Adamant: Hardest metal

What Did We Win?

thenewamerican.com Vol. 19, No. 10 - May 19, 2003 by William Norman Grigg

The war was short and our losses — though tragic — were relatively light. But what did "Operation Iraqi Freedom" actually accomplish?

It was a perfect tableau of liberation. To the cheers of jubilant Iraqis, a U.S. Marine climbed the immense statue of Saddam Hussein in downtown Baghdad and triumphantly draped the Stars & Stripes over Saddam’s heathen-idol visage. Shortly thereafter the signal was given, and the obscene statue was ripped out by its roots. In a culture-specific gesture of contempt, Iraqis removed their shoes and used them to pound the face of the fallen idol. Americans watching the event on television were gratified to learn that the particular flag used on this occasion had flown over the World Trade Center on the morning of 9-11.

On seeing this rewarding spectacle, more than a few Americans undoubtedly said to themselves: "This was what we were fighting for." But they were wrong. Desirable as it was to liberate Iraq from Saddam’s cruel reign, this military objective was not at the top of the White House’s agenda until shortly before the war began. Moreover, if liberating oppressed people from the grip of a cruel tyrant were the objective, it’s curious that the Bush administration would focus its efforts on far-away Iraq, rather than on the even more vicious Communist regimes in nearby Cuba and Venezuela.

The advertised rationale for war in Iraq, recall, was not to liberate Iraqis from Saddam, but to protect Americans from the threat he supposedly presented to our nation. As late as March 17th — two days before the missile strikes on Baghdad that provided the war’s overture — President Bush insisted that Saddam’s arsenal posed a global menace: "The security of the world requires disarming Saddam Hussein now." In a March 6th press conference the president described Saddam’s regime as threatening America’s very survival: "I will not leave the American people at the mercy of the Iraqi dictator and his weapons."

As it turned out, the much-discussed Iraqi "weapons of mass destruction" have thus far failed to materialize. Such weapons, or components of the same, could possibly still be found. But given Iraq’s pathetic battlefield performance, it’s impossible to credit the president’s apocalyptic claims about an Iraqi threat to our homeland.

Gratifying as it is that U.S. and allied troops were never attacked by chemical or biological weapons, it seems odd that Saddam’s regime refused to use them to stop the relentless allied drive to Baghdad. With Saddam gone and most of Iraq securely in allied hands, military teams hunting for WMDs failed to find solid evidence of their existence. Citing U.S. officials as its source, an April 22nd New York Times story from Baghdad reported that a key Iraqi scientist "has told an American military team that Iraq destroyed chemical weapons and biological warfare equipment only days before the war began...."

While this might account for the curious absence of the weapons, it would hardly be rational behavior by a ruthless regime facing immediate extinction. Why would Baghdad have chosen to deprive itself of its most formidable weapons on the eve of war — if, that is, it actually had those weapons?

The U.S. flag draped over Saddam’s statue, and earlier flown over the World Trade Center, symbolized the second rationale for war given by the Bush administration: payback for Black Tuesday; disruption of Baghdad-based terrorist groups; and deterrence of future terrorist attacks on our home soil. While no rational person disputes that Saddam’s regime was on intimate terms with terrorist groups, the Bush administration has never even attempted to tie his regime to the 9-11 atrocity. Satisfying as it was to see Saddam’s leering likeness eclipsed by the WTC flag, it was an empty gesture where justice for the victims of Black Tuesday is concerned.

Victory in Terror War?

U.S. Special Forces troops in Baghdad did capture Abu Abbas, the Palestinian terrorist allegedly responsible for murdering disabled American Leon Klinghoffer following the hijacking of the Achille Lauro cruise ship in 1985. "He got away from us, and we’ve been chasing him ever since," former CIA counter-terrorism chief Vince Cannistraro told Newsday. "He’s a big catch for us. It’s an old score to settle."

Abbas was one of several terrorists — members of a splinter faction of Yassir Arafat’s Palestine Liberation Organization — put on trial in Italy during the mid-1980s. Claiming they had insufficient evidence to hold Abbas, Italian authorities dropped the case and allowed him to leave. Holding an Iraqi passport, Abbas reconstituted his terror cell in Baghdad, at a time when Iraq was receiving military and economic aid from Washington.

Although Abbas is typically described as a fugitive, his whereabouts have not been a mystery. The New York Times conducted an interview with him late last year, in which the accused murderer of a U.S. citizen condemned the September 11th attacks. And while the Bush administration is eager to cite the capture of Abbas as validation of its war in Iraq, it had previously shown little interest in snaring him. Newsday points out that "U.S. Justice Department officials said as recently as last year that they had no grounds to seek his extradition."

On April 16th, the Bush administration lowered the national terrorism "threat level" from Orange (high) to Yellow (elevated). The threat level had been raised on March 17th to coincide with President Bush’s pre-war 48-hour ultimatum to Saddam. Down-shifting the alert level signaled that our military conquest of Baghdad had reduced the terrorist danger to Americans.

Or had it?

On April 21st, the State Department issued a warning to Americans overseas that the conclusion of the war in Iraq "may increase the potential threat to U.S. citizens and interest abroad including by terrorist groups.... U.S. citizens are encouraged to maintain a high level of vigilance and to take appropriate steps to increase their security awareness."

Given that the military conquest of Iraq increased the terrorist danger to Americans, how can it be viewed as a victory in the "war on terrorism"?

Hail Liberation!

The fall of Baghdad did signal the end of a regime that ruled by terror at home, and there is no doubt that the overwhelming majority of Iraqis are relieved by Saddam’s removal. However, it’s far from clear that the absence of Saddam translates into the presence of freedom.

Note that after World War I British colonial authorities created Iraq out of wildly incompatible tribal and ethnic groups. It has no tradition of ordered liberty. Brutal as he was, Saddam Hussein was typical of the ruling elite that has held sway in Baghdad since Iraq’s creation. It’s true that Saddam — like most rulers in the region — used torture and terror to deal with his personal enemies. But lurid violence of this type is, tragically, an Iraqi tradition.

"As a young lad in the town of Mosul I lived through the horror of the civil war in Iraq in 1959-60, when the Communist and Kurdish coalition fought the Nationalists for control of the country," recalled Iraqi expatriate Burhan al-Chalabi in the March 24th London Guardian. "With my brothers and parents, we used to hide huddled together, in a small concealed basement for days on end, absolutely terrified of being slaughtered because we were considered to be on the Nationalist side."

During that pre-Saddam conflict, recalls al-Chalabi, "I saw Iraqis split in half, while alive, by two cars. Girls were hanged from telegraph posts, with fish hooks through their breasts. Men were hanged outside my school gates. We were forced to watch mass hangings in public squares. Dead bodies with their throats slit lay in the streets."

Al-Chalabi points out that the Iraqi Communists committed the most gruesome of these atrocities. Thus it is by no means a welcome sign of "liberation" that "the long-banned Iraqi Communist Party … won the race to publish the first newspaper in Baghdad since the fall of Saddam Hussein," as Reuters reported on April 20th.

With the help of its servants in the "respectable" conservative media, the Bush administration cultivated the impression that with Saddam’s removal, freedom would blossom in Baghdad, and the Iraqis would swoon with gratitude toward their American liberators. Unfortunately, this has not been the case.

"The people of Tikrit [Saddam’s home town] are like the rest of Iraq," declared Abdul al-Malaki to a reporter for The Guardian of London. "They hated Saddam Hussein. I want to kill him." But the 28-year-old café owner wasn’t eager to see U.S. troops remain in his country. "This is an occupation, nothing else," he told the British reporter as they watched a Marine patrol. "We will keep quiet for a year and if they have not gone we will kill them."

Iraqis, who have never had a genuine sense of national identity, are also preparing to kill each other. In the northern Iraq city of Mosul — where, as a child, al-Chalabi witnessed the bone-chilling horrors described above — "Arabs are fighting with Kurds. Pro-Saddam residents are fighting with anti-Saddam Arabs," writes foreign correspondent Phillip Robertson in the April 21st Salon. "And just about everyone is angry at the United States. For Americans, especially, Mosul is not a safe place."

"The fall of this city on April 11 was not at all what we expected," continues Robertson. "[N]o victorious troops welcomed by cheering masses, no women throwing flowers from balconies, no happy families taking the tour of a free city.... On that day, armed men, some of them Kurds, organized themselves to rob the banks while peasants and poor people from town and nearby villages ransacked the office buildings and utilities.... People came from all over the region to get a piece of whatever they could get, in anything that moved."

Pillage and plunder also beset Baghdad after liberation. Shops, hospitals, and the Iraqi National Museum — which housed priceless and irreplaceable antiquities from the dawn of civilization — have been looted mercilessly. "Hardly anyone is going to work," reported the London Telegraph on April 20th. "Offices are closed or wrecked; the economy, such as it was, has collapsed."

The American concept of freedom, which "Operation Iraqi Freedom" was supposedly designed to transplant, is rooted in the sanctity of individual rights and property. Having removed the threat to rights and property posed by Saddam’s regime, the U.S.-led coalition did little if anything to address the threat posed by looters. An April 11th report from Britain’s Sky News described a tragic incident in which U.S. troops actually aided the looters by killing a shopkeeper attempting to defend his property. According to eyewitnesses, "The merchant pulled his rifle on the thieves when they began ransacking the shop.... When U.S. soldiers approached the area, the looters told them that the shopkeeper was a member of Saddam Hussein’s Fedayeen paramilitary police. The American troops reportedly opened fire with machine guns, killing the man...."

Interestingly, under Saddam’s admittedly brutal rule, individual ownership of firearms was relatively widespread. While occupation forces have yet to find the Iraqi government’s much-discussed "weapons of mass destruction," they have — in familiar fashion — begun initial efforts to disarm the civilian population.

"British forces have launched a gun amnesty in Basra in a bid to make the streets safer," reported London’s Ananova news service on April 9th. "An ‘amnesty pit’ has been created close to one British compound in the city in the hope residents will dump their guns." "Iraq has a culture of weapons," explained British military officer Cliff Dare. "There are a lot of them around, most held quite legally. If we want to give the new Iraq a chance these weapons have to be taken out of circulation."

The "New Iraq"

One harbinger of the "new Iraq" was visible in Hay al Ansar, a suburb of the city of Najaf. Residents of that small town, after being freed from the reign of Saddam’s Ba’ath Party, were immediately terrorized by a group calling itself the Iraqi Coalition of National Unity (ICNU), a previously unknown Shi’ite Muslim militia who arrived in vehicles driven by U.S. Special Forces troops.

"They steal and steal," complained a local man to the April 8th Financial Times. "They threaten us, saying: ‘We are with the Americans, you can do nothing to us.’" Hassan Mussawi, a Muslim cleric who leads the ICNU, insisted the group was simply trying to root out suspected Ba’ath Party collaborators. "If they do not resist arrest we hand them over to the Americans," claimed Mussawi. "If they resist then we take measures accordingly."

Across Iraq, noted the London Telegraph, "There is as yet no new authority to replace Saddam and the citizens of Iraq are disoriented. For the revolutionary Mullahs, the conditions are ideal." Those "revolutionary Mullahs" are largely radical Muslims aligned with Teheran, "many of whom … crossed the border from Iran" when Saddam’s secular socialist regime collapsed. Defying a history of intra-Islamic conflict, Shi’ite and Sunni Muslims — by some estimates as many as 20,000 — joined in an April 18th march to demand that American troops leave Iraq. During Friday prayer observance at Baghdad’s Abu Hanifah Nouman mosque, "Shia and Sunni clerics urged the congregation, in fiery sermons, to show their bitterness to the Americans," reported the London Independent.

In Sadr City — a Baghdad suburb once called "Saddam City" and now unofficially nicknamed "Revolution City" — "the text of a speech by Ayatollah Mohammed Emami-Kashani, an influential cleric, was read out," continues the Independent. "It said: ‘Unite with each other and send America and Britain out of your country. It is a duty for the Iraqi nation.’" Within days, reported Reuters on April 22nd, this anti-Anglo-American refrain was taken up by "hundreds of thousands of Shi’ite Muslims [who] swarmed through Iraq’s holy city of Kerbala in a pilgrimage...."

More than 60 percent of Iraq’s population consists of Shi’ite Muslims, most of whom look to neighboring Iran for spiritual direction. The implications of that fact are not lost on Iraq’s minorities, including the nation’s small but ancient Christian community.

As with the Iraqis’ ability to own firearms, the condition of Christians under Saddam’s reign illustrates that while that regime was brutal and highly authoritarian, it was not "totalitarian," in the full sense of the term. Saddam and his henchmen devised perversely inventive ways to torture and kill political dissidents, and the exalted likeness of the "Dear Leader" was pervasive, but Saddam did little to disrupt, reform, or destroy private institutions and customs. Avak Asadourian, Iraq’s Armenian archbishop, told the April 21st Christian Science Monitor that "we enjoyed total religious freedom and there was no religious discrimination" under Saddam’s rule. This may change if Iranian-style revolutionary Islam takes root in Iraq — a development that may be unavoidable if "democracy" is planted there at bayonet point.

Bishop Ishlemon Wardouni, head of Iraq’s Chaldean Christian Church (the only community that still speaks Aramaic, the language spoken by Jesus Christ and His disciples), told the Monitor that Shi’ite Muslims who follow the late Ayatollah Khomeini "want to convert a building next to his church — formerly belonging to the ruling Ba’ath Party — into a mosque." "If this sort of thing happens, maybe later there could be problems," warns Bishop Wardouni. "We have heard their slogans, ‘No Saddam, No Bush, Yes to an Islamic State.’"

Why?

By the time active hostilities had died down in Iraq, the official tally of Americans killed in action was 129. Unofficial estimates of the Iraqi battlefield casualties start at around 10-12,000. While we properly mourn and honor each American who gave his life for our country, we must also acknowledge that the radically disproportionate allotment of battle casualties illustrates that Iraq was never a military threat to our nation or our interests. Why, then, did 129 of our nation’s bravest sons and daughters die in Iraq? Did they give their lives to allow Iran-aligned Shi’ite Muslims to build a revolutionary "Islamic State"?

The evidence clearly shows that Americans and Iraqis died in "Operation Iraqi Freedom" as part of a demonstration project in coercive disarmament and as an object lesson to other nations. "Iraq is not just about Iraq," a "senior administration official" told the April 6th New York Times. According to this key administration strategist, President Bush regards the war against Iraq to be "of a type" with other potential wars of disarmament against such rogue states as Syria, Iran, and North Korea.

In a March 26th Wall Street Journal op-ed column, National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice insisted that "the coalition currently assembled to disarm Iraq shows the way" by foreshadowing the treatment other nations can expect if they disobey UN disarmament decrees. Reiterating a familiar Bush administration theme, Rice placed the war on Iraq in the context of 9-11, which she said represented "one of the relatively rare earthquakes that cause lasting tectonic shifts in international politics...."

However, in a January/February 2000 essay published in Foreign Affairs (the flagship journal of the globalist Council on Foreign Relations, to which Rice belongs), Rice insisted that a war to remove Saddam Hussein would be a top priority of a prospective Bush administration: "Nothing will change until Saddam is gone, so the United States must mobilize whatever resources it can … to remove him."

Those words were published 10 months before George W. Bush was elected, and a year and a half before the September 11th attack — the atrocity commemorated by wrapping the face of Saddam’s statue in the WTC flag. War on Iraq to enforce the UN’s disarmament decrees had been planned long before Black Tuesday supposedly made that war a necessity.

Removing Saddam did nothing to avenge our innocent dead or make our nation more secure. It did little to free the long-suffering Iraqi people, and may actually result in the emergence of an even nastier and more militant regime in Baghdad. Our military victory has left our nation saddled with the prospect of a long, bloody, expensive occupation, and an escalating terrorist threat.

But the war in Iraq did achieve something previously unthinkable: It has united the "mainstream" American right behind the proposition that the United Nations — or a successor organization — must have the military power to disarm rogue nations. Where "mainstream" conservatives once warned that the UN sought the power to rule the world, the "respectable" conservative position now dictates that the UN is to be mocked for its supposed impotence.

Conservative columnist Adam Sparks ably recited the Bush administration’s position in an April 14th San Francisco Chronicle column urging fellow conservatives to adopt the left-globalist mantra, "Think Globally, Act Locally." "The United States is now facing strong criticism from the United Nations, the same organization that didn’t want to get its hands dirty in Iraq; the UN is apparently now interested in rebuilding that nation," observed Sparks. "I think the UN should first rebuild itself into a meaningful organization that can drive homicidal tyrants from power."

Similar suggestions for UN reform were offered in an April 23rd syndicated column by David Davenport of the Hoover Institution, a conservative think tank at Stanford. Rather than abandoning the UN, insists this conservative scholar, we must "fix" it to make it a more "effective decision-making body," especially "in deciding matters of war and peace." Toward that end, Davenport urges — among other things — "limitations on vetoes" in the Security Council, by "requiring at least two nations to exercise it to be effective."

This "reform" would certainly prevent the French from vetoing Security Council resolutions favored by Washington. But it would also prevent the U.S. from vetoing resolutions hostile to America’s national interest.

Reform proposals of the kind suggested by Sparks and Davenport are being offered by numerous conservative analysts and commentators, all of whom — whether knowingly or ignorantly — promote the creation of a world government strong enough to disarm rogue states. In time, the same world government would be strong enough to disarm us as well.

Vladimir Lenin is said to have predicted that Communism will be built by non-Communist hands. In like fashion, it is supposed conservatives — President George W. Bush and his partisans — who are doing the heavy lifting necessary to build the power and precedents necessary for the UN, or a successor organization, to rule the world. Were Lenin alive, he would undoubtedly look on this development with a malicious satisfaction.

A Democracy of Convenience

liberalslant.com By: Matthew Riemer - 05/06/03

The Bush administration's 2003 invasion of Iraq marks the fiftieth anniversary of U.S. interventionism in the Middle East, which began with the CIA's overthrow of Iranian Prime Minister Dr. Mohammad Mossadegh in 1953. These two events, both noteworthy in their own right, form the perfect pair of bookends for a large shelf of Washington's Middle East exploits -- from the bombing of Libya in 1986 to the first Gulf War in 1991 to involvement in Lebanon in the early '80s. 

The '53 coup is significant because it was the first successful overthrow of a foreign government by the CIA. Its success showed just how much influence Washington could have in Eurasia, especially in regions on the doorstep of the Soviet Union. In short, it was a remarkable projection of power. 

The most recent military action in the Middle East, "Operation Iraqi Freedom" as it's been dubbed by the U.S., represents a fundamental shift in how Washington chooses to achieve its policy goals -- now with increased unilateralism and nationalism. The policy of preemptive warfare has been both articulated and executed by the Bush administration in Iraq. 

One of the most interesting observations regarding these two events though reveals a strange inverse relationship they seem to have, which possibly comments on broader policy intentions. 

In both cases, the United States is carrying out "regime change." And in both cases, policy makers are concerned with how the oil industry is going to be run (nationalization/privatization). However, in the former case, the CIA removed an appointed leader and replaced him with a dictator who would then rule for 26 (1953-1979) more years. In the latter case, the opposite occurred as the U.S. removed a dictator who ruled for 26 (1976-2003) years and has replaced him with a U.S. civil administration, which will presumably attempt to foster some kind of democratic institutions. 

This illustrates that the chief U.S. interest in both cases was resource security and regional hegemony/strategic positioning and not the freeing of people from the yoke of dictatorship. In Iran, the nationalization of the Anglo-Iranian Company by the Majlis threatened British and American oil interests by shutting foreign investors out of Iran's lucrative industry, which at the time, the BBC writes, "[was] the UK's largest single investment overseas." It also further distanced the U.S. and weakened its influence in a crucial Cold War state. So in this situation, it's dictatorship over democracy. 

In 2003, the United States could no longer let Saddam Hussein -- a man who threatened U.S. interests and complicated Washington's plans just by his presence -- rule Iraq, which had become the epicenter of the world's most vital region and home to the second largest proven oil reserves. In this example, it's democracy over dictatorship. 

When "democracy" (or, at least, non-dictatorship) happens to be Washington's goal (even rhetorically), it can make for a great sell, as was surely seen over the past several weeks. On the other hand, just because "dictatorship" can't be as readily sold to the public doesn't mean interventions that empower despotic regimes are off-limits. Forays like the CIA's in Iran aren't only for days gone by. In fact, the current situation in Venezuela resembles Iran fifty years ago quite uncannily: upstart leader connected to nationalization of the oil industry from a country with regional strategic importance is overthrown by a plutocratic/military class in the interests of corporations and foreign capital. And even though President Hugo Chavez was able to return to power, the pattern of regime change aimed at governments who resist globalization and the infiltration of their countries by foreign capital continued. So, in Venezuela, like Iran, it's dictatorship over democracy. 

So democracy is only Washington's preferred political system when it happens to be one of convenience (coincides with policy). Such is the case with Iraq in 2003 because Washington's goals, to a degree, overlap with a democratic Iraq. But if Iraqi democracy produces the world's next Hugo Chavez, policy makers will very quickly have little use for such a system.

Matthew Riemer has written for years about a myriad of topics, such as: philosophy, religion, psychology, culture, and politics. He studied Russian language and culture for five years and traveled in the former Soviet Union in 1990. In addition to his work with Liberal Slant, he is also the Director of Operations at: www.YellowTimes.org as well as being in the midst of a larger autobiographical/cultural work. Matthew lives in the United States.

Find more articles by Matthew Riemer in the Liberal Slant Archives

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Venezuela: USA's preference is dictatorship over democracy

<a href=www.vheadline.com>Venezuela's Electronic News Posted: Monday, May 05, 2003 By: Matthew Riemer

US YellowTimes.org columnist Matthew Riemer writes: The Bush administration's 2003 invasion of Iraq marks the fiftieth anniversary of US interventionism in the Middle East, which began with the CIA's overthrow of Iranian Prime Minister Dr. Mohammad Mossadegh in 1953. These two events, both noteworthy in their own right, form the perfect pair of bookends for a large shelf of Washington's Middle East exploits ... from the bombing of Libya in 1986 to the first Gulf War in 1991 to involvement in Lebanon in the early '80s.

The '53 coup is significant because it was the first successful overthrow of a foreign government by the CIA. Its success showed just how much influence Washington could have in Eurasia, especially in regions on the doorstep of the Soviet Union. In short, it was a remarkable projection of power.

The most recent military action in the Middle East ... "Operation Iraqi Freedom" as its been dubbed by the US ... represents a fundamental shift in how Washington chooses to achieve its policy goals ... now with increased unilateralism and nationalism. The policy of preemptive warfare has been both articulated and executed by the Bush administration in Iraq.

  • One of the most interesting observations regarding these two events though reveals a strange inverse relationship they seem to have, which possibly comments on broader policy intentions.

In both cases, the United States is carrying out "regime change."

And in both cases, policy makers are concerned with how the oil industry is going to be run (nationalization/privatization). However, in the former case, the CIA removed an appointed leader and replaced him with a dictator who would then rule for 26 (1953-1979) more years. In the latter case, the opposite occurred as the US removed a dictator who ruled for 26 (1976-2003) years and has replaced him with a US civil administration, which will presumably attempt to foster some kind of democratic institutions.

This illustrates that the chief US interest in both cases was resource security and regional hegemony/strategic positioning and not the freeing of people from the yoke of dictatorship. In Iran, the nationalization of the Anglo-Iranian Company by the Majlis threatened British and American oil interests by shutting foreign investors out of Iran's lucrative industry, which at the time, the BBC writes, "[was] the UK's largest single investment overseas." It also further distanced the US and weakened its influence in a crucial Cold War state. So in this situation, it's dictatorship over democracy.

In 2003, the United States could no longer let Saddam Hussein ... a man who threatened US interests and complicated Washington's plans just by his presence ... rule Iraq, which had become the epicenter of the world's most vital region and home to the second largest proven oil reserves. In this example, it's democracy over dictatorship.

When "democracy" (or, at least, non-dictatorship) happens to be Washington's goal (even rhetorically) it can make for a great sell, as was surely seen over the past several weeks. On the other hand, just because "dictatorship" can't be as readily sold to the public doesn't mean interventions that empower despotic regimes are off-limits.

Forays like the CIA's in Iran aren't only for days gone by. In fact, the current situation in Venezuela resembles Iran fifty years ago quite uncannily: upstart leader connected to nationalization of the oil industry from a country with regional strategic importance is overthrown by a plutocratic/military class in the interests of corporations and foreign capital. And even though President Hugo Chavez was able to return to power, the pattern of regime change aimed at governments who resist globalization and the infiltration of their countries by foreign capital continued.

So, in Venezuela, like Iran, it's dictatorship over democracy.

So democracy is only Washington's preferred political system when it happens to be one of convenience (coincides with policy). Such is the case with Iraq in 2003 because Washington's goals ... to a degree ... overlap with a democratic Iraq. But if Iraqi democracy produces the world's next Hugo Chavez, policy makers will very quickly have little use for such a system.

YellowTimes.org director Matthew Riemer has written for years about a myriad of topics, such as: philosophy, religion, psychology, culture, and politics. He studied Russian language and culture for five years and traveled in the former Soviet Union in 1990. He lives in the United States where you may email him at mriemer@YellowTimes.org

Rally slated for Sunday

<a href=www.zwire.com>Echoes Sentinel By VINCENT PATERNO , Editor 04/24/2003

LONG HILL TWP. - A rally to support American troops in the Middle East will be held from 1 to 2 p.m. Sunday, April 27 in front of the township library on Central Avenue, Stirling.

The event's organizer, Nila Chejlyk of Valley Road, Stirling, said it is being held for area residents "to show appreciation for our military" after it and coalition forces ousted Saddam Hussein and his supporters from power in Iraq and is now aiding the Iraqis' transition to a democratic society.

Several guest speakers are planned, she said. One of them will be Dawn Wolfe, the Board of Adjustment and Planning Board secretary, whose son, Justin M. Kuhns, is an Air Force staff sergeant serving in Iraq. Mayor Suzanne Dapkins will also speak, Chejlyk said.

"This is just our way to show our armed forces how much we love them," she said.

Frelinghuysen Invited

Rep. Rodney Frelinghuysen, R-11, has been invited, Chejlyk said, and patriotic music will be played. Boy Scout troops from the area have been invited to attend, she added.

About 1,200 small American flags are to be given out, she said, adding, "Hopefully there will be 1,200 attending." Any surplus may be held over and distributed at the township's Memorial Day parade Monday, May 26, she noted.

Chejlyk said James Angelo of American Legion Post 484 in Stirling is assisting with the rally. She added it has been promoted by Curtis Sliwa on his WABC radio program, and is also featured on several township Web sites, including the Rescue Squad.

Chejlyk, who said her parents were born in Ukraine, was herself born in Venezuela, where her parents emigrated after World War II. However, when she was nine months old the family relocated to the U.S.

General Lopez Hidalgo's report on US involvement in April coup released in tabloid snippets

<a href=www.vheadline.com>Venezuela's Electronic News Posted: Sunday, May 04, 2003 By: Patrick J. O'Donoghue

Las Ultimas Noticias editor Eleazar Diaz Rangel has released what seems to be snippets from General Melvin Lopez Hidalgo's report on US involvement in the April 11, 2002:

On April 8, 2002, when rumors were rife in the barracks and the conspiracy was afoot, US Embassy Naval Attache, Captain David H. Cazares approached a group of Venezuelan Army and Navy (Armada) officers and asked General Roberto Cardenas why he hadn't made contact with US ships off the coast and a submarine off La Guaira. 

"What were they waiting for?" 

General Gonzalez Cardenas said he didn't know what he was talking about and went off to speak to the Brazilian Military Attache. 

Cazares asked Navy Captain Moreno Leal if the person he was talking to was General Gonzalez , who served on the border ... "it's General Gonzalez alright but I don't know if he served on the border." He spoke to Gonzalez Cardenas again, asking why no contact was made with three ships and the submarine. Gonzalez Cardenas said he would find out. 

It is evident that Cazares had got the wrong Gonzalez ... he met the right one in the elevator and reminded him, "this will have an operational cost ... I await your answer."

On Friday April 12, US Embassy military attache, Colonel Donal F. McCarthy called the Venezuelan Air Force (FAV) Intelligence Office asking for authorization for an overflight of a Hercules C130 transporting a "diplomatic load" of 5 kilos of lithium battery, 5 kilos of compressed oxygen class 2.2, 56 kilos of 1.4 munitions, 30 kilos of flares, 40 kilos of demolition charges, and 2 kilos of detonator.

A General involved in the April conspiracy admitted that what took place on April 11 was a coup attempt. National Guard (GN)  General Alfonso Martinez told the Supreme Tribunal of Justice (TSJ)  but the majority of magistrates decided that there was a "vacuum of power" on April 11. The General's declaration found no echo in the media.

On Saturday, April 13 there was a US ship near La Orchila island from where a plane made several overflights without authorization from Venezuelan authorities but the movements were detected and recorded.

Las Ultimas Noticias published a photo of US Colonel James Rodgers driving his car in Fuerte Tiuna barracks during the coup d'etat ... the AFP agency reported that the Colonel had been there from Thursday, April 10 until Saturday, April 13 ob the 5th floor of the Army Command building.

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