11 April 2019

War Crimes and National Security

CIA black site - Afghanistan

[Photo: CIA black site – Afghanistan]

By Robert C. Koehler
Source:  CommonWonders

Editor's Note
There is good reason for the United States to try to immunize itself from the International Criminal Court. Repeatedly, formally and informally, covertly and overtly, the United States has engaged in military and intervention activities which are well beyond the grey zone of international law. We are led to believe that this is all part of American “exceptionalism”, but the reality is that it is frequently a massaging of reality when U.S. actions are either normalized or explained away for the American public. One excellent example of this is the use of tear gas by the United States. It has been used regularly in the urban warfare of Iraq and Afghanistan. It is also regularly used for “crowd control” in the United States. However, tear gas is considered a chemical weapon under international law, and it is illegal to deploy it against civilians.

True atrocities are frequently lauded as technological advances, or as necessary to minimize loss of life. President Trump authorized the dropping the GBU-43/B, also known as the Mother of All Bombs (MOAB).

It is a 22,000 pound bomb that explodes before hitting the ground. It is basically a larger version of the BLU-82 (“Daisy Cutter”) bomb that had previously been dropped in both Afghanistan and Iraq. The Daisy Cutter is a 15,000 pound bomb described thusly:

“The bomb detonates three feet above the ground, spraying tiny droplets of fuel-based explosive into the air where they create a massive ‘air burst’, a huge explosion, marked by a mushroom cloud.

The blast is so powerful that it kills everything within a 600-metre radius. Anything close to the blast is incinerated, while people farther away die when the air is sucked from their lungs.”

These are not precision weapons by any stretch, but they fit well with what has become US military (and political) parlance as “shock and awe.”  These two ordinances are the largest non-nuclear munitions in the U.S. arsenal.

War crimes go far beyond these dramatic weapons, [including cluster bombs (which stupidly are the same color as the MREs supposedly dropped for the civilian population), “depleted” uranium munitions, and the illegal use of white phosphorus equipped – fragments of which burn not only through vehicles, but the human bodies they land on] to immunizing military personnel and contractors from prosecution in zones, and expropriation of resources and wealth. To get an idea of how convoluted and complex the various “agreements” of war, operational guidelines, and restructuring of national law, ownership, and resources can be, I encourage a quick read of The Iraq Agreement: the Devil is in the details.

Robert Koehler has good grounds to question our definition of “national security” and what we will allow to ensure it. The very concept has become so broad that it can cover any eventuality foreign or domestic. Of perhaps even greater concern is the evolution of “freedom”, which is accepted as as synonym for “democracy”  but frighteningly is equated with free market capitalism. For example, when George W. Bush claimed that we were “freeing” the Iraqi people, he was explicitly referring to privatizing their oil reserves. Any political concept as broad as these has little to do with either security or freedom, but is central to the evisceration of all the things we think we are and stand for.

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Category: Ideology, Militarism, Rights, Robert C. Koehler, Silencing & Repression, War and Conflict, Weapon Systems | Comments Off on War Crimes and National Security
3 July 2018

The Supreme Court Just Replaced One Injustice with Another

Fred Korematsu

[Photo: Fred Korematsu (VCU CNS)]

By Southern Poverty Law Center
Source:  SPLC Newsletter

Editor's Note
The internment of Japanese Americans during WWII remains a deep stain on the character of the United States. Fred Korematsu fought his way to the Supreme Court to get internment banned. He failed, but only because documents proving that the decision was based on race was buried, and “national security” was put forward as the overarching necessity for the internment order. Those buried documents finally came to light and the Korematsu decision was vacated in 1984. The recent SCOTUS decision is spitting in the face of Fred Korematsu (now deceased) and all Japanese Americans who were forced into internment camps. The conservative majority on the court decided to intentionally overlook all of Donald Trump’s bombastic statements regarding banning Muslims, as well as the various renditions of the original order as the Trump Administration reverse engineered their way into a reeking decision on the basis of – yes, “national security”.

The Court’s decision was patently political, but also a likely foreshadowing of what is to come. Trump, and the GOP, have made no secret of their desire to reset immigration and re-inject race into consideration under the veneer of basing immigration on “merit” on one hand, and “national security” on the other. In short, non-white immigrants are a “security threat”, and white immigrants are of higher merit and therefore acceptable. The Court has sent the signal that they will likely rubber stamp such actions. This decision, and Korematsu, may be even more pertinent if the decision to place entire families from South of the U.S. border into internment camps.

I have included two additions to the end of the SPLC Newsletter. One is a video of Rachel Maddow’s excellent discussion of the Korematsu case, and the other is the brilliant and heartfelt dissent of the Trump v Hawaii (Muslim ban) decision.

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Category: Ethnocentrism, Guest, Immigrants and Refugees, Islamophobia, Pull Right - Fascism, Racism, Rights, Social (In)Justice | Comments Off on The Supreme Court Just Replaced One Injustice with Another
4 February 2004

Environmental collapse – sooner not later

Politicians global warming Cordal

[Photo: “Politicians Discussing Global Warming” Sculpture by Isaac Cordal.]
By Rowan Wolf

There is an interesting article in the February 9, 2004 edition of Fortune Magazine – CLIMATE COLLAPSE – The Pentagon’s Weather Nightmare (UTJ Permalink) by David Stipp. The Pentagon is apparently taking “climate change” seriously even if the White House is not. The Pentagon called in Andrew Marshall, who has been the Defense Department’s “sage” for over thirty years, to look at the scenarios.

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