdeli in his appeal to Kurds, which states: “Let Kurdish Parliament convene immediately and if the two leaderships have any sense of patriotism and dignity, they should ask parliament:
- To declare the unification of the two [Kurdish] administrations (even if nominally at this point)
- To declare Kirkuk as the capital of the joint unified government.
- To agree a timetable to move the government to Kirkuk as soon as possible.
- To ask Kurdish people everywhere to be vigilant and be prepared to fight for freedom.
- To declare a three day festival on the occasion of one government in Kirkuk and ask the Kurds for massive marches and demonstrations to support this patriotic resolution.”
While the regime of Saddam Hussein was no friend to the Iraqi Kurdish people, this of course has nothing to do with why the United States government hates Hussein. This hatred by the U.S. capitalist government is not based on humanitarian concerns. They hate Saddam Hussein for the good things he did, such as the nationalization of Iraqi oil that benefited the people of Iraq by keeping oil wealth in the country for social programs and benefited of the Iraqi economy.
The ill treatment of Kurds under the regime of Saddam Hussein has led to alliances of Iraqi Kurdish opposition with U.S. imperialism. Yet these alliances, as pointed out by Dilip Hiro in “Iraq: Eye Of The Storm” were not meant to help the Kurds create an independent state. Instead the U.S. “refused to help quasi-independent Kurdistan graduate to an independent state while vetoing the region’s return to Baghdad’s jurisdiction. All it wanted was to deploy the Kurds as a lever to keep Saddam down.”
Today’s imperialist intervention against the Kurdish right to Kirkuk proves, all the more, Hiro’s contention. How the Kurdish leadership responds to this challenge will define whether or not they represent a true leadership for the Kurdish people, or if they are the lap dogs of imperialism.
While defending Iraq against imperialist attack and supporting their right to defend themselves socialists also recognized that Saddam Hussein is a capitalist leader and that the Iraqi people, especially the Kurds, have their own scores to settle with him. Yet any government set up by a U.S. occupation army will not be democratic, will not support Kurdish rights, and will only lead to the privatization of the resources that American oil monopolies intend to steal.
America’s so-called concern for human rights can be seen in the past US interventions in Iraq. Saddam Hussein’s Ba’ath Party first came to power in 1963. Immediately after taking power, based on lists provided by the CIA, they rounded up 5,000 leftists and trade-union leaders and murdered them. After the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait we were shown pictures of Iraqi Kurds killed by poison gas in the U.S. media. What we were not told is why the US was silent when this was happening and the fact that the US supplied the gas to kill the Kurds and to kill Iranians in the Iran-Iraq war. While we are now told of the Iraqi repression of the Kurdish people we are not told of how the Turkish government is carrying out the same policies of genocide against the Turkish Kurds, and doing it with U.S. weaponry.
Many of the Kurds know that their national interest to self-determination will never be established by the “liberating” forces of Turkey and Iran or British and American imperialism. This will only be established by the Kurds themselves and by the alliances they build with other anti-imperialist forces. British imperialism divided Kurdistan, a country with its own unique language and culture, into a minority inside the nations of Iraq, Turkey, Syria, and Iran. Today the Kurds are the largest nation without a homeland in the world. Imperialism, with its motto of divide and conquer, never has and never will solve the Kurdish question. A free and united Kurdistan will only be born through a sweeping socialist revolution that overthrows the capitalist regimes of Turkey, Iran, Iraq, and Syria while challenging the dictates and military of the United States.
On both scores, both the defense of the Iraqi nation from imperialism, as well as the liberation of the Kurdish nation, Arab nationalism alone has proven to be incapable of effective resistance. Arab capitalist governments, while giving lip service of opposition to the U.S. invasion of Iraq to placate their own people, continued to provide gasoline to the invading Anglo-American forces. Likewise these capitalist nations are not friends of the Kurdish resistance. This points to the need to build a stronger socialist resistance in the Middle East that that exposes and overthrows fake anti-imperialist U.S. puppet governments in the region and uses their oil resources to benefit the people.
Just as the U.S. ruling class hates governments like Iraq, Libya, and Venezuela who use the profits of their oil resources partly to benefit the people with social programs. Likewise they love capitalist governments like that of Saudi Arabia and Kuwait that strip the people of all their rights and keep the oil profits in the hands of the international oil monopolies and their corrupt local servants. As such the U.S. imperialists are willing to tolerate empty anti-imperialist and radical Islamic proclamations from such countries.
Today in the United States we face unemployment, homelessness, and a lack of health care. The billions of dollars the U.S. is squandering on killing Iraqis and Kurds to steal their resources should be spent to benefit the working class and poor of the United States. Workers in the United States have nothing in common with the oilmen and military profiteers who are carrying out the occupation of Iraq and Kurdistan.
END THE OCCUPATION!
BRING THE TROOPS HOME NOW!
FULL RIGHTS FOR THE LONG SUFFERING KURDISH PEOPLE!
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