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Wig-wearing American spy detained in Moscow, Russian officials say

By , May 14, 2013 1:24 pm

Wig-wearing American spy detained in Moscow, Russian officials say
By: Dylan Stableford on: 14.05.2013 [16:06 ] (114 reads)

Novice spy gear. Cash. A recruitment letter. Bad wigs.

That’s what Russia’s Federal Security Service said an American accused of being a spy was carrying when he allegedly tried to recruit a Russian agent for the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. The Russian counterintelligence bureau now wants the man, identified as Ryan Christopher Fogle, expelled from the country, declaring him a “persona non grata.”

Fogle was detained on Monday wearing a blond wig, Russian authorities said. They also said he had large sums of euros, a Boy Scouts-style compass, three pairs of glasses, a flashlight, a map of Moscow and a typed contract offering $ 100,000 for future spy work.

“This is a down-payment from someone who is very impressed with your professionalism and who would greatly appreciate your cooperation in the future,” the letter, published by Russian news sites, reads. “Your security means a lot to us. This is why we chose this way of contacting you. We will continue to make sure our correspondent sic remains safe and secret.”

The letter concludes: “We look forward to working with you in the nearest future. Your friends.”

According to Russian officials, Fogle was a career agent whose cover was his role as third secretary of the political department of the U.S. Embassy in Moscow. Photos published by the Russia Today website showed a man, presumed to be Fogle, in a blue-checkered shirt, baseball cap and blond wig pinned facedown to the ground. He was then was shown handcuffed inside an FSS office—without the wig. Another photograph shows a table covered with Fogle’s purported spy gear.

“The detainee was brought in the reception office of the Federal Security Service and after necessary procedures was handed over to the official representatives of the U.S. Embassy,” the bureau said in a statement. “Recently American intelligence has made multiple attempts to recruit employees of Russian law enforcement organs and special agencies, which have been detected and monitored by Russian FSB counterintelligence.”

The U.S. Embassy has yet to comment on the report.

According to The New York Times, Russia’s Foreign Ministry summoned U.S. Ambassador Michael McFaul to appear on Wednesday to respond to the espionage allegation.

The ambassador, Reuters noted, was holding a live Q&A session (“#AskMcfaul”) on Twitter when news of the apparent arrest broke.

When was asked to comment on Fogle, McFaul wrote “No” in Russian.

Link

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Wig-wearing American spy detained in Moscow, Russian officials say

By , May 14, 2013 10:41 am

Wig-wearing American spy detained in Moscow, Russian officials say
By: Dylan Stableford on: 14.05.2013 [16:06 ] (60 reads)

Novice spy gear. Cash. A recruitment letter. Bad wigs.

That’s what Russia’s Federal Security Service said an American accused of being a spy was carrying when he allegedly tried to recruit a Russian agent for the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. The Russian counterintelligence bureau now wants the man, identified as Ryan Christopher Fogle, expelled from the country, declaring him a “persona non grata.”

Fogle was detained on Monday wearing a blond wig, Russian authorities said. They also said he had large sums of euros, a Boy Scouts-style compass, three pairs of glasses, a flashlight, a map of Moscow and a typed contract offering $ 100,000 for future spy work.

“This is a down-payment from someone who is very impressed with your professionalism and who would greatly appreciate your cooperation in the future,” the letter, published by Russian news sites, reads. “Your security means a lot to us. This is why we chose this way of contacting you. We will continue to make sure our correspondent sic remains safe and secret.”

The letter concludes: “We look forward to working with you in the nearest future. Your friends.”

According to Russian officials, Fogle was a career agent whose cover was his role as third secretary of the political department of the U.S. Embassy in Moscow. Photos published by the Russia Today website showed a man, presumed to be Fogle, in a blue-checkered shirt, baseball cap and blond wig pinned facedown to the ground. He was then was shown handcuffed inside an FSS office—without the wig. Another photograph shows a table covered with Fogle’s purported spy gear.

“The detainee was brought in the reception office of the Federal Security Service and after necessary procedures was handed over to the official representatives of the U.S. Embassy,” the bureau said in a statement. “Recently American intelligence has made multiple attempts to recruit employees of Russian law enforcement organs and special agencies, which have been detected and monitored by Russian FSB counterintelligence.”

The U.S. Embassy has yet to comment on the report.

According to The New York Times, Russia’s Foreign Ministry summoned U.S. Ambassador Michael McFaul to appear on Wednesday to respond to the espionage allegation.

The ambassador, Reuters noted, was holding a live Q&A session (“#AskMcfaul”) on Twitter when news of the apparent arrest broke.

When was asked to comment on Fogle, McFaul wrote “No” in Russian.

Link

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In Mideast Version of ‘American Idol,’ Region’s Troubles, Syria War Often Commandeer the Stage

By , May 13, 2013 5:08 am

In Mideast Version of ‘American Idol,’ Region’s Troubles, Syria War Often Commandeer the Stage

BEIRUT (AP) — TV singing contests around the world tend to serve up light, glitzy entertainment with a dash of emotional drama. But in the Middle East’s version of “American Idol,” it’s the region’s troubles that often take center stage.

Two contestants are from civil war-ravaged Syria, including a singer-composer whose bus was ambushed by gunmen en route to her audition and a music student who brought judges to tears with a song lamenting the devastation of his hometown of Aleppo. A performer from the Gaza Strip has become an audience favorite for singing about the plights of Palestinians under Israeli rule.

“The show has become a platform for Arab Spring youth to express themselves artistically and show the region that there’s hope for the future,” said Mazen Hayek, the spokesman for the Dubai-based, Saudi-owned MBC Group that broadcasts “Arab Idol” from a studio in the Lebanese capital, Beirut.

The show’s producers say political expression is allowed. But in a region where tribal, religious and political affiliations often define identity, performers walk a fine line — especially in a contest where winning is based on popularity.

“It’s live and people around the region, and Arabs around the world, follow it in real time, posting praise or criticism on Twitter and Facebook, before they even vote for their favorites,” Hayek said.

Now in its second season, the show has jumped in the ratings in part because of an eclectic mix of contestants, including several from nations wracked by conflict, such as Syria, as well as those still reeling from the fallout of the Arab Spring.

The current season began in March with 27 contestants from across the Arab world, including Tunisia, Egypt, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Syria and the Palestinian territories. The group has been whittled down to 10, and two will compete in the June 21 final.

Several contestants bring political baggage to the Beirut stage from which young singers in evening gowns and smart suits dazzle a TV audience of millions with a repertoire running from Arab classics to modern pop songs.

But the Syria crisis, now in its third year, has loomed largest. More than 70,000 Syrians have been killed and millions displaced since an uprising against President Bashar Assad’s regime erupted in March 2011. Now a civil war, the conflict has taken an enormous toll on the country.

Farrah Youssef, 23, a singer and composer from the Syrian port city of Tartous, was nearly killed on her way to Beirut in October. Syrian gunmen fired on the bus she was traveling in and robbed the passengers.

She said several of her friends have been killed in bombings in Damascus, the capital, where she’s been studying English. A younger brother was gravely wounded in a shooting attack and four of her girlfriends were kidnapped, raped and killed, their bodies dumped on the side of a deserted road outside the capital, she said.

“I’ve been so sad that I can’t grieve any longer,” Youssef said in a recent interview. “I ask myself all the time, ‘what on earth happened?’ Everything was so calm and then suddenly my country was on fire.”

While Damascus has been largely spared the destruction that has hit other cities, Aleppo has not been so fortunate.

Ten months of street fighting have devastated Aleppo, Syria’s largest urban and commercial center, leveling entire neighborhoods and leaving landmark mosques, the ancient souk and other historic treasures in ruins. Once one of Syria’s most beautiful cities, Aleppo is now scarred, carved up into rebel- and government-held areas.

Abdelkarim Hamdan, who grew up poor in a traditional Muslim family in Aleppo’s walled Old City before becoming a contestant on the show, refuses to choose sides in the conflict.

“I sing for Syrians regardless of their opinions and their political affiliations,” Hamdan said in an interview in Beirut.

The 25-year-old did not join anti-government protests when the uprising broke out. He has expressed his opposition to violence in his own lyrics about his hometown, set to a popular folk tune. His performance on a recent episode brought the four-judge panel to tears and prompted patriotic cheers in the audience.

“Aleppo, you are a spring of pain in my country,” he sang. “So much blood has been shed in my country. I cry and my heart is burning for my country and my sons who have become strangers in it.”

His ode to Aleppo instantly went viral on the Internet, but with praise came criticism from Muslim hardliners, who consider the talent show un-Islamic.

Some people urged Hamdan to go fight or not sing. Others posted comments online saying Hamdan and Youssef should not be engaging in frivolous entertainment when so many people back home are suffering.

The two contestants shrug off the criticism. They say they don’t regret being on the show and will stay unless voted off.

“I believe that if God gave you a nice voice that you should use it,” Hamdan said.

One of 14 children from his father’s two marriages, Hamdan put himself through school by working at gas stations and construction sites since he was 15. His goal is to win and use any earnings from the show to get his degree in music and help support his elderly parents.

Youssef, who spent most of her childhood in Europe, was already a known composer and singer in Syria before the conflict erupted. With a voice that one of the judges described as reminiscent of the Egyptian diva Umm Kalthoum, Youssef has gained a huge following.

As a Muslim woman, she has been criticized for wearing revealing gowns and heavy makeup on the show. She takes such comments to heart, but refuses to indulge those who have labeled her an Assad supporter because she comes from Syria’s coastal region, the heartland of the president’s Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam.

“People are very emotional because the situation in our country is just horrible,” Youssef said. “I don’t sing for myself, but for all people in Syria, to make them happy just a bit and to make people forget the reality for just one moment.”

The two Syrians are not the only contestants who bring regional politics to the show.

In an early episode, an Iraqi contestant from the autonomous Kurdish region in the north of the country stirred emotions after listing her country of origin as “Kurdistan.”

One of the judges admonished her, noting that the panel and the audience consider Kurdish provinces of Iraq as an integral part of the country. After that, Barwas Hussein listed her country as Kurdistan, Iraq, and performed in Arabic, instead of Kurdish, the language of her first song.

And a Palestinian singer from the Khan Younis refugee camp in the Gaza Strip, which is ruled by the Islamic militant group Hamas, was a favorite from the start because of the obstacles he had to overcome to reach Beirut.

Mohammed Assaf, 23, first had to plead with Hamas to let him leave. He then had to bribe Egyptian border guards to let him cross into Egypt, and from there applied for his Lebanon visa, he said. A fellow Palestinian eventually gave up his slot for Assaf during the audition phase because he believed Assaf — already a minor celebrity in Gaza as a wedding singer — had a better chance of winning.

Assaf often sings about the plight of Palestinian refugees and those imprisoned by Israel.

“I wanted so badly for the Arab world to hear my voice,” said Assaf.

In Gaza itself, Assaf’s image is posted on some seaside restaurants, where people gather on Friday nights to watch the show on big screens, and the Palestinian cell provide Jawal is allowing customers to send free text messages in order to vote for Assaf.

Not everyone has welcomed the excitement, though, including Hamas.

Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum noted on his Facebook page that the singer has experienced the hardship of life in Gaza and comes from a “decent and respected” family. But at the same time, he said, “we don’t share the same ideas.”

“My complaint is with the name of the show,” Barhoum wrote. “No one is an idol. God is the idol for us.”

Associated Press writer Ibrahim Barzak in Gaza City, Gaza Strip, contributed to this report.

Assyrian International News Agency

Kidnapped Bishops Have Not Been Released, Says North American Archdiocese

By , April 23, 2013 11:23 pm

(AINA) — A statement posted on the website of the Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese of North America claims that they two Bishops who were kidnapped in Syria two days ago have not been released, contrary to reports from major media outlets.

There have appeared many reports in both the Eastern and Western press that the two hierarchs who were abducted yesterday by terrorists in Syria, Metropolitan Boulos Yazge, Antiochian Orthodox Archbishop of Aleppo, and Archbishop Youhanna Ibrahim, Syriac Archbishop of Aleppo, have been released. His Eminence Metropolitan Philip spoke by phone this morning to His Beatitude John X, Patriarch of Antioch and all the East, who said that these reports are false, and that the release of these two hierarchs has NOT taken place.

We ask you to continue to pray for their safety, and eventual release.

Assyrian International News Agency

Chavez: Washington Nemesis, Latin American Hero

By , March 12, 2013 11:02 am

laura-carlsen-hugo-chavezYou could almost hear the sigh of relief coming out of Washington at the news of Hugo Chavez’s death on March 5.

President Obama issued a brief statement that failed even to offer condolences, forcing a senior State Department official to patch over the evident callousness and breach of diplomacy by offering his personal condolences the following day. 

Within moments of Chavez’s death, commercial media and mouthpieces for the U.S. government were verbally dancing on his grave and predicting the imminent demise of Chavismo—Chavez’s political legacy in Venezuela and abroad.

Time headlined its article “Death of a Demagogue.” The New York Times, which bent over backwards to minimize Chavez’s overwhelming victory in Venezuela’s October elections—and later to portray his battle with cancer as a cover-up, mimicking opposition claims—proclaimed that Chávez’s death “casts into doubt the future of his socialist revolution” and “alters the political balance not only in Venezuela, the fourth-largest supplier of foreign oil to the United States, but also in Latin America”—and this in a news article with no sourcing provided.

The Inter-American Dialogue, a U.S. think tank, concluded that “Chavez’s legacy, and the damage he left behind, will not be easily undone,” and predicted that the social gains and regional institutions Chavez built over his political lifetime will soon fall apart and things will soon return to normal—that is, with the United States back in the hemispheric driver’s seat.

Congressman Ed Royce (R-CA) came right out and said “Hugo Chávez was a tyrant who forced the people of Venezuela to live in fear. His death dents the alliance of anti-U.S. leftist leaders in South America. Good riddance to this dictator.”

A Hegemon Spurned

So why did Washington hate this guy so much?

It never helped that the South American president had a penchant for insulting his adversaries personally. But one supposes that diplomacy rises above name-calling, even if the other guy did it first. The anti-Chavez current in Washington goes far deeper than personal enmity or even political differences.

What scared Washington most about Chavez was not his failures or idiosyncrasies. It was his success.

The official reasons given for demonizing Hugo Chavez don’t hold water. Chavez is accused of restraining freedom of the press in a nation known for its ferociously anti-Chavez private media. And while his Yankee critics called him a dictator, Chavez and his policies won election after election in exemplary electoral processes. You can disagree with his reform to permit unlimited terms in office, but this is the practice of many nations deemed democratic by the U.S. government and considered close allies. And the criticisms of Chavez’s social programs as “patronage” cannot ignore the millions of lives tangibly improved.

Before Chavez turned Venezuela away from the neoliberal model, the nation was a basket case. But throughout his tenure, social indicators that measure real human suffering showed steady improvement. Between 1998, when he was first elected, to 2013 when he died in office, people living in poverty dropped from 43 percent of the population to 27 percent. Extreme poverty dropped from 16.8 percent of the population to 7 percent. According to UNESCO, illiteracy—nearly 10 percent when Chavez took office—has been eliminated. Chavez also reduced childhood malnutrition, initiated pensions for the elderly, and launched education and health programs for the poor. 

Venezuela’s human development ranking subsequently climbed significantly under Chavez, reaching the “high” human development category. The programs that Washington scorned as “government handouts” made people’s lives longer, healthier, and fuller in Venezuela. 

Now that Chavez is dead, the U.S. press has revived the State Department’s practice of designating the “good left” and the “bad left” in Latin America. Chavez, of course, embodied the “bad left,” while Brazil’s Lula was unilaterally and unwillingly designated the “good left”.

Yet it was Lula da Silva who defended his friend and made the case for Chavez’s lasting positive legacy in the pages of the New York Times. He eulogized the leader and predicted, “The multilateral institutions Mr. Chávez helped create will also help ensure the consecration of South American unity.” 

In fact, Chavez’s success in building institutions for alternative regional integration is one of the big reasons Washington hated him. The self-declared anti-capitalist led Venezuela as it joined with regional powerhouse Brazil and other southern cone countries to make a bid to crack the Monroe Doctrine. Along with Andean nations, they also sought, in varying degrees, to wrest control of significant natural resource wealth from transnational corporations to fund state redistribution programs for the poor.

In 2005, Chavez helped scuttle the U.S. goal of a Free Trade Area of the Americas. Later he spearheaded the formation of the Union of South American Nations (Unasur) in 2008. As a Latin American alternative to the U.S.-dominated Organization of American States, the 12-member Unasur proved its value by successfully mediating the Colombia-Ecuador conflict and the Bolivian separatist crisis in 2008. In 2010, Chavez again played a major role with the creation of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States, made up of hemispheric partners, excluding the United States and Canada.

The Bank of the South, also promoted by Chavez, seeks greater South-South monetary and financial autonomy. As Lula writes in his editorial on Chavez´s death, the Bank offers an alternative to the World Bank and IMF, which “have not been sufficiently responsive to the realities of today’s multipolar world”.

With stops and starts, these initiatives have moved regional integration forward outside the historic model of U.S. hegemony.

U.S. Moves and the Principle of Self-Determination

What happens next? Venezuela held an emotional funeral on March 8 and is planning for April elections. Most predict that Vice President Nicolas Maduro, selected by Chavez as his successor, will win easily. He has the advantage of Chavez’s blessing: a common slogan in Caracas these days is “Chavez, te juro, que voto por Maduro” (“Chavez, I swear, my vote is for Maduro”). Another sign that Chavismo lives on was the thousands of people at the funeral chanting “Chavez didn’t die; he multiplied.”

The State Department views dimly the prospect of an improved U.S.-Venezuela relationship under Maduro. On March 6, the State Department held a press call on which “Senior Official One” (a State Department practice for “background” when its officials apparently don’t want to be identified with their own public statements) said the department was optimistic following Chavez’ death, but that “yesterday’s first press conference, if you will, the first address, was not encouraging in that respect. It disappointed us.”

He referred to a 90-minute address by Maduro, stating that “the enemy” attacked Chavez’s health. The Venezuelan government also announced the expulsion of two U.S. military personnel in Venezuela, allegedly for having contacted members of the Venezuela military to stir up an insurrection.

The State Department noted that it plans “to move ahead in this relationship” by holding conversations in areas of common interest, citing “counternarcotics, counterterrorism, economic or commercial issues including energy.” It added, “We are going to continue to speak out when we believe there are issues of democratic principle that need to be talked about, that need to be highlighted.”

During the Chavez years, U.S. officials and the press went into contortions to avoid congruency with the basic principle that democracy is measured by elections. With Chavez having indisputably won some thirteen elections, the U.S. government applied new criteria to Venezuela along the lines of “democracy can be wrong.” Despite his broad-based support, many went so far as to dub Chavez a “dictator.”

The U.S. government’s commitment to democracy falters when Washington doesn’t like the results. It supported the failed coup against Chavez in 2002 and blocked the return of Honduras’s elected president after the 2009 coup there.

Now all eyes will be on Washington to see whether it upholds another value reiterated by President Obama—the right to self-determination. Will U.S. “democracy-promotion programs” under NED, IRI, and other regime-change schemes resist the temptation to meddle in Venezuela’s April 14 elections?

Venezuela without Chavez will be an important test of moral and diplomatic integrity for the second Obama administration and John Kerry’s State Department.

FPIF Latest Content

Russian Media: CIA infects South American leaders with cancer?

By , March 7, 2013 1:51 am

Russian Media: CIA infects South American leaders with cancer?
By: Bulov on: 07.03.2013 [04:56 ] (43 reads)

Russian Media: CIA infects South American leaders with cancer?
http://english.pravda.ru/world/americas/05-01-2012/120158-south_america-0/
05.01.2012

Over 18 months period four progressive leaders of Latin America and their fellow citizens were shocked by the diagnosis delivered by their physicians – cancer. Fernando Lugo, Luis Inacio Lula da Silva, Hugo Chavez, and recently Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner were given this diagnosis. The Presidents of Paraguay, Brazil, Venezuela and Argentina suspiciously simultaneously turned out on the verge of survival.

Chavez immediately warned that the disease may be a “new weapon of the empire to eliminate unwanted leaders.” Maybe, but oddly enough, the result was the opposite. All politicians not only did not stop their political life and moved away from responsibilities, but on the contrary, dramatically increased their rating and rallied around the supporters.

First, in August of 2010 60-year-old Paraguayan President Fernando Lugo was diagnosed with a tumor of lymphatic system. After six sessions of chemotherapy in Sao Paulo and Asuncion, doctors reported that the tumor was gone. He was elected in 2008 with a mandate for five years. He resigned his ecclesiastical rank and became the second leftist president in the history of the country.

66-year-old former Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva was diagnosed with larynx cancer in October of 2011, nine months after the transfer of power to Dilma Russef. The doctors did not operate on Lulu, saying that as a result he may lose his voice forever – an extremely important tool for policy and communication.

They argue that after several sessions of chemotherapy the tumor of the ex-president who had a firm intention to return to politics was reduced by 75 percent. Lula, who was in power from 2003 to 2010, reduced poverty in the country, united Latin America and made Brazil one of the world’s largest economies.

57-year-old Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez began treatment for cancer at the end of June of 2011. There is still no official data on what type of cancer he has. He was operated in Havana on July 20. After four rounds of chemotherapy, a series of medical tests confirmed a positive trend. Chavez has been in power since 1999 and in October of 2012 he is to run for the third term.

Finally, in late December, the media reported that 58-year-old Argentine President Cristina Kirchner will undergo surgery in early January of 2012 for cancer of the thyroid gland and the prognosis for recovery is quite favorable. Kirchner was re-elected for the second term in December of 2011 and takes a firm anti-American stance.

Hugo Chavez was the first to become suspicious. “I am far from delusions of persecution, but the fact remains – the murder as a way of removing unwanted politicians has been always practiced by the Empire (USA). I have no proof, and yet it is obvious that there is something strange with progressive politicians in Latin America,” said Chavez.

He is right, as murder of Fidel Castro was attempted in dozens of ways. Venezuelan writer Luis Brito Garcia counted more than 900 assassination attempts of the Cuban leader organized by the CIA. However, today Latin America is not only united against the USA, but also against Israel, where nearly all the countries recognize the independence of Palestine, so in fact one can search for trace not only of the CIA, but Mossad as well. It is also strange that Chavez’s illness and the type of cancer (prostate cancer) was first reported by “a source at the CIA,” a newspaper that exists on the money of the State Department – Nuevo Herald.

Is cancer a side effect of new weapons used by the intelligence? Or is it just a coincidence that is successfully intertwined with the “modus vivendi” of the agonizing North American giant? There are several prerequisites for the conspiracy theory. First, there is an obvious one – to prevent the development of South American socialism. Second, methods of operation have been developed, and the most unsuccessful ones are discussed by the entire world. Third, there is a sound scientific basis to invent new kinds of biological, chemical and electronic weapons tested in local wars.
Note that only those whose policies contradict the dominant position of the United States develop the disease. Then remember the “failures”. First of all, the strange death of former President of Palestine Yasser Arafat who was suffering from leukemia in 2004. At the conclusion of French experts, he died of a massive brain hemorrhage caused by a disorder of the blood supply, which was provoked, in turn, by an unspecified infection. In the patient’s blood platelet count was low and content of white blood cells was high. Similar symptoms may be signs of various diseases, including cancer, inflammation of the lungs and some blood disorders.

Then the mysterious murder of Alexander Litvinenko who died in London in 2006 as a result of a chemical poisoning with polonium-210. Which special services have done this is not known, but he died instantly from a progressive form of cancer afflicting vital organs. Another typical case is poisoning of the former Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko with dioxin of high purity, which was produced in the laboratory outside of Russia. Incidentally, this poison causes cancer of nasal and respiratory tract.

Also note that during the invasion in Iraq and Afghanistan, the U.S. tested a number of new weapons. For example, microwave guns that operate according to the principle of conventional microwave oven, but its waves are directed into a narrow beam, and the range of action is much wider. In addition to cancerous effect they have another one, no less terrible. They heat the water contained in the skin cells and the intercellular space. It cannot kill humans, but causes great pain, similar to that from burns. The symptoms are very similar to the symptoms of a heart attack from which president Nestor Kirchner died suddenly on the eve of the nomination.

WikiLeaks reported that in 2008 the CIA asked its embassy in Paraguay (Fernando Lugo!) to collect all biometric data, including the DNA of all four presidential candidates. Knowing the DNA code, it is easy to develop an oncogene for each individual. If we assume that such data was obtained on the eve of the elections in Brazil, then cancer of Dilma Russef in 2009 fits into this theory.

Having partially lost its influence in Latin America, the U.S. may have found a much easier and cheaper way to get rid of unwanted “partners.” Over time alpha radiation, electromagnetic waves, or chemicals cause emergence and development of cancer. Using the experience gained, the CIA tested new weapons on the progressive leaders and revolutionaries of Latin America.

The U.S. economy is experiencing a crash no different than that of Greece, and it remains afloat only because it can turn on the money printing machine. Yet, the State Department cannot afford to dominate everywhere by military force, which requires great amounts of money to maintain. Therefore, it is logical to assume that they found new quick and inexpensive methods for the effective destruction of enemies. The most important advantage of these methods is that they leave no traces, disguised as oncology or a heart attack and eliminate the possibility of direct exposure and liability.
Lubov Lulko
Pravda.Ru

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Russian Media: CIA infects South American leaders with cancer?

By , March 7, 2013 1:51 am

Russian Media: CIA infects South American leaders with cancer?
By: Bulov on: 07.03.2013 [04:56 ] (44 reads)

Russian Media: CIA infects South American leaders with cancer?
http://english.pravda.ru/world/americas/05-01-2012/120158-south_america-0/
05.01.2012

Over 18 months period four progressive leaders of Latin America and their fellow citizens were shocked by the diagnosis delivered by their physicians – cancer. Fernando Lugo, Luis Inacio Lula da Silva, Hugo Chavez, and recently Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner were given this diagnosis. The Presidents of Paraguay, Brazil, Venezuela and Argentina suspiciously simultaneously turned out on the verge of survival.

Chavez immediately warned that the disease may be a “new weapon of the empire to eliminate unwanted leaders.” Maybe, but oddly enough, the result was the opposite. All politicians not only did not stop their political life and moved away from responsibilities, but on the contrary, dramatically increased their rating and rallied around the supporters.

First, in August of 2010 60-year-old Paraguayan President Fernando Lugo was diagnosed with a tumor of lymphatic system. After six sessions of chemotherapy in Sao Paulo and Asuncion, doctors reported that the tumor was gone. He was elected in 2008 with a mandate for five years. He resigned his ecclesiastical rank and became the second leftist president in the history of the country.

66-year-old former Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva was diagnosed with larynx cancer in October of 2011, nine months after the transfer of power to Dilma Russef. The doctors did not operate on Lulu, saying that as a result he may lose his voice forever – an extremely important tool for policy and communication.

They argue that after several sessions of chemotherapy the tumor of the ex-president who had a firm intention to return to politics was reduced by 75 percent. Lula, who was in power from 2003 to 2010, reduced poverty in the country, united Latin America and made Brazil one of the world’s largest economies.

57-year-old Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez began treatment for cancer at the end of June of 2011. There is still no official data on what type of cancer he has. He was operated in Havana on July 20. After four rounds of chemotherapy, a series of medical tests confirmed a positive trend. Chavez has been in power since 1999 and in October of 2012 he is to run for the third term.

Finally, in late December, the media reported that 58-year-old Argentine President Cristina Kirchner will undergo surgery in early January of 2012 for cancer of the thyroid gland and the prognosis for recovery is quite favorable. Kirchner was re-elected for the second term in December of 2011 and takes a firm anti-American stance.

Hugo Chavez was the first to become suspicious. “I am far from delusions of persecution, but the fact remains – the murder as a way of removing unwanted politicians has been always practiced by the Empire (USA). I have no proof, and yet it is obvious that there is something strange with progressive politicians in Latin America,” said Chavez.

He is right, as murder of Fidel Castro was attempted in dozens of ways. Venezuelan writer Luis Brito Garcia counted more than 900 assassination attempts of the Cuban leader organized by the CIA. However, today Latin America is not only united against the USA, but also against Israel, where nearly all the countries recognize the independence of Palestine, so in fact one can search for trace not only of the CIA, but Mossad as well. It is also strange that Chavez’s illness and the type of cancer (prostate cancer) was first reported by “a source at the CIA,” a newspaper that exists on the money of the State Department – Nuevo Herald.

Is cancer a side effect of new weapons used by the intelligence? Or is it just a coincidence that is successfully intertwined with the “modus vivendi” of the agonizing North American giant? There are several prerequisites for the conspiracy theory. First, there is an obvious one – to prevent the development of South American socialism. Second, methods of operation have been developed, and the most unsuccessful ones are discussed by the entire world. Third, there is a sound scientific basis to invent new kinds of biological, chemical and electronic weapons tested in local wars.
Note that only those whose policies contradict the dominant position of the United States develop the disease. Then remember the “failures”. First of all, the strange death of former President of Palestine Yasser Arafat who was suffering from leukemia in 2004. At the conclusion of French experts, he died of a massive brain hemorrhage caused by a disorder of the blood supply, which was provoked, in turn, by an unspecified infection. In the patient’s blood platelet count was low and content of white blood cells was high. Similar symptoms may be signs of various diseases, including cancer, inflammation of the lungs and some blood disorders.

Then the mysterious murder of Alexander Litvinenko who died in London in 2006 as a result of a chemical poisoning with polonium-210. Which special services have done this is not known, but he died instantly from a progressive form of cancer afflicting vital organs. Another typical case is poisoning of the former Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko with dioxin of high purity, which was produced in the laboratory outside of Russia. Incidentally, this poison causes cancer of nasal and respiratory tract.

Also note that during the invasion in Iraq and Afghanistan, the U.S. tested a number of new weapons. For example, microwave guns that operate according to the principle of conventional microwave oven, but its waves are directed into a narrow beam, and the range of action is much wider. In addition to cancerous effect they have another one, no less terrible. They heat the water contained in the skin cells and the intercellular space. It cannot kill humans, but causes great pain, similar to that from burns. The symptoms are very similar to the symptoms of a heart attack from which president Nestor Kirchner died suddenly on the eve of the nomination.

WikiLeaks reported that in 2008 the CIA asked its embassy in Paraguay (Fernando Lugo!) to collect all biometric data, including the DNA of all four presidential candidates. Knowing the DNA code, it is easy to develop an oncogene for each individual. If we assume that such data was obtained on the eve of the elections in Brazil, then cancer of Dilma Russef in 2009 fits into this theory.

Having partially lost its influence in Latin America, the U.S. may have found a much easier and cheaper way to get rid of unwanted “partners.” Over time alpha radiation, electromagnetic waves, or chemicals cause emergence and development of cancer. Using the experience gained, the CIA tested new weapons on the progressive leaders and revolutionaries of Latin America.

The U.S. economy is experiencing a crash no different than that of Greece, and it remains afloat only because it can turn on the money printing machine. Yet, the State Department cannot afford to dominate everywhere by military force, which requires great amounts of money to maintain. Therefore, it is logical to assume that they found new quick and inexpensive methods for the effective destruction of enemies. The most important advantage of these methods is that they leave no traces, disguised as oncology or a heart attack and eliminate the possibility of direct exposure and liability.
Lubov Lulko
Pravda.Ru

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Sequestering American Exceptionalism

By , February 27, 2013 3:12 pm

sequester-sequestration-military-spending-defense-budget-american-exceptionalism-world-policemanThe Obama administration and Republican leaders appear to have reached agreement on at least one issue: preventing sequestration cuts to military spending. “If sequester happens,” said then-Defense Secretary Leon Panetta on February 3, “it’s going to badly damage the readiness of the United States of America.”

Readiness, in this case, means continuing the self-appointed U.S. role of world policeman. “We have the most powerful military force on the face of the earth right now,” continued Panetta. “It is important in terms of providing stability and peace in the world.”

Republican leaders are adamant that fiscal austerity be reserved for domestic programs and not apply to the Pentagon. Their budget strategy since the Reagan era has been to slash taxes and keep military spending high to force deep cuts in social welfare spending and preserve market dominance. 

Most Republican backbenchers are also believers in the U.S. global policeman role. Any further cuts in military spending, according to Representative Ander Crenshaw of Florida, will undermine America’s ability to “respond to crises around the world,” “contain persistent threats from Iran, Syria, the Horn of Africa, and Pakistan,” and “defend liberty.”

The political debate has thus far focused on tradeoffs between domestic and military spending, tax cuts and deficits. Left out are questions about whether the United States should be responsible for policing the world or whether international agencies might address terrorism, aggression, and political instability in a more consistent, comprehensive, and internationally acceptable manner.

The United States adopted its world policeman role at the outset of the Cold War. Its mission to “contain communism” was a slippery one, valid in the case of protecting West Berlin but stretched to the breaking point in supporting repressive regimes and overthrowing democratically elected governments. Still, by the time the Soviet Union dissolved in 1991, many Americans had come to accept this expansive global role, believing that the more military power the United States exerted, the better for the world.

Following the 9/11 terrorist attacks, the George W. Bush administration pursued a military strategy that had only a tangential relationship to protecting Americans from further terrorist attacks. The United States invaded Iraq despite the fact that the United Nations weapons inspection team had successfully squelched Iraq’s ability to produce weapons of mass destruction. The Iraq invasion was preceded by a 2002 National Security Strategy Report that asserted the right of the U.S. to “act against such emerging threats before they are fully formed.”

The Obama administration has extended the Bush doctrine of preemption by authorizing assassinations of suspected “militants” in countries with which the United States is not at war. Such rank unilateralism has no basis in international law, and indeed the UN has opened a major new investigation into the United States’ use of drones and targeted assassinations. 

If it feels an irrepressible urge to deploy its resources abroad, the United States would do well to curb its global pretensions and become more of a team player, putting its military muscle and money behind international agencies. The UN helps protect civilians in war zones, provides humanitarian aid to refugees, promotes the alleviation of poverty and sustainable development, and is a central player in the cause of human rights. A separate International Criminal Court investigates and prosecutes individuals accused of genocide, crimes against humanity, or war crimes. The United States has thus far refused to participate in this court.

By the most conservative estimates, the United States spends over $ 700 billion on its military, accounting for 41 percent of the world’s total military expenditures. Transferring some of these funds to UN agencies, even with expected cuts in the U.S. military budget, would enhance global security without weakening U.S. national security.

The United States is moving against the tide of history in attempting to maintain its self-appointed world policeman role. The development of international institutions and law are more than a century in the making and will no doubt require another century to secure. But the “American Century” is most certainly coming to an end. The goal should be a smooth transition to a more cooperative world order. 

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The Latin American Exception

By , February 21, 2013 5:17 am

The map tells the story.  To illustrate a damning new report, “Globalizing Torture: CIA Secret Detentions and Extraordinary Rendition,” recently published by the Open Society Institute, the Washington Post put together an equally damning graphic: it’s soaked in red, as if with blood, showing that in the years after 9/11, the CIA turned just about the whole world into a gulag archipelago.

Back in the early twentieth century, a similar red-hued map was used to indicate the global reach of the British Empire, on which, it was said, the sun never set.  It seems that, between 9/11 and the day George W. Bush left the White House, CIA-brokered torture never saw a sunset either.

All told, of the 190-odd countries on this planet, a staggering 54 participated in various ways in this American torture system, hosting CIA “black site” prisons, allowing their airspace and airports to be used for secret flights, providing intelligence, kidnapping foreign nationals or their own citizens and handing them over to U.S. agents to be “rendered” to third-party countries like Egypt and Syria.  The hallmark of this network, Open Society writes, has been torture.  Its report documents the names of 136 individuals swept up in what it says is an ongoing operation, though its authors make clear that the total number, implicitly far higher, “will remain unknown” because of the “extraordinary level of government secrecy associated with secret detention and extraordinary rendition.”

No region escapes the stain.  Not North America, home to the global gulag’s command center.  Not Europe, the Middle East, Africa, or Asia.  Not even social-democratic Scandinavia.  Sweden turned over at least two people to the CIA, who were then rendered to Egypt, where they were subject to electric shocks, among other abuses.  No region, that is, except Latin America.

What’s most striking about the Post’s map is that no part of its wine-dark horror touches Latin America; that is, not one country in what used to be called Washington’s “backyard” participated in rendition or Washington-directed or supported torture and abuse of “terror suspects.”  Not even Colombia, which throughout the last two decades was as close to a U.S.-client state as existed in the area.  It’s true that a fleck of red should show up on Cuba, but that would only underscore the point: Teddy Roosevelt took Guantánamo Bay Naval Base for the U.S. in 1903 “in perpetuity.”

Two, Three, Many CIAs 

How did Latin America come to be territorio libre in this new dystopian world of black sites and midnight flights, the Zion of this militarist matrix (as fans of the Wachowskis’ movies might put it)?  After all, it was in Latin America that an earlier generation of U.S. and U.S.-backed counterinsurgents put into place a prototype of Washington’s twenty-first century Global War on Terror.

Even before the 1959 Cuban Revolution, before Che Guevara urged revolutionaries to create “two, three, many Vietnams,” Washington had already set about establishing two, three, many centralized intelligence agencies in Latin America.  As Michael McClintock shows in his indispensable book Instruments of Statecraft, in late 1954, a few months after the CIA’s infamous coup in Guatemala that overthrew a democratically elected government, the National Security Council first recommended strengthening “the internal security forces of friendly foreign countries.”

In the region, this meant three things.  First, CIA agents and other U.S. officials set to work “professionalizing” the security forces of individual countries like Guatemala, Colombia, and Uruguay; that is, turning brutal but often clumsy and corrupt local intelligence apparatuses into efficient, “centralized,” still brutal agencies, capable of gathering information, analyzing it, and storing it.  Most importantly, they were to coordinate different branches of each country’s security forces — the police, military, and paramilitary squads — to act on that information, often lethally and always ruthlessly.

Second, the U.S. greatly expanded the writ of these far more efficient and effective agencies, making it clear that their portfolio included not just national defense but international offense.  They were to be the vanguard of a global war for “freedom” and of an anticommunist reign of terror in the hemisphere.  Third, our men in Montevideo, Santiago, Buenos Aires, Asunción, La Paz, Lima, Quito, San Salvador, Guatemala City, and Managua were to help synchronize the workings of individual national security forces.

The result was state terror on a nearly continent-wide scale.  In the 1970s and 1980s, Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet’s Operation Condor, which linked together the intelligence services of Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay, Paraguay, and Chile, was the most infamous of Latin America’s transnational terror consortiums, reaching out to commit mayhem as far away as Washington D.C., Paris, and Rome.  The U.S. had earlier helped put in place similar operations elsewhere in the Southern hemisphere, especially in Central America in the 1960s.

By the time the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, hundreds of thousands of Latin Americans had been tortured, killed, disappeared, or imprisoned without trial, thanks in significant part to U.S. organizational skills and support.  Latin America was, by then, Washington’s backyard gulag.  Three of the region’s current presidents — Uruguay’s José Mujica, Brazil’s Dilma Rousseff, and Nicaragua’s Daniel Ortega — were victims of this reign of terror.

When the Cold War ended, human rights groups began the herculean task of dismantling the deeply embedded, continent-wide network of intelligence operatives, secret prisons, and torture techniques — and of pushing militaries throughout the region out of governments and back into their barracks.  In the 1990s, Washington not only didn’t stand in the way of this process, but actually lent a hand in depoliticizing Latin America’s armed forces.  Many believed that, with the Soviet Union dispatched, Washington could now project its power in its own “backyard” through softer means like international trade agreements and other forms of economic leverage.  Then 9/11 happened.

“Oh My Goodness”

In late November 2002, just as the basic outlines of the CIA’s secret detention and extraordinary rendition programs were coming into shape elsewhere in the world, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld flew 5,000 miles to Santiago, Chile, to attend a hemispheric meeting of defense ministers.  “Needless to say,” Rumsfeld nonetheless said, “I would not be going all this distance if I did not think this was extremely important.” Indeed.

This was after the invasion of Afghanistan but before the invasion of Iraq and Rumsfeld was riding high, as well as dropping the phrase “September 11th” every chance he got.  Maybe he didn’t know of the special significance that date had in Latin America, but 29 years earlier on the first 9/11, a CIA-backed coup by General Pinochet and his military led to the death of Chile’s democratically elected president Salvador Allende.  Or did he, in fact, know just what it meant and was that the point?  After all, a new global fight for freedom, a proclaimed Global War on Terror, was underway and Rumsfeld had arrived to round up recruits.

There, in Santiago, the city out of which Pinochet had run Operation Condor, Rumsfeld and other Pentagon officials tried to sell what they were now terming the “integration” of “various specialized capabilities into larger regional capabilities” — an insipid way of describing the kidnapping, torturing, and death-dealing already underway elsewhere. “Events around the world before and after September 11th suggest the advantages,” Rumsfeld said, of nations working together to confront the terror threat.

“Oh my goodness,” Rumsfeld told a Chilean reporter, “the kinds of threats we face are global.”  Latin America was at peace, he admitted, but he had a warning for its leaders: they shouldn’t lull themselves into believing that the continent was safe from the clouds gathering elsewhere.  Dangers exist, “old threats, such as drugs, organized crime, illegal arms trafficking, hostage taking, piracy, and money laundering; new threats, such as cyber-crime; and unknown threats, which can emerge without warning.”

“These new threats,” he added ominously, “must be countered with new capabilities.” Thanks to the Open Society report, we can see exactly what Rumsfeld meant by those “new capabilities.”

A few weeks prior to Rumsfeld’s arrival in Santiago, for example, the U.S., acting on false information supplied by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, detained Maher Arar, who holds dual Syrian and Canadian citizenship, at New York’s John F. Kennedy airport and then handed him over to a “Special Removal Unit.” He was flown first to Jordan, where he was beaten, and then to Syria, a country in a time zone five hours ahead of Chile, where he was turned over to local torturers.  On November 18th, when Rumsfeld was giving his noon speech in Santiago, it was five in the afternoon in Arar’s “grave-like” cell in a Syrian prison, where he would spend the next year being abused. 

Ghairat Baheer was captured in Pakistan about three weeks before Rumsfeld’s Chile trip, and thrown into a CIA-run prison in Afghanistan called the Salt Pit.  As the secretary of defense praised Latin America’s return to the rule of law after the dark days of the Cold War, Baheer may well have been in the middle of one of his torture sessions, “hung naked for hours on end.”

Taken a month before Rumsfeld’s visit to Santiago, the Saudi national Abd al Rahim al Nashiri was transported to the Salt Pit, after which he was transferred “to another black site in Bangkok, Thailand, where he was waterboarded.” After that, he was passed on to Poland, Morocco, Guantánamo, Romania, and back to Guantánamo, where he remains.  Along the way, he was subjected to a “mock execution with a power drill as he stood naked and hooded,” had U.S. interrogators rack a “semi-automatic handgun close to his head as he sat shackled before them.”  His interrogators also “threatened to bring in his mother and sexually abuse her in front of him.”

Likewise a month before the Santiago meeting, the Yemini Bashi Nasir Ali Al Marwalah was flown to Camp X-Ray in Cuba, where he remains to this day.   

Less than two weeks after Rumsfeld swore that the U.S. and Latin America shared “common values,” Mullah Habibullah, an Afghan national, died “after severe mistreatment” in CIA custody at something called the “Bagram Collection Point.” A U.S. military investigation “concluded that the use of stress positions and sleep deprivation combined with other mistreatment… caused, or were direct contributing factors in, his death.”

Two days after the secretary’s Santiago speech, a CIA case officer in the Salt Pit had Gul Rahma stripped naked and chained to a concrete floor without blankets.  Rahma froze to death.     

And so the Open Society report goes… on and on and on.

Territorio Libre 

Rumsfeld left Santiago without firm commitments.  Some of the region’s militaries were tempted by the supposed opportunities offered by the secretary’s vision of fusing crime fighting into an ideological campaign against radical Islam, a unified war in which all was to be subordinated to U.S. command.  As political scientist Brian Loveman has noted, around the time of Rumsfeld’s Santiago visit, the head of the Argentine army picked up Washington’s latest set of themes, insisting that “defense must be treated as an integral matter,” without a false divide separating internal and external security.

But history was not on Rumsfeld’s side.  His trip to Santiago coincided with Argentina’s epic financial meltdown, among the worst in recorded history.  It signaled a broader collapse of the economic model — think of it as Reaganism on steroids — that Washington had been promoting in Latin America since the late Cold War years.  Soon, a new generation of leftists would be in power across much of the continent, committed to the idea of national sovereignty and limiting Washington’s influence in the region in a way that their predecessors hadn’t been. 

Hugo Chávez was already president of Venezuela.  Just a month before Rumsfeld’s Santiago trip, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva won the presidency of Brazil. A few months later, in early 2003, Argentines elected Néstor Kirchner, who shortly thereafter ended his country’s joint military exercises with the U.S.  In the years that followed, the U.S. experienced one setback after another.  In 2008, for instance, Ecuador evicted the U.S. military from Manta Air Base.  

In that same period, the Bush administration’s rush to invade Iraq, an act most Latin American countries opposed, helped squander whatever was left of the post-9/11 goodwill the U.S. had in the region.  Iraq seemed to confirm the worst suspicions of the continent’s new leaders: that what Rumsfeld was trying to peddle as an international “peacekeeping” force would be little more than a bid to use Latin American soldiers as Gurkhas in a revived unilateral imperial war. 

Brazil’s “Smokescreen”

Diplomatic cables released by Wikileaks show the degree to which Brazil rebuffed efforts to paint the region red on Washington’s new global gulag map.

A May 2005 U.S. State Department cable, for instance, reveals that Lula’s government refused “multiple requests” by Washington to take in released Guantánamo prisoners, particularly a group of about 15 Uighurs the U.S. had been holding since 2002, who could not be sent back to China.

“[Brazil’s] position regarding this issue has not changed since 2003 and will likely not change in the foreseeable future,” the cable said.  It went on to report that Lula’s government considered the whole system Washington had set up at Guantánamo (and around the world) to be a mockery of international law.  “All attempts to discuss this issue” with Brazilian officials, the cable concluded, “were flatly refused or accepted begrudgingly.”

In addition, Brazil refused to cooperate with the Bush administration’s efforts to create a Western Hemisphere-wide version of the Patriot Act.  It stonewalled, for example, about agreeing to revise its legal code in a way that would lower the standard of evidence needed to prove conspiracy, while widening the definition of what criminal conspiracy entailed.

Lula stalled for years on the initiative, but it seems that the State Department didn’t realize he was doing so until April 2008, when one of its diplomats wrote a memo calling Brazil’s supposed interest in reforming its legal code to suit Washington a “smokescreen.”  The Brazilian government, another Wikileaked cable complained, was afraid that a more expansive definition of terrorism would be used to target “members of what they consider to be legitimate social movements fighting for a more just society.” Apparently, there was no way to “write an anti-terrorism legislation that excludes the actions” of Lula’s left-wing social base.

One U.S. diplomat complained that this “mindset” — that is, a mindset that actually valued civil liberties  – “presents serious challenges to our efforts to enhance counterterrorism cooperation or promote passage of anti-terrorism legislation.”  In addition, the Brazilian government worried that the legislation would be used to go after Arab-Brazilians, of which there are many.  One can imagine that if Brazil and the rest of Latin America had signed up to participate in Washington’s rendition program, Open Society would have a lot more Middle Eastern-sounding names to add to its list. 

Finally, cable after Wikileaked cable revealed that Brazil repeatedly brushed off efforts by Washington to isolate Venezuela’s Hugo Chávez, which would have been a necessary step if the U.S. was going to marshal South America into its counterterrorism posse. 

In February 2008, for example, U.S. ambassador to Brazil Clifford Sobell met with Lula’s Minister of Defense Nelson Jobin to complain about Chávez.  Jobim told Sobell that Brazil shared his “concern about the possibility of Venezuela exporting instability.”  But instead of “isolating Venezuela,” which might only “lead to further posturing,” Jobim instead indicated that his government “supports [the] creation of a ‘South American Defense Council’ to bring Chavez into the mainstream.”

There was only one catch here: that South American Defense Council was Chávez’s idea in the first place!  It was part of his effort, in partnership with Lula, to create independent institutions parallel to those controlled by Washington.  The memo concluded with the U.S. ambassador noting how curious it was that Brazil would use Chavez’s “idea for defense cooperation” as part of a “supposed containment strategy” of Chávez. 

Monkey-Wrenching the Perfect Machine of Perpetual War

Unable to put in place its post-9/11 counterterrorism framework in all of Latin America, the Bush administration retrenched.  It attempted instead to build a “perfect machine of perpetual war” in a corridor running from Colombia through Central America to Mexico.  The process of militarizing that more limited region, often under the guise of fighting “the drug wars,” has, if anything, escalated in the Obama years.  Central America has, in fact, become the only place Southcom — the Pentagon command that covers Central and South America — can operate more or less at will.  A look at this other map, put together by the Fellowship of Reconciliation, makes the region look like one big landing strip for U.S. drones and drug-interdiction flights. 

Washington does continue to push and probe further south, trying yet again to establish a firmer military foothold in the region and rope it into what is now a less ideological and more technocratic crusade, but one still global in its aspirations.  U.S. military strategists, for instance, would very much like to have an airstrip in French Guyana or the part of Brazil that bulges out into the Atlantic.  The Pentagon would use it as a stepping stone to its increasing presence in Africa, coordinating the work of Southcom with the newest global command, Africom.   

But for now, South America has thrown a monkey wrench into the machine.  Returning to that Washington Post map, it’s worth memorializing the simple fact that, in one part of the world, in this century at least, the sun never rose on US-choreographed torture.

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Brutally beaten by his American adoptive parents, who earlier gave him psychotropic medication for an extended period of time, a 3-year-old Russian boy Died!

By , February 19, 2013 1:03 pm

Brutally beaten by his American adoptive parents, who earlier gave him psychotropic medication for an extended period of time, a 3-year-old Russian boy Died!
By: Bulov on: 19.02.2013 [05:05 ] (119 reads)

3 year old Russian boy killed by American adoptive mother in Texas
http://rt.com/news/russian-child-killed-texas-496/

Brutally beaten by his American adoptive parents, who earlier gave him psychotropic medication for an extended period of time, a 3-year-old Russian boy Died!

Published: 18 February, 2013, 17:57
Edited: 18 February, 2013, 22:24
TAGS:
Children, Crime, Russia, Politics, Human rights, Law, USA, Violence

(AFP Photo / Mark Ralston)
After being brutally beaten by his American adoptive mother, who gave him psychotropic medication for an extended period of time, a 3-year-old Russian boy named Maksim has died in Texas, Russian diplomats have said.
Russia’s Investigative Committee has launched a probe into the death of Maksim Kuzmin at the hands of his adoptive American family.
The boy died before medics, called by his adoptive mother, arrived at the scene. An autopsy showed that he suffered multiple injuries to his head, limb, abdomen and internal organs prior to death.
The investigation revealed that Maksim was beaten by his adoptive mother, who had also fed him strong psychotropic medication. The boy was given Risperdal, an anti-psychotic drug mainly used for short-term treatment of schizophrenia and bilateral disorders and approved for prescription in the US with the starting age of 10.
The US State Department did not comment on the boy’s death, which reportedly happened on January 21. Nevertheless, the incident became known to the Russian Embassy in the US.
Russian Children’s Ombudsman Pavel Astakhov has asked the Russian Foreign Ministry to conduct an impartial investigation, and to keep Russia informed of all details concerning Maksim’s death.
Russian MFA Representative for Human Rights Konstantin Dolgov said the US State Department failed to provide help to the Russian diplomats investigating Kuzmin’s death. In a Twitter post, Dolgov called the incident “yet another inhuman abuse of a Russian child adopted by an American family,” and said he was expecting “severe punishment for those found guilty in his death.”
Maksim’s death comes amid heightened Russia-US tensions, which center on children and human rights abuses. The boy’s death was less than a month after the ‘Dima Yakovlev Law’ banning US citizens from adopting Russian foster children came into force.
Although the two countries agreed in 2012 to form a joint task force to investigate crimes against adopted Russian children, Russian politicians and law enforcement have repeatedly said the US is reluctant to cooperate on the matter. They also noted that convicted American parents were given soft sentences for their cruel treatment, or even manslaughter, of Russian kids, which was said to be one of the grounds for the adoption ban bill.

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