WOT
the world is a safer place
Submitted by antarchi on May 14, 2011 - 03:07"The world is safer. It is a better place because of the death of Osama bin Laden," declared President Barack Obama, hours after U.S. forces killed the al-Qaida leader.
This is how we know it's safer...
[US] Metro officials are stepping up security measures after the announcement that Osama bin Laden has been killed by U.S. forces in Pakistan.
The National Naval Medical Center base in Bethesda is on a heightened level of security following the announcement Sunday evening that Osama bin Laden has been killed in a raid on his compound in Pakistan.
Robins Air Force Base is operating at a heightened security level in response to the death of Osama bin Laden.
FORT HOOD - As the nation reacts to news about Osama bin Laden's death, there are some fears of retaliation.
On Sunday, the president, along with the Defense Department, gave the order to raise the security level to "Bravo" on military posts across the country.
Some military branches have heightened their security level in Hawaii following Sunday’s announcement of Osama bin Laden’s death in Pakistan.
Israeli police have raised their security level in the country in the wake of the elimination of Osama Bin-Laden.
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obama's learnt the neo-cons were right
Submitted by antarchi on January 22, 2011 - 23:23He obviously has been through the fires of becoming President and having to make decisions and live with the consequences. And it's different than being a candidate. When he was candidate he was all for closing Gitmo. He was very critical of what we'd done on the counterterrorism area to protect America from further attack and so forth..
I think he's -- in terms of a lot of the terrorism policies -- the early talk, for example, about prosecuting people in the CIA who've been carrying out our policies -- all of that's fallen by the wayside. I think he's learned that what we did was far more appropriate than he ever gave us credit for while he was a candidate. So I think he's learned from experience...
I was concerned that the counterterrorism policies that we'd put in place after 9/11 that had kept the nation safe for over seven years were being sort of rapidly discarded. Or he was going to attempt to discard them. . . . As I say, I think he's found it necessary to be more sympathetic to the kinds of things we did.
Quoted in The vindication of Dick Cheney
neo-con obama
Submitted by antarchi on January 22, 2011 - 23:16the crux of Bush/Cheney radicalism -- the mindset and policies that caused much of the controversy - continues and has even been strengthened. Gen. Hayden put it best, as quoted by The Washington Times:
"You've got state secrets, targeted killings, indefinite detention, renditions, the opposition to extending the right of habeas corpus to prisoners at Bagram [in Afghanistan]," Mr. Hayden said, listing the continuities. "And although it is slightly different, Obama has been as aggressive as President Bush in defending prerogatives about who he has to inform in Congress for executive covert action."
Wikileaks: Hamas, Fatah, Gaza
Submitted by antarchi on January 3, 2011 - 02:20A few extracts. The 2nd and 3rd cables, from Jun 2007, seem to put in question a view I've heard from a number of sources - that the US / Israel supported Fatah (militarily) to take over in Gaza. Or maybe I'm not good enough at reading between the lines of diplomatic cables.
(all emphasis mine)
This one, from Apr 2007, makes clear that there was a strategy for 'regime change', but it was economic:
CODEL ACKERMAN'S MEETING WITH OPPOSITION LEADER BINYAMIN NETANYAHU:
Bring Down Hamas [Original heading in US cable]
----------------
¶5. (C) Congressman Ackerman asked Netanyahu for his views on Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. Netanyahu said Abbas was a "nice man who means well," but he added that Israel and the U.S. should focus on "bringing down Hamas" through an "economic squeeze." Netanyahu asserted that eight months ago, the Hamas government had been on the brink of collapse, but had become stronger because Israel became weaker as a result of the Lebanon war. Without elaborating, Netanyahu said it would be easier to weaken Hamas than to strengthen Abbas.
...
Netanyahu predicted that Palestinians would vote for Abbas if they believe that he can deliver the money. He suggested putting in place an "economic squeeze with an address," so that Hamas would receive the popular blame.
...
¶7. (C) Congressman Ackerman asked if Abbas would survive politically. Netanyahu said he was unsure, since politics were stressful, especially Palestinian politics. The policy, he added, should be to starve the NUG. If any money is given, it should go directly to Abbas. Netanyahu said it was not clear the GOI has a policy, there was a general climate of weakness.
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strongly committed to hypocrisy
Submitted by antarchi on October 10, 2010 - 23:23“The United States is strongly committed to the promotion of human rights around the world, including in the Islamic Republic of Iran,” the White House said in an accompanying news release. “As the President noted in his recent address to the United Nations General Assembly, human rights are a matter of moral and pragmatic necessity for the United States.”
... Yet, President Obama has taken no action against US officials who under the direction of George W. Bush, Dick Cheney and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld imprisoned without charge “war on terror” detainees at secret black sites and at Guantanamo Bay.
These prisoners also were subjected to beatings, solitary confinement and a denial of due process. They, too, were coerced into making false confessions under unbearable interrogations, which included torture, abuse, blackmail, and the threatening of family members.
President Obama has excused his failure to exact any accountability on complicit US officials by saying that he preferred “to look forward, not backwards.” It is apparently easier to look backwards in Iran and demand accountability than it is in Washington.
about 30% of drone victims are civilians
Submitted by antarchi on September 17, 2010 - 13:46[Between 2006 and October 2009], our analysis indicates, 82 U.S. drone attacks in Pakistan have killed between 750 and 1,000 people. Among them were about 20 leaders of al Qaeda, the Taliban, and allied groups, all of whom have been killed since January 2008.
It is not possible to differentiate precisely between militant and civilian casualties ... However, of those killed in drone attacks from 2006 through mid-October 2009, between 500 and 700 were described in reliable press reports as militants, or some 66 to 68 percent.
Based on our count of the estimated number of militants killed, the real total of civilian deaths since 2006 appears to be in the range of 250 to 320, or between 31 and 33 percent.
Obama, far from curtailing the drone program he inherited from President George W. Bush, has instead dramatically increased the number of U.S. Predator and Reaper drone strikes. There have been 43 strikes in Pakistan this year (two while Bush was still in office), compared to 34 in all of 2008.

