40 years of occupation (contd.)

Well, today is the 40th anniversary of the day the 1967 war started– the war that brought under sraeli military occupation vast swathes of Arab land. Some of that land, namely, the occupied Palestinian territories of the West Bank and Gaza, and the Syrian territory of Golan, remains today under Israeli occupation, and the residents of those territories have been ruled by a foreign military force for all these years…
Running any long-lasting military occupation is also a burden on the occupying country.
Today, the spokesperson for UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon made a fairly good statement about the anniversary:

    As the fortieth anniversary of the 1967 Arab-Israeli war reminds us, statehood for Palestinians, security for Israelis and peace in the region cannot be achieved by force. An end to the occupation and a political solution to the conflict is the only way forward — for Israelis, Palestinians, Syrians, Lebanese and the wider region. This will only be achieved through negotiations to bring about an end to the occupation, on the basis of the principle of land for peace, as envisaged in Security Council resolutions 242 (1967) and 338 (1973).

Meanwhile, in Palestine, Israeli tanks rolled into Gaza yesterday:

    Soldiers took over two buildings and military bulldozers ripped up roads during the incursion around the town of Rafah, about two kilometres (just over a mile) inside Palestinian territory, witnesses said.
    “Armoured and infantry forces are searching the area for terrorist infrastructure. Several Palestinians have been detained for questioning,” an army spokesman told AFP.
    …Israel has vowed no let-up in its operations against militants since it resumed air strikes against Gaza on May 16 following a sharp increase in rocket fire from the densely populated territory.
    The air raids have killed 16 civilians and 37 militants, mostly from Hamas, but have failed to completely halt the rockets.
    More than 285 have been fired into Israel since May 15, the army said, killing two civilians, wounding more than 20 and sending hundreds fleeing from the southern town of Sderot that has borne the brunt of the fire.

In Lebanon, the Palestinian refugee camp of Ain al-Helweh, in the south of the country, became transformed into the second major battleground between the Lebanese army and Islamic militants who had found it possible to burrow into the camps after the recognizable political organizations in the camps– Fateh, Hamas, the PLO– lost control of portions of them.
Violence sows violence. Rule by military occupation is an oppressive form of administrative and structural violence and must be brought to a speedy end, wherever it is found. Four-plus years in Iraq… 40 years in Palestine… It is more than enough!
It is time for Mr. Ban Ki-moon to do something bold, visionary, and serious about bringing all the relevant parties to an authoritative Middle East peace conference at which the speedy and complete end of both these military occupations can be negotiated.
The inescapable fact of the deep political linkage between the situations in Iraq and Palestine was clearly recognized by the authors of the Iraq Study Group (Baker-Hamilton) report. They urged the speedy re-activation of Israeli-Palestinian diplomacy as an essential aid to de-escalating the tensions in Iraq. Since the ISG report came out last December, Pres. Bush has taken several actions that indicate he is “backing into” (or at least, towards) implementing several of its recommendations– though he reviled it at the time. But the one recommendation he truly does not seem to be heading toward at all is the one regarding the need for speedy and effective Palestinian-Israeli diplomacy…
In May, instead of welcoming and seeking to build on the Saudis’ achievement in wining a ‘National Unity Government’ agreement between the two major Palestinian organizations, the Bushites started working very actively and belligerently behind the scenes to try to torpedo the agreement.
It is tragic, too, that though the tide of opinion in the US Congress has finally started to turn toward a speedy and complete US withdrawal from Iraq, and therefore the ending of the US’s occupation of the country, there has been no similar groundswell of political forces in favor of ending Israel’s parallel occupation of Palestine…
Rule by foreign military occupation: An extremely un-democratic and anti-humanitarian form of rule, wherever it is found. End it.

Airpower and the surge

Good for AP’s Charles Hanley, who has a piece on the wire today noting that US warplanes have been dropping bombs on Iraq at twice the rate of a year ago.

He writes,

    In the first 4 1/2 months of 2007, American aircraft dropped 237 bombs and missiles in support of ground forces in Iraq, already surpassing the 229 expended in all of 2006, according to U.S. Air Force figures obtained by The Associated Press.
    …At the same time, the number of civilian Iraqi casualties from U.S. airstrikes appears to have risen sharply, according to Iraq Body Count, a London-based, anti-war research group that maintains a database compiling news media reports on Iraqi war deaths.
    The rate of such reported civilian deaths appeared to climb steadily through 2006, the group reports, averaging just a few a month in early 2006, hitting some 40 a month by year’s end, and averaging more than 50 a month so far this year.

This increasing use of US airpower might “feel good” to some of the fliers involved. But it is probably having a very negative effect on the progress of the counter-insurgency campaign being waged by US (and compliant Iraqi) ground forces in the country in the context of the continuing “surge”. It is an essential mantra of COIN ops that “the most important battle-space is in the mind of the host country nationals.”
It is a simple but continuing truth of human psychology that most people don’t like to be bombed, and tend not to be well disposed to those who bomb them.
Hanley gives some snippets from an interview with Col. Joe Guastella, the U.S. Air Force’s operations chief for the region. He quotes Guastella as saying that the increase in Iraq-focused air ops “has a lot to do with increased pressure on the enemy by [the Multinational Corps-Iraq]– combined with more carriers.”
It seems a lot like what he’s saying there is, “We bomb more because the additional aircraft carrier battle group here in the Gulf allows us to do that.” What sad and mindless militarism.
Hanley does not give us any account of Guastella being questioned closely by the reporters who interviewed him there at the regional US air headquarters as to how, precisely, increased use of aerial bombardments was helping to win over the hearts and minds of Iraqis. He does give a few excerpts from the USAF’s daily briefing, which are numbing in their opacity and bellicosity.

Changes ahead at the CSM

This note in today’s Christian Science Monitor informs the world of something that I learned of only on Sunday, namely that at the end of June all five other regular CSM columnists and I are to be given the axe.
It has all been (and felt) rather sudden, especially since for some months I’d been talking to Josh Burek, my editor there, about doing more columns for them than hitherto. Or more precisely, about reverting to my original arrangement with them, which was for two columns per month.
So the column I write for the CSM next week will be the last in a series dating back 17 years. Maybe it’s a good time for a break. Time to look at many other options. I can’t help feeling regretful, though, since the Monitor has been a good paper to work with and for. Back in the 1970s, veteran Monitor foreign-news journos Geoffrey Godsell and Joe Harsch taught me a tremendous amount about both the news business and the value of investing time trying to seek out “the story behind the story”, or the “bigger picture” behind the epiphenomena that make it to the news pages of most other, more competition-driven, major news media.
In our conversation Sunday, Josh said he’d continue to welcome my contributions to the paper’s Opinion pages. Good. I’m looking at a number of other options, as well.
This change has come at a slightly complex time for me. Right now I’m in the Rocky Mountains, having driven 1,660 miles here from Virginia over the past four days along with my daughter Lorna, who’s on her way to take up a job in Los Angeles. Thursday I’m flying back to DC to complete on the purchase of a small apartment that Bill and I will use as a pied-a-terre when we’re in the nation’s capital. I am planning to spend a lot more time in DC over the months ahead. It feels like a good time to do this.
Anyway, that road-trip explains the sparseness of my recent posting here. I’ll resume my normal rhythm as soon as I can.

More on the Iraq- South Korea analogy

Ever since Presidential spokesman Tony Snow said on Wednesday that the administration is now aiming for a US troop presence in Iraq similar to the one in South Korea, there has been a flood of commentary, most of it highly criticial.
I wrote merely that it seemed “hilarious”, because so inappropriate. But as he so often does, Dan Froomkin caught the essence of the matter when he wrote Thursday, “the analogy is troubling. And flawed. And dangerous. And telling.” In that column he provides his own astute analysis of why those adjectives are apt, plus a broad roundup of other people’s comments on the matter.
I just want to add a couple of points:
(1) The whole idea that the US might send military forces sailing to distant places around the world, with guns, cruise missiles, and nuclear-tipped ballistic missiles ready to deploy almost anywhere at a few days notice, is something that may have come to seem “natural” to many US citizens during the Cold War, and evidently still seemed okay to many of them in the presidential election of 2004. Today, it seems– and in my view, rightly– more and more like an anomaly on the world scene, and one that needs to be reviewed and corrected.
Who asked the US to act as the world’s policeman, anyway? Back in the emerging-Cold War context of the early 1950s, the US was able to get some South Koreans to ask them to deploy there. But in the global security (and political) climate that we have today, why would anyone think a continuing US military presence would be “natural” at all?
(2) The notion that the US might have a “South Korea-style” continued military presence truly is, as Froomkin noted, an extremely dangerous one. However, if the US had a presence in Iraq today that was exactly like its presence today in South Korea, matters would be a lot better for the Iraqis than they are at present.
Primarily, you wouldn’t have extremely heavily armed US forces blundering around most of the country’s cities and highways causing tensions and destruction of lives and propoerty just about wherever they go by virtue of both their presence there and their actions there. And you wouldn’t have the US holding Iraq’s central government structure and its decisionmaking as virtual “captives” within a fortress-like, heavily (US-)guarded compound in the center of Baghdad…
Instead, you’d have the US forces corralled in a small number of bases, and also as “tripwires” along a border with… well, with which of Iraq’s neighbors in particular would that be? And all of that presence would be clearly regulated by a Status of Forces Agreement concluded with, as is currently the case in South Korea, a generally well accepted and democratically accountable government.
(I note that getting to this position in South Korea has not, however, been an easy or always pleasant process. US-protected “South” Korea was governed by military rulers for many years. Its US-constituted intelligence body, the KCIA, was a fiercer younger brother of Washington’s CIA… Etc., etc. So there is a huge remaining question of how the Bushites could even foresee the process of transitioning the US presence in Iraq to a “South Korea style” of presence.)
But I think it’s still important to note that the current situation in SK is so much better than than the current situation in Iraq. So if the Bushites see an SK-style presence as their goal, then in some ways that can be seen as a helpful opening position in any negotiation they have over the future shape of the US troop presence in Iraq.
Great, if they want, as a first stage, to withdraw all their troops to barracks rather than have them careening around the country continuing to try to bend Iraq’s political system to their will!
But if there really are serious negotiations over Iraq’s future– conducted both by the various Iraqi parties and by the US and other relevant international actors– then there is no way that a permanent or near-permanent presence of US-commanded troops in the country would be the outcome of such negotiations.
… Anyway, as part of the reconsideration of the US’s posture in the world that surely must occur as part of the country’s and the world’s post-Iraq evaluations and deliberations, the idea that the US should anyway continue to behave as the world’s policeman– in Iraq, South Korea, or elsewhere– should surely come under close scrutiny.

Announcing: The Global Network on Nonviolence!

Attentive JWN readers might recall that last fall I wrote about having taken part in an amazing, four-day course/conference on Leadership for Nonviolence at the UN University’s International Leadership Institute in Amman… After the course, a high proportion of the participants, both “faculty” and “students”, felt so energized by our days together there that they kept in good touch (via email and a specially created Google Group). We constituted a Steering Committee to plan the establishment of a more robust follow-up organization; and the Committee held a short meeting in Amman in late February…
And today, dear readers, I am happy to announce that the website of the Global Network for Nonviolence has gone public; and along with it, GNN announces its birth to the world!
(Small drum-roll there. But mainly, a big bouquet of appreciation to our webmasters Michael Simmons and Linda Carranza, and to the site designer, Martin Kelley.)
If you go to the present homepage, you can learn a little about the incredible, multinational group that is leading the GNN. It tells us that:

    The Steering Committee members are:
    * Neven Bondokji (Jordan) and Hagit Tarnari (Israel), co-chairs
    * Sagar Gurung (Nepal), secretary
    * Michael Simmons (USA), webmaster
    * David Foncho (Cameroon) and Zoughbi Zoughbi (Palestine), members
    This group then co-opted onto the Committee Jairam Reddy (South Africa) to serve as treasurer and Helena Cobban (USA and Britain) as fundraising director. Dr. Reddy’s position as Director of UNU-ILI is a symbol of our continuing good relationship with UNU-ILI. Group member Linda Carranza also agreed to act as GNN’s web management advisor.

Actually, if you play the great little video that’s there on the present home-page– which was planned and shot by Hagit Tarnari at the end of our October conference– you can most likely pick out all the Steering Committee members except, perhaps Zoughbi Zoughbi and Jairam Reddy.
(Memo to self: Talk to webmasters Michael and Linda about getting the SC members’ bios up as as clickable links onto the site… )
There are so many aspects of GNN that I find really inspiring. One is the talented, committed, and caring group of people involved. Another is the truly multi-cultural flavor of what we’re trying to do– check out the five different language-versions we’ve already produced, of the Mission Statement we adopted in February… with hopefully more to come!
Another is the fact that nonviolence work as such is something that everyone can (and should) do in their own communities, at all different levels, and in their own best-considered way… Speaking for myself, I recall that back in the early 1990s I worked on an Arab-Israeli citizens’ peacebuilding project in the context of a notably different kind of organization, a US-based NGO that focused on “conflict resolution” as such. But I found there were several aspects of that work that troubled me. Firstly, there was the iron control that the US leaders of the organization exercized over the project. And secondly, the way in which, for many Israeli participants, it seemed that getting Arab state nationals and Palestinians to sit down and talk with them was the main (or only) goal they sought– and indeed, for some of them, it seemed that every additional Arab they met was a personal “trophy” for them… Whereas for the Palestinian and other Arab participants, there were issues of very burning concern that they needed to talk to the Israelis about. But many of the Israeli participants refused even to put these issues onto the agenda, seeing the simple fact of the meetings having occurred as being enough to meet their goals. And the US leaders of the project simply indulged that bullheadedness.
And so, that organization’s meetings went on and on, without making much discernible headway at all, but consuming huge amounts of donors’ very well-intentioned funds. (In effect, the meetings merely mirrored what was happening in the “official” peace process during those years.)
With GNN, by contrast, it involves solid principles of universal applicability, –see our Mission Statement!– and and a truly global operating context. And nonviolence work is something people do where they are— it doesn’t depend, for its raison d’etre and future funding, on X number of Israelis being able to get Y number of Palestinians into a room and saying “Look! We’ve had a meeting!” In the GNN’s case, it involves people who are already nonviolence activists in their own countries, and because of the location of our parent institution, the UNU-ILI, these people include people from Israel, Palestine, and a number of Arab countries, along with a broad array of non-Middle eastern countries, who all come together to brainstorm on common challenges, and exchange ideas on what might be good ways to meet them…
And here is the final reason why I find GNN to be so inspiring: This violence-wracked world of ours needs a robust, global nonviolence movement more than ever before– and right now, in many countries of the world, there is a new awareness that the paths of violence that have been taken until now have not brought people the security and wellbeing that they (we) all so desperately need.
The time feels so right for this.
I believe that– especially after the tragic failure of the US’s military adventure in Iraq, of Israel’s military action of last summer in Lebanon, and of so many other military campaigns around the world in recent years– the citizens of many of the world’s countries are definitely open to seeking another, less violent path.
Many people have already been doing great work in the field of nonviolent organizing, for many long decades already, I know. (We list some them on our Links page there, and will be putting more links up soon.) Over the months ahead, the GNN Steering Committee is certainly planning to open up the network’s membership to a much broader group than just the 55 or so people who took part in last October’s conference.
Oops, did I mention that that the new website is still very much a work in progress? I see that the “Contact Us” and “Donate” buttons still don’t have any content. But they will, they will… Our webmasters Michael and Linda, who live in Hungary, are doing some nonviolence trainings in Serbia today and for the next few days. But I think on Monday or so they’ll be able to do the next update of the site.
In the interim, though, I strongly urge you to contribute whatever funds you can to support this great new effort. (Okay, it’s my job on the Steering Committee to be fundraising director… Help me out here, folks, please!) You can contact me to find out how– or with any further questions you have about GNN.
Finally, I should note that one of the first networked actions that many GNN people are getting involved in is activities that impart a specifically nonviolence-focused message to the events being held throughout next week to mark the 40th anniversary of Israel’s occupation of the West Bank, Gaza, and Golan. See the June 5th section of the website for info about and links to some such activities.
(For my part, I have made a big sign that says “Occupation = Violence: End it!” that I intend to use in both an Israeli-Palestinian and a US-Iraq context.)
Anyway, please do go and spend a bit of time exploring GNN’s site. And since you can’t send comments there yet, you might as well put them here… and I promise I’ll pass them on.

Studying peace and reconciliation in Coventry

Are you or anyone you know interested in doing some post-graduate work in Peace Studies? I got an email earlier this week from Andrew Rigby, the Director of the Centre for Peace and Reconciliation Studies at Coventry University in the UK, whom I visited back in March… He said there is still (just!) time for people to apply to this year’s intake for their Postgraduate Certificate in Conflict Resolution Skills.
That page on their website says:

    Participants enjoy a lively two-week period of residence at Coventry University, from 2 to 14 September 2007, and follow up with six months of online, self-directed learning.

Andrew told me they do have some scholarship funding available, especially for overseas students. You can get information about that through the link at the bottom of this page on their site.
In addition, it’s my understanding that the credits you earn through that PG Certificate course can be counted towards what you’d need for an MA course, or perhaps even a Ph.D. course, at their center. Just explore some more around their website to find out about that– and also, about the fabulous, extremely multi-cultural community of learners they have there at the Center.
When I was at Coventry in March, I really enjoyed the discussions I had with Andrew and his colleagues and MA students. Nearly all the students were non-UK nationals. They brought a wealth of pertinent life-experience into the classroom and engaged deeply and very intelligently with the topics we were discussing.
Coventry University is right next door to Coventry Cathedral, which was badly damaged when the Luftwaffe bombed the city in 1940. Ever since then, Coventry Cathedral, the city– and more recently, the city’s university– have all seen the pursuit of post-conflict reconciliation as a very important task.
… Then in April, as alert JWN readers will recall, I had a grand couple of days visiting Bradford University’s Department of Peace and Conflict Studies, which is noticeably larger than Coventry’s, and also takes a slightly different slice of the field of peace studies. (‘Peace and conflict’, rather than ‘peace and reconciliation.’ Both important slices.)
I see that Bradford’s program– but not, alas, Coventry’s– is on this fairly helpful list of post-graduate peace-studies programs that Eastern Mennonite University has published on the website of their “Center for Justice and Peacebuilding.”
Anyway, as I said– if you or anyone you know is interested in doing some post-graduate peace studies, Coventry’s PG Certificate is a great program. (And there are a lot of other great programs out there, too.)

Iraq: 5 British ‘hired guns’ abducted

Five British ‘security contractors’ were abducted by persons unknown in Baghdad today. This comes after the May 12 incident in Mahmoudiyah in which three US soldiers were abducted. (The body of one member of this latter group was found later.)
The apparent increase in the use of abductions of members of western fighting formations in Iraq is significant. For the anti-western insurgents, killing members of the occupying forces (and their ‘privately’ organized sidekicks) is much simpler. To do an abduction you need a larger ambushing/assault force, a get-away plan, and a relatively extensive safe area to retreat to.
The pro-western forces in Iraq must be losing control of significant swathes of land, if these assailants can undertake these abductions and then simply melt away into the landscape.
Plus, these assailants either had access to huge quantities of Iraqi police materiel, or themselves included a large number of police officers.
That Reuters report notes these details about today’s abductions, which took place in an Iraqi Finance Ministry building not far from Sadr City:

    A ministry official who witnessed the kidnapping said it took place as several computer experts gave a lecture on organizing electronic contracts.
    The gunmen entered the room led by a man wearing a police major’s uniform, the official said.
    The gunmen shouted, “Where are the foreigners, where are the foreigners?” she said.
    Police said gunmen in a large convoy of vehicles, typically used by police, had sealed off streets round the building.
    It was the first reported kidnapping of foreigners since the Baghdad security plan began in mid-February and the first time Westerners had been taken from inside a government building.

Ten US soldiers were killed in Iraq today, bringing the month’s total so far to 114.
It is urgently time for the UN to convene an authoritative international peace conference at which all parties to the bloodshed in Iraq will negotiate the speedy, orderly, and complete withdrawal of all foreign fighting units from the country and the restoration of its true sovereignty.
In addition, surely all governments should reach agreement on making it illegal for their nationals to travel around the world as ‘guns for hire.’

Read Faiza’s latest post– read it NOW

Faiza al-Arji is a compassionate, very smart and percipient Iraqi engineer (and the mother of three talented, hard-working young adults.)
Faiza has been in Amman for around a year now, working hard to get desperately needed water-treatment systems back to the distressed communities in her homeland.
Every well-off westerner who buys silly little plastic bottles of water for no reason should stop immediately and donate all the money saved to Faiza’s project.
Anyway, today we finally have the English translation of the long post that faiza put onto her blog in Arabic last week.
She writes about the many contacts she has with doctors and others coming out of Iraq:

    All stories are entangled, sometimes contradicting, but they tell about the conditions in the sad Iraq today, the conditions of the sad Iraqi people, as if they are tossing in fire, escaping one fire to another… from the fire of daily killings, kidnapping and panic, to the fire of expatriation in neighboring countries; indescribable suffering and humiliation, without a legal residency permit, without the right of acquiring a job, without the right to educate their children, while free medical treatment is provided to an extent by some organizations, but very limited…
    The reality conditions of the Iraqis say that the entire world abandoned them, and even those who want to help them are helpless, tied handed, and scared…
    That is what I have seen from the reality of the organizations working to help Iraq; it is not a matter of administrational corruption or bad programs, but the organizations, even the big ones, are helpless and tied handed, afraid of Bush and his administration, because then he would accuse them of supporting terrorism, if they helped the miserable, sad Iraqi people…
    The world is living a dangerous phase of its history, as evil people control the decision-making in the major countries, frightening all who try to do good, accusing them of serious charges to destroy their reputations and future…
    But there are still some brave men and women who do not care or fear… they extend the humanitarian-aid hand to Iraq and the Iraqis, individually or through non-governmental organizations. We pray to God to bless them, support them, stabilize them, and give them the strength to do good, amen.

She writes about the terrible daily living conditions for the million or so Iraqi refugees in Jordan.
She writes:

    Where is the responsibility of the Iraqi government?
    Where is the responsibility of the American government?
    Where is the responsibility of the United Nations?
    These three should bear the responsibility of what happened to Iraq, excluding others…
    These three laid down the legitimacy of this war, and are still evading the responsibility of what human catastrophes befell Iraq… they are still hiding what is truly happening in Iraq, their declarations always lying, saying that all things in Iraq are moving in the healthy direction, that issues are moving towards the better…
    I think that the first step to solve the problems of the sad, wounded Iraq is to admit, by those three that the situation is catastrophic, and to present humanitarian aid to the Iraqis inside who were displaced from their homes and still are, to those who were wounded or crippled because of the violence and bombings, to those who lost the head of their family and their daily bread source. Those three should take responsibility for all that is happening to the Iraqis, to compensate the devastated families with medical and nutriment aid, to solve the problems of the displaced by getting them back to their homes, by providing protection to their residential areas by a national, clean Iraqi Army, one distinguished with high professionalism, not infiltrated by sectarian gangs and militias who would kill their citizens….
    But the painful reality is that the Iraqi government lives isolated from the sufferings of its people, its men broadcast speeches that do not belong to reality, but whoever hears them believes that Iraq is sinking into happiness and welfare; there are just a few terrorists from Al-Qai’ida, whom we will eliminate, then live happily ever after…
    It is a catastrophe when a lying, thieving administrator becomes the head responsible in a small-scale company… then what is the size of the catastrophe in a country like Iraq, which became under the mercy of officials most of whom are liars and thieves?
    Oh, poor Iraq…

She writes:

    Now , Iraqis are divided into supporters of the occupation, and rejecters of it…
    According to my assessments and observations since the beginning of the war until now, the supporters are a minority of beneficiaries who work with the present government or with the occupation; companies and contractors, and those are completely isolated, fearing to mingle with the Iraqis in fear for their lives inside Iraq, but those of them who are here in Amman declare their opinions openly without fear, and of course they drive the latest models of cars, they and their sons and daughters, they own the most luxurious palaces in Amman, and frequent the fanciest restaurants and nightclubs…
    Those do not suffer; no problems of residency, children education, medical treatment, or any financial crisis. Those say that Iraq is well and going in the right direction, they love Bush and Blair, seeing them as their model in life…
    I met a number of those people, finding them like parrots who repeat the same talk, and there isn’t an atom of pity or mercy in their hearts towards the poor Iraqis, because for them, life is just a chance, and their chance is now, while the rest are weak fools who do not know how to manage their lives, and so deserve what befalls them…
    It seems that the multitude of money blinds the hearts and the eyes…
    I don’t know, but I feel disgust and aversion towards them, I feel they are like insects that suck the blood of humans, living for themselves without thinking of others…
    Those people think of nothing but money; how to earn it, how to enlarge their bank balance, not caring whether it was in the right way or the wrong, legitimately or illegitimately, for them; these are chances not be missed, and the people who live by the principals, according to them, are just naïve people, living in a non-realistic world…
    The other faction of the Iraqis are the poor majority, those who suffered all the disasters of Iraq; they suffered the past wars, they suffered from the blockade, and from this last war. They lost the taste of settlement and comfort, and are still waiting for conditions to improve in Iraq. These people love Iraq, and find no meaning to life without it, or away from it…
    These people’s lives are threatened every day in a random way since the beginning of the war till now, they either lost a family member, or were exposed to kidnapping, threats, displacement, or were forced to travel and leave their houses…
    These are the victims whose voices no one hears, and whose complains no one heeds…
    And they are the majority of the Iraqi people…
    These people reject the idea of Sunnie-Shia’at, because they are a mixture of this and that…
    But those who approved of the war, who walked in the procession of Bush and his administration, agree to the marketing of the Sunnie-Shia’at story, for political purposes and financial gains, and these can be achieved if the sectarian federalism was applied, a federalism that will fulfill their interests, they work in the government, they have their parties, and their parties have sectarian militias that ravage corruption in Iraq, whose victims are the poor Sunnie – Shia’at Iraqi people; they kill, kidnap, and bomb, to force the Iraqi people to accept the idea of dividing Iraq, and thus they drive Bush’s project in the new Iraq…

She has some horrendous narratives that arriving Iraqi doctors have told her, about violence in the heart of the hospitals…
She writes,

    Violence feeds more violence…
    Iraq needs diplomacy in dealing with events, the national reconciliation needs diplomacy, hearing the other party’s opinion, while stubbornness and stupidity are reasons to destroy Iraq and rip it apart…
    And the leader of this stubbornness and stupidity is the American administration and its stupid policy in Iraq, since 2003 until now…
    The Iraqis need someone to unify them and collect their hearts, to bring them near each other to discuss common points… the Iraqis need someone to spread the culture of forgiveness among them, to forget the past…
    But this evil American administration divided the Iraqis and provoked them against each other, utilizing the mistakes of the past in the worst possible way…
    And what did it reap but ruin and destruction upon it, and upon these poor Iraqi people…
    This is the reality of the situation, but Bush eludes, denies, and tricks himself and his people…
    Iraq now is moving in the wrong direction, And this daily violence is the biggest evidence….

She writes:

    Then I met the wife of one of our relatives, whom Saddam deported from Iraq, because he was a Shia’at of Iranian origins, during the war between Iraq and Iran…
    She said- the Intelligence took over the house, my children and I were subjected to hardships, my husbands suffered expatriation as he went to Syria. He was a rich merchant in Iraq, then lived poorly in poverty and died in Syria… she said the Iraqi Intelligence kept chasing her and demanding that she cooperates with them, she lived through tough and frightful days…
    Of course her story made me sad, and I asked her: but are you satisfied with what is happening in Iraq now?
    She said: of course not; when the American tanks entered into southern Iraq where I used to live, I told the people- do not be happy, for Iraq will be destroyed…
    I felt how big is her suffering and sorrow; her husband died away from her, while she was a beautiful young lady, her children deprived of their father, because of Saddam’s regime’s injustice…
    But what can the solution be?
    Shall we amend Saddam’s injustice by shedding the blood of more Iraqis?
    Is throwing off the regime by the intervention of a foreign country the solution?
    Of course the regime in Iraq should have been changed, but not by this dumb foolish way…
    The Iraqis should have been left alone until the appropriate time comes along, to change the leadership they didn’t want; changing from the inside, by the people’s will would have been a mature, balanced and intelligent step, without outside intervention, bloodshed, or ignorant dumb policies that do not comprehend the nature of the Iraqi society and its history, and do not know how to solve its problems in a just way without instigation, spite, and revenge….
    The mistakes of the American policy in Iraq are deadly and cannot be justified… hundreds of thousands of Iraqis died for four years, there is an on-going violence, and not much hope on the horizon…
    Hope is diminishing day after day…
    If Bush does not change his policy in Iraq, withdraw his armies, and leave the occasion to the sincere Iraqi nationalists to take over the decision-making in Iraq, then the daily series of catastrophes and bleeding will keep on… And these sins will continue to be committed everyday in Iraq against a poor nation. Bush is responsible for these crimes in the first place, then every villain, thieve or criminal who encourages him to remain there….
    And at the end, as the Iraqis always say: Nothing goes right but what is right…
    Meaning- Iraq will be liberated, and build its future…
    But when?
    Who can guess for how many years we shall wait?
    Five? Ten? Twenty?
    May God help Iraq, and the Iraqis.

Amen. May God help the Iraqis– but may She/He also help us antiwar Americans to bring our country to its senses, to bring our troops home in an orderly way that is also compassionate to the Iraqis– and to bring a new era of truthfulness, accountability, and compassion into our own nation’s political life.
Thank you, Faiza, for the vivid directness and thoughtfulness of your writing.

Cindy Sheehan’s farewell

The inspiring, committed, and very effective peace activist Cindy Sheehan posted an agonizingly pained ‘farewell’ to public life on her Daily Kos website yesterday.
It is worded as a sharp reproach to the Democratic Party:

    I was the darling of the so-called left as long as I limited my protests to George Bush and the Republican Party. Of course, I was slandered and libeled by the right as a “tool” of the Democratic Party. This label was to marginalize me and my message. How could a woman have an original thought, or be working outside of our “two-party” system?
    However, when I started to hold the Democratic Party to the same standards that I held the Republican Party, support for my cause started to erode and the “left” started labeling me with the same slurs that the right used. I guess no one paid attention to me when I said that the issue of peace and people dying for no reason is not a matter of “right or left”, but “right and wrong.”

She said that she had reached her present decision to leave public life in the US, and her conclusions about the Democratic Party and the state of public life here in general, after meditating on some of these issues “for about a year now.”
Yesterday was “Memorial Day” here in the US– that is, a day when citizens are urged to remember all those who have died in war. Cindy Sheehan’s son Casey was killed in Iraq in April 2004, an event that catapulted his mother into three years of extremely energetic (and personally draining) antiwar activism.
I can imagine that all the observances and media attention that are given to Memorial Day must make it a hard time for all those Americans bereaved by the present wars. The more so since the essential pointlessness– indeed, the directly counter-productive nature– of these wars, and most especially the one in Iraq, are increasingly plain for all to see.
Cindy Sheehan wrote in yesterday’sblog post:

    The most devastating conclusion that I reached this morning, however, was that Casey did indeed die for nothing. His precious lifeblood drained out in a country far away from his family who loves him, killed by his own country which is beholden to and run by a war machine that even controls what we think. I have tried every [day] since he died to make his sacrifice meaningful. Casey died for a country which cares more about who will be the next American Idol than how many people will be killed in the next few months while Democrats and Republicans play politics with human lives. It is so painful to me to know that I bought into this system for so many years and Casey paid the price for that allegiance. I failed my boy and that hurts the most.
    I have also tried to work within a peace movement that often puts personal egos above peace and human life. This group won’t work with that group; he won’t attend an event if she is going to be there; and why does Cindy Sheehan get all the attention anyway? It is hard to work for peace when the very movement that is named after it has so many divisions.

Cindy first came to my attention when she left a comment on this JWN post, back in January 2005. Since then, I have followed her activism with huge admiration. Then in May last year, she came with Ann Wright and a couple of others to speak here in Charlottesville, and I finally got to meet her. At the time, I wrote about Cindy and Ann: “These two women are national treasures! We have to look after them!”
I guess no-one looked after Cindy well enough for her to keep her energies up. And given the barrage of extremely hateful hostility to which she has been exposed since she first spoke out, it is not surprising at all that currently she feels the need, as she wrote, to “go home”:

    I am going to go home and be a mother to my surviving children and try to regain some of what I have lost. I will try to maintain and nurture some very positive relationships that I have found in the journey that I was forced into when Casey died and try to repair some of the ones that have fallen apart since I began this single-minded crusade to try and change a paradigm that is now, I am afraid, carved in immovable, unbendable and rigidly mendacious marble.

Cindy has long been explicit in saying that one of the things she was trying to do with her activism was to invest the death of her son in combat in Iraq with some “meaning.”
For my part, I see no reason for her to conclude that, in any way, she “failed” Casey, as she wrote. As the parent of three young(-ish) adults, I would say that the main thing I tried to do in raising them was to nurture them so their own God-given gifts and personalities could emerge and flourish. I made them physically in my body for nine months, and I did a lot to feed, shelter, and teach them for a further 18 years or so. But they are not “my” creations; they are their own people.
As a young adult, Casey Sheehan made his own decisions. Maybe his mom had encouraged him to join the military, or maybe not. I don’t know. But Cindy, you should not hold yourself responsible in any way either for him having gotten killed in Iraq… Or, for the fact that all of us in the antiwar movement have– thus far!– failed to bring an end to this terrible war.
George W. Bush and those of his advisors who persuaded him to invade Iraq are the ones responsible for Casey’s death. Period.
And regarding the failure of the antiwar movement– yet– to have fully succeeded, I would say two things:

    (1) We may not have “won” yet, but we have already started to make a huge difference. I see this every time I go down to my weekly local peace demonstration here in central Virginia and hear the support we get there, compared with the very low support– and the much more frequent expressions of hostility– that we got back in late 2003 or early 2004.
    Yes, the “progress” we make sometimes seems agonizingly slow– especially when we keep in mind that for every day the war drags on, more US soldiers and hundreds more Iraqis will have to die… But we’re getting there. Even in spite of the self-absorption of the “opposition” politicians in this country and the other dysfunctionalities of the political system here– still, we are making progress. S – l – o – w though it often feels…
    (2) I have found, in child-raising and other areas of human endeavor, that the Buddhist discipline of non-attachment to the fruit of one’s labors has been incredibly helpful and empowering. You do the very best you can in any project– but the outcome of those labors really is not in your hands. It is in the hands of God, you might say. (But most Buddhists probably wouldn’t.)

So Cindy, go spend time with your surviving kids, absolutely. Marvel in their uniqueness. Admire their God-given gifts. Be there for them as much as you all need and are able. I’m pretty certain it won’t make your grief at Casey’s killing go away. Probably nothing can do that. But I really do urge you to find a hundred ways to nurture your self… Because I still think– no, I know— you are a national treasure.
Does anyone need further proof of this? Just go to some of the 900-plus the comments at the end of Cindy’s post there, and read some of what her work has meant to people all around this big old country of ours.
Walk in the Light, Cindy Sheehan.
Might you one day walk back into the arena of public activism? Who knows. But the main thing is to keep your special Light of Cindy-ness alive and glowing– whether for a small circle of family and friends, or for the whole world. Anyway, we all are one.

US and Iran: A welcome diplomatic opening

The US and Iranian ambassadors in Baghdad met for four hours earlier today, hosted by Iraqi PM Nuri al-Maliki in his office in the Baghdad Green Zone.
This was the highest-level bilateral (trilateral) meeting between officials of Iran and the US since Washington broke diplomatic ties with Teheran in 1980. The length of today’s meeting was a welcome indicator that some serious– if still necessarily preliminary– diplomatic business got done.
In that report linked to above, Reuters’ Ross Colvin wrote that both sides afterwards described the meeting as “positive.”
He wrote that the Iranian ambassador, Hassan Kazemi-Qomi, called the meeting “a first step in negotiations between these two sides” and said Tehran would seriously consider an Iraqi invitation for further discussions.
Colvin wrote that K-Q’s American counterpart, Ryan Crocker,

    said he had been less interested in arranging further meetings than laying out Washington’s case that Shi’ite Iran is arming, funding and training Shi’ite militias in Iraq, a charge Iran denies.

Colvin wrote that Kazemi-Qomi said Iran

    saw positive steps in the talks.
    “Some problems have been raised and studied and I think this was a positive step … In the political field, the two sides agreed to support and strengthen the Iraqi government, which was another positive item achieved in these talks,” he said.
    He said Iran had offered to help train and arm Iraq’s security forces, presently the job of the U.S. military
    Crocker said he would refer to Washington a proposal by the Iranians for a mechanism with Iranian, U.S. and Iraqi participation to coordinate Iraqi security matters.
    He said he had told the Iranians they must end their support for the militias, stop supplying them with explosives and ammunition and rein in the activities of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Qods Force in Iraq.
    The Iranians had rejected the allegations but did not respond in detail. In turn, they had criticized the “occupying” U.S. military’s training and equipping of the new Iraqi army, saying it was “inadequate to the challenges faced”.
    … In a brief address to the delegations before the start of the talks, Maliki said Iraq would not be a launchpad for any attacks on neighboring states, an apparent reference to Iranian fears of a U.S. attack. It would also not brook any regional interference in its affairs, he added.

Colvin noted that the talks, “come as U.S. warships hold war games in the Gulf and after Tehran said it had uncovered spy networks on its territory run by Washington and its allies.”
The talks also, of course (though Colvin didn’t mention this) come as the region-spanning tensions over both Iran’s nuclear-engineering program and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict are running high. For my part, I find it very hard indeed to see how the US-Iraq-Iran imbroglio can be sustainably defused unless those other components of what I have called the “perfect storm” of three concurrent and linked crises in the Middle East can also be put on the path to sustainable resolution…
But still, to have these two significant governments at last apparently talking seriously about shared concerns in Iraq, rather than engaging in an open shooting war there or anywhere else, is a huge blessing for all of humankind, and especially for the long-suffering residents of Iraq and the rest of the Middle East.
Let’s just first of all, all say a big thanks for that.
I have a few more comments on today’s developments:
(1) The role of the Iraqi government in the emerging US-Iranian negotiations (I guess it is still too soon to call this a US-Iranian “relationship”?)
But the Maliki government’s role in this is intriguing. Obviously, when Pres. Bush made the decision to invade Iraq and topple Saddam Hussein’s regime, one of his key goals was to install a reliably pro-US government there. Maliki emerged as PM as a result of an electoral process that was completely dominated by the US. But the demographic and political realities of Iraq meant that any use of anything approaching a “fair” electoral process there always meant that the product of such a process would be a leadership much more responsive to the urgings of “brotherly” and neighboring Iran than to those from distant, and very “foreign”, Washington.
How on earth could the Bushites ever have expected anything different? (Because they always systematically blocked out any input into their decisionmaking from objective scholars and analysts who actually knew something about Iraq, is how. But we don’t need to revisit that here.)
So now, we start to see some of the diplomatic results of that.
It is notable that today’s talks– and presumably, the continuing diplomatic process that we can now expect will flow from them– are being described as “hosted by” Maliki. Okay, he is still to a large degree the “captive” of the US forces, there in the Green Zone. But these days, the Americans may well need him– to provide a veneer of political legitimacy to their presence in Iraq– just as much as, if not more than, he needs them (to, among other things, protect him from the wrath of an Iraqi citizenry that is very fed-up with the fact he has been able able to deliver almost nothing of any value to them…)
It is notable too that, at a time when the political elite in the US is abuzz with discussions of Maliki’s many claimed “shortcomings” as Iraq’s PM, the Iranian negotiator was saying that the Iranian government wants to give the the Maliki government more support, including through the provision of military and security-force training– in a move that seems couched as a thinly veiled criticism of what the US has been doing in this field up until now.
(2) The exchange of accusations between the US and Iran.
Crocker trotted out the US’s very well-rehearsed litany of accusations of Iran’s unjustified “meddling” in Iraq. All of which are, of course, particularly rich, coming as they do from a power that sent troops, fighter-bombers, and cruise missiles halfway round the world to intervene extremely illegitimately in Iraq!
But the Iranians also have their own, very numerous, accusations regartding the US’s many– and generally much better documented– hostile acts and declarations against them.
These include Congress’s funding of regime-change activities; the Pentagon’s despatch of an additional large naval task force to the waters very near Iran’s coast, and their conduct of some large-scale military exercizes there; the US forces’ recent arrests of five Iranian diplomats in Erbil, northern Iraq… And most recently, the accusations that Teheran’s Intelligence Ministry made last Saturday that it had,

    “succeeded in finding, recognizing and confronting some spy networks of infiltrating elements from the Iraqi occupiers in west, southwest and central Iran… These spy networks were guided by the intelligence services of the occupiers and were supported by some influential Iraqi groups.”

The Iranian news agency IRNA promised that more details of this accusation would be forthcoming “in the next few days.”
No indication was given there whether these “spy networks of infiltrating elements” were connected at all with the bitterly anti-mullah Iranian dissident organization the Mujahedeen-e-Khalq, which has some 3,800 fighters concentrated in Camp Ashraf, which is around 60 km north of Baghdad (and 100 km west of the Iranian border.)
The US has formally designated the MEK as a terrorist organization. But in early April, CNN was reporting that, “The U.S. military… regularly escorts MEK supply runs between Baghdad and its base, Camp Ashraf.” The reporter there did not specify what these “supplies” were, though he quoted the camp’s MEK leader as saying that what was involved was “procurement of logistical needs.” As third-country nationals in a country under military occupation, the occupying power has a responsibility to ensure that the MEK members’ basic humanitarian needs are met– but certainly not their need for “logistics”, whatever that term might cover… And especially not, given that the MEK as as an organization is still designated as a “foreign terrorist organization.”
There have been various reports of other, non-MEK, Iraq-based and US- and british-backed saboteurs undertaking acts of violence and other hostile actions inside Iran in recent months, too.
The CNN reporter wrote in April that Shirwan al-Wa’eli, Iraq’s national security minister, had said,

    “We gave this organization [the MEK] a six-month deadline to leave Iraq, and we informed the Red Cross…And presumably, our friends the Americans will respect our decision and they will not stay on Iraqi land.”

I found it interesting that in today’s press briefing, Amb. Kazemi-Qomi made no mention of the MEK– or indeed, of any of the accusations that Iran has about anti-Iranian actions being undertaken or supported by the US government, whether from Iraq or from elsewhere. Rather than getting drawn into endless rounds of reciprocal accusations, K-Q seemed more intent on being “statesmanlike”, and on focusing on the forward-looking agenda regarding his government’s negotiations with the US– an agenda that Crocker and most of the rest of the Bushites are seem noticeably reluctant to think about or talk about in public.
(And regarding the MEK, the Iranians are probably more intent on trying to work bilaterally with the Maliki government to get the MEK camp or camps dismantled. So they must have been pleased to hear Maliki say that Iraq “would not be a launchpad for any attacks on neighboring states”.)
3. The further agenda for the US and Iran talks, regarding Iraq.
This is huge. But most Bushites, as noted above, are probably still very reluctant to start to address it. This is an issue that is still very problematic and divisive within the administration. Gates, the uniformed military, and Rice are all now probably more or less united in realizing that,

    (a) Washington has to find a way to negotiate a substantial US troop withdrawal from Iraq, starting at the very latest in early 2008;
    (b) To do this, including Iran as one major party in the negotiation is unavoidable; and
    (c) In this context, a military attack on Iran is out of the questions; and probably, in addition, the current level of tension in the US-Iran relationship needs to be de-escalated.

Within the Republican Party– and indeed, within the broader US political elite, as well– the first of those three propositions now has considerable support. But its corollaries (b) and (c) still don’t, by any means, either in the GOP or in the broader political elite!
Hence, presumably, the need the Bushites see for extreme wariness in proceeding with this negotiation.
4. The US-Iranian agenda beyond Iraq.
As I mentioned above, the Bushites’ policies conflict harshly with those of Teheran in other areas, too, primarily regarding the nuclear issue and Arab-Israeli issues. It seems the “ground-rules” for today’s meeting in Baghdad had been firmly established by the US side as being that the discussions could only deal with matters directly related to Iraq.
Hey, who knows what the three of them might all have talked about inside the room there? Maybe we’ll never wholly know. But anyway, in his remarks after the meeting, K-Q stuck to the agreed script and didn’t mention any non-Iraq-related subject.
However, as I noted above, it will certainly be very hard for the US to get very much of what it wants to get from the Iranians regarding Iraq unless it is prepared to at least start dealing with some of Iran’s very sharp concerns in other fields.
Including, if Washington’s desire US really is for an orderly and substantial US troop withdrawal from Iraq– then what on earth is the Iranians’ interest in that?? Because now, the Iranians have the US troops in Iraq just exactly where they want them: dispersed, stretched out; vulnerable– 160,000-plus sitting ducks who are Teheran’s present guarantee that the US will undertake no military attack against Iran, and also, that it will rein the Israelis from trying anything similar.
Jimmy Carter only had to think about the fate of 52 US hostages to the will of the revolutionary Iranians. Now, George Bush has quite voluntarily and recklessly sent 3,000 times that number of hostages to the same fate…
No wonder that some administration insiders are now talking about a post-surge “Plan B” that would remove substantial numbers of the US troops from Iraq, and concentrate the remainder within only three or four, presumably very well-guarded perimeters.
But why should anyone believe the Iranians would be willing to let that happen so long as they continue to be subjected to all kinds of other hostile acts and declarations by the Americans?
So for the Iraq part of the US-Iran negotiation to work requires, at the very least, that the two sides reach agreement on a broader pact of ending direct hostilities between them.
How far-reaching might such an agreement be? We don’t know yet. But one thing that seems clear to me is that with every month that passes, the Iranian side of this complex balance is becoming stronger, and the US side weaker. Thus the longer the Bushites delay the conclusion of a non-agggression pact with Teheran, the broader will be the gains that Teheran ends up making.
5. Other regional and international actors.
Of course the US and Iran are not the only foreign (non-Iraqi) governments who have an intense interest in containing and ending the current state of insecurity in Iraq. In particular, I note that in the Arab world, all the Arab governments have a very strong interest in both

    (a) Seeing the restoration of political stability and public security inside Iraq, before Iraq-incubated Sunni extremism becomes an even more threatening force than it already is, for all of them; and
    (b) Not seeing the affairs of the Middle East being regulated entirely between these two non-Arab governments, in Washington and Teheran.

When I was in Egypt and Jordan in February, those were two very strong themes I heard again and again from my Arab friends and colleagues there– at the Al-Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies, and elsewhere.
(I note that Israel and Turkey also have certain interests regarding the the US-Iranian-Iraqi nexus. Turkey’s have mainly to do with the situation in the north, and can probably be fairly well accomodated in the context of improving US-Iran relations. Israel’s– as understood by the current government there– depend fairly strongly on there not being any improvement in US-Iran relations… Just the opposite! Tough luck for them, then, if they have to sit back and watch while US-Iran ties improve.)
Back to the Arab states, though. I guess a big question in my mind is whether goals (a) and (b) above can both be satisfactorily reached. I would say they could– provided the Iranians are prepared to do do some fairly clever and sure-footed diplomacy to set at ease the minds of Arab elites in places like Egypt, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia.
Anyway, for any stabilization project inside Iraq to succeed will require the active involvement of, at the very least, the Saudis, Jordanians, and Syrians, all of whom have various fingers in the Iraqi pie at present.
… So, bottom line on the US-Iranian diplomacy: Yes, today’s meeting was a great breakthrough… But considerable further diplomatic work remains to be done.
Let’s all hope and pray the leaders in all the relevant capitals are prepared to do that work. As Winston Churchill once memorably said, “Jaw-jaw is better than war-war.” That was never truer than today. The lives of Iraqis (and American service members) will continue to be lost and devastated in quite unacceptable numbers until the diplomats– supported, I hope, by a swelling movement of citizens in all the countries concerned in favor of much more “jaw-jaw” and less “war-war”– can get their act together and definiteively defuse this very, very harmful situation.