Saturday, 4 December 2010

Oceans of blood and profits for the mongers of war

Since there are now three conflicts in the greater Middle East; Afghanistan, Iraq, Israel/"Palestine" and maybe another Lebanese war in the offing, it might be a good idea to take a look at the cost of war.
Not the human cost – 80 lives a day in Iraq, unknown numbers in Afghanistan, one a day in Israel/"Palestine" (for now) – but the financial one. I'm still obsessed by the Saudi claim for its money back after Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait in 1990. Hadn't Saudi Arabia, King Fahd reminded Saddam, financed his eight-year war against Iran to the tune of $25,734,469,885.80? For the custodian of the two holy places, Mecca and Medina, to have shelled out $25bn for Saddam to slaughter his fellow Muslims was pretty generous – although asking for that extra 80 cents was surely a bit greedy.
But then again, talking of rapacity, the Arabs spent $84bn underwriting the Anglo-American operation against Saddam in 1990-91 – three times what Fahd gave to Saddam for the Iran war – and the Saudi share alone came to $27.5bn. In all, the Arabs sustained a loss of $620bn because of the 1990 Iraqi invasion of Kuwait – almost all of which was paid over to the United States and its allies. Washington was complaining in August 1991 that Saudi Arabia and Kuwait still owed $7.5bn. Western wars in the Middle East, it seemed, could be fought for profit as well as victory. Maybe Iraq could have brought us more treasure if it hadn't ended in disaster. At least it would help to have paid for America's constant infusion of cash to Israel's disastrous wars.
According to Israeli historian Illan Pappé, since 1949, the US has passed to Israel more than $100bn in grants and $10bn in special loans – more than Washington hands out to North Africa, South America and the Caribbean. Over the past 20 years, $5.5bn has been given to Israel for military purchases. But for sheer self-abuse, it's necessary to read of the Midas-like losses in the entire Middle East since just 1991 – an estimated $12,000,000,000,000. Yup, that's a cool $12trn and, if you don't believe me, take a look at an unassuming little booklet that the "Strategic Fortnight Group" published not long ago. Its statistic caught a few headlines, but was then largely forgotten, perhaps because it was published in faraway Mumbai rather than by some preposterous American "tink-thank" (as I call them). But it was funded by, among others, the Norwegian and Swiss foreign ministries. And the Indians are pretty smart about money, as we know as we wait in fear of its new super-economy.
So since there may soon be a new Israel-Hizbollah war, let's get an idea of the astronomical costs of all those F-16s, missiles, "bunker-busters", Iranian-made rockets, smashed Lebanese factories, villages, towns, bridges, power stations, oil terminals – we will not soil ourselves with Lebanon's 1,300 pathetic dead or Israel's 130 pathetic dead in the 2006 war for these are mere mortals – not to mention the losses in tourism and trade to both sides. Total losses for Lebanon in 2006 came to an estimated $3.6bn, for Israel $1.6bn – so Israel won hands down in terms of money, even if its rabble of an army screwed everything up on the ground. But among those who paid for this were American taxpayers (funding the Israelis) and European taxpayers, Arab potentates and the crackpot of Iran (funding Lebanon). So the American taxpayer destroys what the European taxpayer rebuilds. It's the same in Gaza; Washington funds the weapons to blow up EU-funded projects and the EU rebuilds them in time for them to be destroyed again. But boy oh boy, in the Lebanese war, US arms manufacturers make a packet – and so, to a lesser extent do the Iranian and Chinese missile dealers.
Let's break down the 2006 Lebanon war figures. Bridges and roads: $450m. Utilities: $419m. Housing: $2bn. But military "institutions": a paltry $16m. Hizbollah apparently spent $300m. Overall, rebuilding came to $319m, infrastructure repairs to $454m, oil spill costs to $175m. Just for sadistic fun, you can add forest fires ($4.6m), displaced civilians ($52m) and Beirut airport ($170m). But the biggest cost of all? Tourism, at $3-4bn. Now Israel. Tourism lost $1.4 bn, "government and emergency services" $460n, businesses $1.4bn, compensation paid out $335.4m, forest fires $18m. What have the Israeli army and Hizbollah got against forests? In all, the Israeli losses amounted to 1.5 per cent of GDP, the Lebanese 8 per cent of GDP...
Continue reading
Robert Fisk@'The Independent'

Rachel Maddow on How the GOP Uses Sex, Pedophiles to Kill Good Legislation

On last night's Rachel Maddow Show, the host discussed the GOP's current love affair for the horrible "poison perv pill" as a way to kill meaningful legislation in Washington:
If you want to kill a proposed policy in Washington, one of the most devious ways to do it is with a "poison pill." As a metaphor, the poison pill is relatively straightforward: you simply force something into a bill that is so politically toxic, it kills the whole thing.
But if you are this year's minority party in the House -- and yes, that still means the Republicans -- then you've got a whole new take on the poison pill tactic .... This year's Republican lawmakers have come up with "poison sex pill" or the "poison perv pill" or the "world's most cynical poison pill," depending on how you think about it. They keep coming up with ways to add the word "pedophile" or "Viagra" or "rapist" to bills that have precisely nothing to do with any of those things. They add those things to bills so it looks like Democrats are voting in favor of pedophiles or Viagra or rapists, when in fact they are voting for things like better school lunches. Classy, right?
Watch the whole segment here:


David Lynch - Good Day Today


   
“I am very happy to be with Sunday Best with the songs ‘Good Day Today’ and ‘I Know’. This feels like a good partnership and I’m looking forward to everyone having a good day today. In all my films, I have always been very involved with all that one hears. The creation of this record was a natural extension of my love of sound and music.”
- David Lynch

via Drowned In Sound

Friday, 3 December 2010

WikiLeaks Mirrors


Real mirrors on different IP Addresses
  • wikileaks.info - Mirror hosted in Switzerland [62.2.16.94]
  • wikileaks.se - Mirror hosted in Sweden [88.80.6.179]
  • nyud.net - Mirror hosted in the United States [129.170.214.192]
Important Wikileaks Links

  • twitter.com/wikileaks - Official Wikileaks Twitter Page

  • facebook.com/wikileaks - Official Wikileaks Facebook Page


  • John Perry Barlow JPBarlow The first serious infowar is now engaged. The field of battle is WikiLeaks. You are the troops. #WikiLeaks
     JPBarlow We'll see if an army without officers can be effective against the combined Meatspace military. I bet on us. #SaveWikiLeaks

    WikiLeaks wikileaks WikiLeaks moves to Switzerland http://wikileaks.ch/

    WikiLeaks; Cablegate Mirror

    "lingers on the palette like a lazy forklift driver..."


    (Thanx Anne!)
    WikiLeaks wikileaks WikiLeaks,org domain killed by US everydns.net after claimed mass attacks KEEP US STRONG https://donations.datacell.com/

    A quick reminder – Australians don’t like football

    WTF Indeed???

    Stan Lee BrandDNA North and South Korea let off a few missiles at each other, yet Korea still gets more World Cup votes than Australia. WTF!?

    REpost: Remember this? *SIGH*

    James Ball jamesrbuk Good news - I believe Salon (thanks to @ggreenwald) is set to host (sadly non-interactive) .jpg versions of the @tableau graphics. Kudos.

    WikiLeaks - The Musical

    [A playground, Australia, mid-1980s. Two girls are gossiping.]
    SALLY
    You know who I love?
    That band Men at Work.
    Did you hear the scandal
    With Annie and Dirk?
    They were caught making out
    By a school clerk
    LISA
    Someone told me. I think it was Lou.
    They were over by the football ground
    They were naked; she was making a sound
    Like a hot and bothered kangaroo.
    SALLY
    I also heard that Mr. Nantz
    Was driving his car without any pants
    LISA
    He's the one
    With the red Impala?
    He has tufts of hair
    Just like a koala
    [JULIAN ASSANGE approaches.]
    SALLY
    Uh oh, it's Julian
    He's a little bit strange
    Let's lower our voices
    As he comes into range
    LISA
    I agree with you
    This is not for his ears
    We can start talking normal
    When he disappears
    [SALLY and LISA start to whisper.]
    JULIAN ASSANGE
    What are you guys
    Talking about?
    LISA
    It's none of your business
    Don't stick in your snout
    JULIAN ASSANGE
    But whispering is impolite
    It's cliquish, mean, and just not right.
    Your secrecy is a kind of slap.
    LISA
    You should tell someone who gives a crap
    JULIAN ASSANGE
    I don't like how this is going
    My curiosity is growing
    Come on, tell me. Really, tell!
    To not know is a kind of hell
    [SALLY and LISA whisper more and then leave, giggling.]
    JULIAN ASSANGE
    I'll get you!
    I'll get you!
    Don't believe me?
    I'll bet you!
    There will be retribution!
    There will be tit for tat!
    There will be revolution
    I will see to that!
    [Enraged and frustrated, JULIAN ASSANGE becomes a hacker. He devotes himself to the unchecked distribution of all information.]
    JULIAN ASSANGE
    I'll dub myself Mendax
    It means "noble liar."
    I'll remake myself as a
    High-tech town crier
    When people attempt
    To hide information
    I will be the one
    To compel revelation
    [After two decades moving between the hacking subculture and academia, JULIAN ASSANGE founds WikiLeaks, a website devoted to challenging secrecy regulations by releasing documents.]
    JULIAN ASSANGE
    To radically shift regime behavior
    We must accept a new kind of savior
    How can any authority control what we see
    When all information wants to be free?
    [At first, JULIAN ASSANGE uses WikiLeaks for good, exposing assassinations in Kenya.]
    JULIAN ASSANGE
    Witness how I used my network
    To interfere with Kenyan wetwork.
    It's hard to grasp this type of power
    I liken it to Bentham's tower
    He called it the panopticon
    It acted as a check upon
    All who thought they were being observed
    This is what we have long deserved.
    [One day JULIAN ASSANGE is contacted by BRADLEY MANNING.]
    BRADLEY MANNING
    Hello, I am Bradley Manning
    I work in intelligence
    I know you by your reputation
    And frankly, sir, I have the sense
    That my position in the army
    Grants me special access to
    Secret information that I
    Think that I might leak to you.
    JULIAN ASSANGE
    What's your name, now? Manning? Bradley?
    Tell me more; I'll listen, gladly...