Saturday, 22 October 2011

#OccupyMelbourne @Trades Hall 22/10/11 (1)

(Photos by TimN)

Spaceboy on the front line @ #OccupyMelbourne (Trades Hall 22/10/11)

(Photos by TimN)
Policewoman behind me while I was taking that last shot said 'he looks as though he is sleepwalking' to which I replied that he wasn't and that anyway hadn't she learnt during the past week in the City Square that you can still protest even while asleep...she didn't seem to find that answer all that amusing I'm afraid to say!

Occupy Melbourne: eviction

the eviction of Occupy Melbourne…

Occupy Australia and the Antipodean “bubble”

See you there...

Madeleine Love
The benefit of is that Melbournians now know where City Square is! Continuing at Federation Square 12noon.

You are not my fugn mayor...

Lord Mayor Robert Doyle looks down at the Occupy Melbourne protestors.  
Photo: Joe Armao

Ron Tandberg (#OccupyMelbourne)

Via

On Facebook, NATO Chief Announces End to Libya War

Jeez - you really think they would know that Twitter is where it's at. So much for intel eh!

Egypt's government: designed for dictatorship

US Diplomat Loses Top Secret Clearance for Linking to WikiLeaks

Yemenis question the killing of 16-year-old Al-Awlaki’s son

Roughly cut footage of the police 'not employing excessive force' in removing #OccupyMelbourne from the City Square yesterday

As a policeman actually said to me yesterday: '...this is not heavy-handed'!!!

Doyle accused of heavy-handedness in halting occupation

Blake Hounshell
Does anyone actually know what the 17,000 State Dept. employees left in Iraq will actually do?

I salute you Tom!

British lawmaker Tom Watson talks to reporters during a protest in front of Fox Studios in Los Angeles on Friday, Oct 21, 2011. A few dozen people showed up to demonstrate outside Fox Studios where News Corp. is holding its annual shareholders meeting. (AP Photo/Nick Ut) / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS)

The Iraq War Ain’t Over, No Matter What Obama Says


President Obama announced on Friday that all 41,000 U.S. troops currently in Iraq will return home by December 31. “That is how America’s military efforts in Iraq will end,” he said. Don’t believe him. Now: it’s a big deal that all U.S. troops are coming home. For much of the year, the military, fearful of Iranian influence, has sought a residual presence in Iraq of several thousand troops. But arduous negotiations with the Iraqi government about keeping a residual force stalled over the Iraqis’ reluctance to provide them with legal immunity.
But the fact is America’s military efforts in Iraq aren’t coming to an end. They are instead entering a new phase. On January 1, 2012, the State Department will command a hired army of about 5,500 security contractors, all to protect the largest U.S. diplomatic presence anywhere overseas.
The State Department’s Bureau of Diplomatic Security does not have a promising record when it comes to managing its mercenaries. The 2007 Nisour Square shootings by State’s security contractors, in which 17 Iraqi civilians were killed, marked one of the low points of the war. Now, State will be commanding a much larger security presence, the equivalent of a heavy combat brigade. In July, Danger Room exclusively reported that the Department blocked the Congressionally-appointed watchdog for Iraq from acquiring basic information about contractor security operations, such as the contractors’ rules of engagement.
That means no one outside the State Department knows how its contractors will behave as they ferry over 10,000 U.S. State Department employees throughout Iraq — which, in case anyone has forgotten, is still a war zone. Since Iraq wouldn’t grant legal immunity to U.S. troops, it is unlikely to grant it to U.S. contractors, particularly in the heat and anger of an accident resulting in the loss of Iraqi life.
It’s a situation with the potential for diplomatic disaster. And it’s being managed by an organization with no experience running the tight command structure that makes armies cohesive and effective.
You can also expect that there will be a shadow presence by the CIA, and possibly the Joint Special Operations Command, to hunt persons affiliated with al-Qaida. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta has conspicuously stated that al-Qaida still has 1,000 Iraqi adherents, which would make it the largest al-Qaida affiliate in the world.
So far, there are three big security firms with lucrative contracts to protect U.S. diplomats. Triple Canopy, a longtime State guard company, has a contract worth up to $1.53 billion to keep diplos safe as they travel throughout Iraq. Global Strategies Group will guard the consulate at Basra for up to $401 million. SOC Incorporated will protect the mega-embassy in Baghdad for up to $974 million. State has yet to award contracts to guard consulates in multiethnic flashpoint cities Mosul and Kirkuk, as well as the outpost in placid Irbil.
“We can have the kind of protection our diplomats need,” Deputy National Security Adviser Denis McDonough told reporters after Obama’s announcement. Whether the Iraqi people will have protection from the contractors that the State Department commands is a different question. And whatever you call their operations, the Obama administration hopes that you won’t be so rude as to call it “war.”
Spencer Ackerman @'Wired'

The Fierce Imagination of Haruki Murakami