Book Review: The Sutras of Abu Ghraib

The Sutras of Abu Ghraib: Notes from a Conscientious Objector in Iraq

Special Note:  Aidan Delgado will be online here at Docudharma to talk about the book and his experiences in Iraq. Please join in the conversation –

Sunday, October 28th at 9 PM Eastern / 6 PM Pacific 

A few weeks ago Aidan Delgado sent us an email asking if we would help promote his new book about the Iraq War and how he came to be a Conscientious Objector.  We were more than happy to do so.  A few days later I received a copy of the book from the publisher, Beacon Press.  The story is well written and captivating –  highly recommended.  Here are a few more thoughts I will share with you… 

It takes courage to become a soldier and go to war.  It takes more courage to stand up for your principles and do the right thing.  This book is more than just a war story. As Delgado puts it: 

This book is not about who I am and what happened to me, even though you will read about who I am and what happened to me.  It is a story about a struggle that we all face, a story about deciding what you believe is right and upholding that belief to the bitter end, come what may.



Artist: Dadara

The son of a diplomat, Aidan Delgado spent his childhood and teen years overseas.  He lived in Thailand, Senegal, and Egypt before moving to the US for college.  This worldly experience gave him a perspective that most young people can’t appreciate.  His first year at college, he had trouble adjusting to the school and decided that he would take a break and join the Army reserve for a different kind of challenge.  By freakish coincidence, 9/11/01 was the day he went in to sign the contract. The ink was barely dry on the paper when news of the World Trade Center and Pentagon attacks came on the TV. Despite his  academic background he chose to enlist as a mechanic.  Having never worked on a car before, he relished the chance to work with his hands instead of his mind.  Once he signed up, he had to wait six weeks before going to basic training.  He had already taken leave from college but was still living in the dorms.  With nothing else to do, he went to the library and checked out a bunch of books on Buddhism.  After reading just one book, he realized that he had been Buddhist all his life, he just didn’t know it.  He grasped the truth of it and continued studying and practicing Buddhism during the lead up to his deployment.  He already recognized that this path was  incongruous with being a soldier but he thought that he could deal with it.

March 2003 – Delgado’s unit, the 320th Military Police Company, shipped out to Iraq.  After a brief stay at a base in Kuwait he crossed the Iraq border and was stationed at Tallil Airbase in southern Iraq.  The feeling at the time was that Sadaam would be defeated and the war would be over in less than 6 months. Ha!  Anyway, from the very early days, boredom was the prevailing spirit.  It was a dusty, dreary, mind-numbing existence.  The food, water and harsh climate added to the misery.  For ‘fun’ some of the MPs would chase down and shoot the starving wild dogs from their trucks.  This bothered Delgado and some of his friends, but military bravado dictated that no one say anything lest they appear soft and wimpy.  This gratuitous violence escalated into throwing bottles at civilians they passed on the roads, to striking children, and pointing weapons at unarmed men for the slightest provocation.

In addition to repairing humvees, Delgado was chosen to be the radio operator at the POW camp on base.  The prisoners, mostly young men his age, were corralled in pens surrounded by earthen walls and razor wire.  Delgado wrote to his girlfriend:

…I’m sitting here bored and suddenly very lonely.  Maybe it’s the sight of all these prisoners:  ragged, dirty, half-starved, with looks of utter bewilderment and confusion on their faces.  I watch them being herded into barbed-wire cages and I can’t help but feel terribly sorry for them, no matter who they are or were, no matter how black their hearts have been….I just feel this deep, abiding sorrow for them. They seem so utterly wasted and defeated. 

 


prisoners being transported from Tallil

As a high school student in Cairo, Delgado learned to speak some Arabic.  Not fluently, but more than anyone else in his platoon knew, by far. The base at Tallil was not far from Nasiryah and Delgado was frequently taken on missions to that town as a translator in order to purchase food, ice and other ‘luxury’ items, like air conditioners. At that time in southern Iraq, the civilians were friendly to the Army and the fact that Delgado could speak even halting Arabic was very much appreciated by the people there.  They would surround him and smile and give him hugs.  However, his ability to communicate with the Iraqis in this friendly manner eventually became a cause for his fellow soldiers to mistrust him and regard him as a “terrorist sympathizer”. 


Self portrait taken outside one of Sadaam’s palaces

Becoming increasingly depressed and disgusted with the extreme prejudice of many of the soldiers toward the ‘ragheads’, Delgado made a difficult decision to file for Conscientious Objector status.  He turned in his weapon because he couldn’t stand feeling like a hypocrite and “the worst Buddhist in the world”. His Sergeant and the Chaplain counseled him that this would be an extremely hard process and that he would likely be shunned by everyone else in the unit. The chain of command would do everything they could to make his life difficult in order to get him to retract his CO application.  And that is exactly what happened. Except for his closest friends in the motor pool, everyone else considered him a coward and/or a traitor. His commander refused to give him a two-week leave to go home because he was considered a “flight risk”.  They also had the audacity to take away his body armor, telling him that since he wouldn’t be in battle, what good would it be.  In reality, at Abu Ghraib they were under constant mortar fire from insurgents outside the camp and he really needed that protection.  (Like anyone in Iraq wouldn’t!)

After six months at Tallil, the company is given orders to move out.  They are going to the prison camp at Abu Ghraib. 


The Ganci compounds at Abu Ghraib

November 2003 – Once at Abu Ghraib his superiors continue to make his life as miserable as possible and assign him double duty  – at the motor pool and also as the radio operator at prison headquarters.  In that role he was able to get the inside scoop on how the prison operated. As everyone now knows, it was a wretched hell-hole.  They were understaffed with just a few companies of soldiers to handle 4000-6000 prisoners.  It turns out most of them are not even enemy POWs.  They are charged with crimes like petty theft, drunkenness, and “suspicious activity”. The prisoners lived outdoors in deplorable conditions.  The food was rotten, everyone was sick, and most of the prisoners got lost in the bureaucracy.  The problem of “phantom prisoners” – no one knew for sure who was at Abu Ghraib because the inmates were constantly being shuffled around to other facilities.  It’s just a few months later that the scandal with the photos broke out. An MP sent copies of the prisoner abuse photos to CNN.  Right away the commanders tell them all to stop talking about it and that things “will be handled internally”.

Anyone who rocks the boat is quickly punished and isolated; the chain of command seems designed to make sure that any problems never reach a level where someone can do something about them.  The sad truth is that often the only way to make changes is go outside the Army system and take grievances to the media, to Congress, or to the American public.

March 2004 – After one year (and still not knowing the status of his CO application) Delgado goes home.  Like many soldiers, he has trouble readjusting to life in the US.  His relationship with his girlfriend is strained.  Somewhat anticlimactically, he receives approval for his conscientious objector status and is honorably discharged from the Army.  He goes back to school and eventually begins speaking out against the war.  This book is his legacy.  He speaks his truth about the war and doesn’t shy away from this responsibility or his Buddhist tenets. 

Cease to do negative actions,
learn to do positive actions,
control your mind,
and benefit others,
that is the teaching of the Buddha.


Wat Phrathat Doi Suthep (Thailand)
flickr Creative Commons



Visit Aidan’s website for more pictures and information. 

Pony Party: Lack of morning cheer Edition

Morning. But wait I can’t have my usual three cups of coffee, I must cut back.

You know this will work out just fine as long as nobody talks to me until say…. the afternoon….

Anybody with suggestions on tasty caffeine free things please don’t hesitate to come forward….

My husband loves Andy Griffith. I find him annoying. It must be a southern thing. He was great in Face in the Crowd, though….

Face in the Crowd ranks up there as a movie that still holds relevance. If you really want to get depressed watch it in a double bill with Network.

Ahhhhhhhh…..

Please don’t rec the pony party, hang out, chit chat and then read some of the excellent offerings here…

See, That Right There …

( – promoted by Nightprowlkitty)

I have a friend at work whose young daughter started a bit of a trend with us.

She saw her older brother doing something wrong  and she pointed to him and said, “see, that right there … you have to change your attitude!”  So now whenever something idiotic happens at work, the “management” does its usual bad job, we say “see, that right there …” and add whatever comment we have.

From Woman of Color Blog brownfemipower tell us:

Chicago Military Public Schools Draw Mixed Reactions

Yes, you read that right, the U.S. military is running four Chicago public schools. And it’s actually fucking *debated* on NPR on whether or not this is ‘ok’.
via NPR
Tell Me More, October 23, 2007 · Chicago Public Schools is allowing the United States military to run four of its schools. The decision is raising question about what involvement, if any, the armed forces should have in educating Chicago’s children. The relative of a middle-schooler who currently attends one of the city’s military education programs, is joined by a vocal critic of the concept. They share differing views.

From The Chicago Tribune (warning, PDF):

CPS Daily Clips
CHICAGO TRIBUNE
Copyright 2007 Chicago Tribune Company
October 15, 2007

Reading, writing, recruiting? Debate rages as city’s newest facility is dedicated
By: Stephanie Banchero and Carlos Sadovi

Chicago Public Schools , which already has the largest junior military reserve program in the nation, on Monday will commission the country’s first public high school run by the U.S. Marines, much to the chagrin of activists who have fought to keep the armed services out of city schools.

The dedication of the Marine Military Academy on the Near West Side comes a few days after Chicago officials announced plans to open an Air Force academy high school in 2009. If that happens, Chicago will become the only public school district in the nation to have academies dedicated to the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marines.

District officials say the military-themed schools give students more choices and provide an opportunity to enroll in schools that provide structure, discipline and a focus on leadership. They say the schools emphasize academics, not recruitment. “We have to think outside the box, and what existed before simply did not work for far too many students,” said Chicago Public Schools Chief Arne Duncan. “These schools are popular and have waiting lists, so that tells me parents want more of them.”

But critics argue the military academies and other district Junior ROTC programs unfairly target poor and minority teenagers for military service.

“We’re already the most militarized school system in the nation, and the [district] officials just keep opening more programs, as if they have no problem being a recruitment tool for the military,” said Brian Roa, a member of the National Network Opposing Militarization of Youth and a science teacher at Senn High School on the North Side. Senn shares a building with Rickover Naval Academy. “Chicago Public Schools should be in the business of educating children, not finding ways to indoctrinate them into the military.”

Nearly a century old, The Junior ROTC was created in 1916 as a way to develop citizenship in teenagers. It grew incrementally for decades until the 1990s, when it dramatically expanded. Today,about 500,000 students are enrolled in high school military programs nationwide. Chicago has the nation’s largest junior cadet program.

“This is not a recruiting tool, but a way to help students succeed at whatever career they might choose,” said Army Lt. Col. Rick Mills, who oversees the district’s JROTC. “We intend to use the academies to take students who perform in the middle range and use the military model to enhance their postsecondary education.”

Many of the students interviewed at the naval high school, which opened two years ago, said they chose the school for its focus on discipline. Most said they do not intend to enlist.

Natassa Bourkas, a 16-year-old who plans to attend college, said she hopes she will stand out from other students applying to colleges.

“When people see that we went to a military school, they know we’re obedient, we follow directions, we’re disciplined,” said the student, who plans to become a pediatric cardiologist.

But despite a stated focus on college prep, the city’s military academies have had mixed academic records since the first academy opened in 2000.

Pass rates on the 2006 high school state exam range from about 9 percent to 30 percent at the military academies, compared with the district’s average of 32 percent. None of the academies met federal No Child Left Behind testing standards last year.


See, that right there … that attitude.

Since when is the military the only source to learn discipline and values?  This is the best we can come up with?  Leaving aside the obvious, that these kids are being targeted to be military cannonfodder, leaving aside that the results are not terribly impressive when it comes to test scores, is this how low we have sunk?  Do we really find the military culture to be the best when it comes to educating our children?

It was sad reading about this, seeing the hopes of both parents and children, the myth of military school being for the elite and somehow that will rub off on their own schooling.  Yes, this is how far we have sunk.  See, that right there … that attitude.

Browsing through the diversosphere, I found an amazing video, a poetry performance from Kelly Zen-Yie Tsai.  (h/t to angry asian man).  It’s entitled By-Standing: The Beginning of an American Lifetime:

I dunno, it seemed a great response to those who think the military would do a good job of running our high schools.  I like this woman’s stuff.  See, that right there … that attitude … it’s good!

Send Mojo, Juju, Prayers and Happy Thoughts!

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3 Strikes=I’m Out!

I’m so frustrated…I’m all set to go to Boston this morning to protest, rain and all…

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Fine, I can deal with rain…I guess.  I think the paint on my “NO MORE WAR” sign is water proof, so it won’t run.
But I just got a call from the baby sitter, she is sick this morning.  Great no baby sitter for the kids.  I quickly call the MIL,
“Mom?  Can you take the kids for me today, please?” 
“Sorry, hun…I can’t.  I have to go visit two friends in the hospital.” 
Cool, she’s being charitable, I can’t compete with that.
“Thanks anyway Mom”
I can’t ask the kids to stand in the rain with me, really.  But….perhaps, it might work, we have good rain gear…
Strike One!

Five minutes later, the phone rings…
“Is this Kris?” 
“Yes!”
“Hi Kris, This is **** from CCPJ, I’m sorry to tell you, but we had to cancel the bus to Boston this morning, we didn’t have enough people sign up!”
“Seriously?” (under breath…”Fuck”)
“But we hope to see you there, look for our banner, Cape Codders for Peace and Justice…!”
“Okay, thanks!”
Strike Two!

Get in the car, maybe the rain won’t be too bad, got kids, sign, video camera…
and a dead battery, run to the neighbors…
“Hey bud, can you give me jump, my battery died.”
“Yeah, sure Kris!”
Then I’m thinking, but what if I turn off my car and it doesn’t start in Boston with the kids.  I’d hate to be stuck in Boston.  Even with AAA, I’m two hours away from home…in the rain!
Strike Three!

UGH!!!!

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PKK Bush Ralston Lockheed Scandal Breaks Into Wapo!

(kidneystones, keeping the pressure on! …@3 – promoted by buhdydharma )

Don Rumsfeld was charged with war-crimes today. Bushco’s connection to Mid-East terrorism and pork may be the next story to blow.

Wapo

Retired Air Force Gen. Joseph W. Ralston, a former NATO commander Bush appointed last year as his special envoy to work on the issue, left the job recently because of what several sources described as his frustration at the administration’s failure to devote serious attention to the problem. Ralston, vice chairman of an international consulting firm led by former defense secretary William S. Cohen, did not return several calls for comment.

There’s far more at stake…

“He never said he was leaving in protest,” another administration official said of Ralston, adding that the one-year appointment had expired. “But I guess you could speculate that if things were really going gangbusters, maybe he would have stayed on.”

Ralston was selling Lockheed fighters to the Turkish military when he was supposed to be eliminating PKK activity in northern Iraq. Ralston officially quit two weeks ago around October 11th just as the shit started to hit the fan. After some digging it became clear that Ralston actually walked off the job sometime in July this year. Why?

PKK/PJAK terrorists stepped up their attacks this summer. Turkish soldiers and Iranian soldiers were the victims, leading to the present crisis with Turkey. US security contractors‘ vehicles were sighted at the headquarters of PKK Leader Murat Karayilan just weeks ago.

We were well on top of the Bush/Ralston/PJAK connection long before the MSM. The Wapo coverage is just the tip of the ice-berg. We need to keep the pressure on. Ralston needs to go before Congress and testify under oath about what he knows about the Lockheed deal and Bush support for Middle Eastern terrorism.

Pony Party: Torment Edition

Went to the doctor for what is likely a minor problem. If it doesn’t go away I am to have some tests in a month or so.

Here is the kicker…. my small issue is related to caffeine intake and so I must at least HALF my caffeine consumption. He made me list all of my caffeine sources and laughed and squeezed my hand. All I can say is super duper fuckety fuck.

I am already calculating trade offs: I would rather give up sodas than coffee and tea. I already know water is good for me… sigh…

These ponies are probably grouchy because somebody tried to take their caffeine away…

DSC_0003

I’m gonna be prickly….

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Alright maybe music will soothe the soul…

Stay and chit chat but please don’t rec the pony party, look at some other excellent diaries on our recent list or the FP.

A Day in the Life of our Border Collie, Lucy

A few years ago, my wife and I needed assistance moving our homestead from the world of ideas to the material world. Neither of us grew up on a farm. Both of us had little homestead related hands-on experience. One could say that the first step had been taken years ago when my wife started researching this way of life. We had also gradually begun planning for our homestead, had written a family mission statement which included a homesteading way of life, had had children whose very natures demanded a farm life, and we had at last succeeded in moving to the country. Each of these actions got us moving in the direction of the homestead but we weren’t sure how to take the next concrete step. Shortly after moving to our own place in the country, one particular event put us past the point of no return and that was when our Border Collie, Lucy, came to live with us. She was our first farm animal. With each additional animal we became more and more like homesteaders but it all started with Lucy.

Cross posted at Pockets of the Future and dkos

Lucy came to us through a homeschooling exercise. My wife and I were designing a homeschooling curriculum to supplement an ABC book we wrote for our children based upon our spiritual philosophy. The curriculum features lessons and activities that correspond to each letter of the alphabet. We worked on the letter D for over a month because we started doing a unit study on the dog. Dogs remind us of so many spiritual characteristics important to us such as devotion, love, loyalty, and service and there are many stories and books about special dogs that illustrate these qualities beautifully. The whole family enjoyed this study so much that we just couldn’t seem to move on. We would find another story or come up with a new exercise so that we didn’t move on to the letter E. As we studied the qualities of the dog, our hearts began opening to the idea of adding one to our family. My wife and I were starting a business at the time as well as beginning to homeschool our children while developing the aforementioned curriculum. We felt maxed out. With six children, four of them under six years old, we did not feel ready to take on something new. But the dog talk was reverberating all through the house and there was no stopping it.

So then we went to a local vegetarian festival where I had a booth promoting my now defunct counseling business. Early in the day, I walked around the venue. I noticed a set of booths for a group trying to save doomed dogs and cats who had a week before they would be put down. One happy looking dog that looked like a Border Collie caught my eye. I walked back to our booth and mentioned the dog to my wife who had just read something about Border Collies a few days before. Before I knew it, my children were excitedly taking turns walking around the festival with the dog. I knew that there was going to be no turning back then. We brought her home that very evening. In one of the mysteries of life, my counseling business and our homestead intersected that day. The homestead just took off after that with one animal after another coming to live with us, one skill after another being learned, barns being built and milk pouring in whereas the counseling business was shut out on all levels. It seems that nature gave a nod to one while stiff arming the other. Even though Leslie and I put more into the counseling business in terms of time and resources, the homestead grew and flourishes today whereas the counseling business is but a distant memory.

It was soon clear to us that Lucy possessed all of the qualities we had been studying about in dogs. Border Collies are working dogs first and foremost. They are highly intelligent and sensitive. They really, really want to please their owner or master. They are devoted and eager to please, hanging on their master’s every instruction. At the higher levels of master and dog, artistry is reached where the nonverbal communication is so precise that dog and owner become one. The Border Collie can anticipate what their master wants them to do sometimes even before the owner themselves has thought of it. Lucy was such a dog. Now I understand why dog owners shower their dogs with such gifts. My wife and I have been thinking about doing the same with Lucy. One of our children told us about a service that would allow us to make a painting of Lucy for our living room. Can you make Custom Pet Portraits On Canvas? I had no idea you could do such a thing until my children told me about it. I’d have to look into that for Lucy since she is worth it. It would make an excellent gift for the family. She would look beautiful on canvas.

Lucy has gentle, deep brown light-filled eyes which reflect the nature of her essence. She is extremely patient and gentle with the children and above all else she wants to serve the family. At first she would not even relieve herself on her own. We had to walk her into the woods on our property twice a day. Some Border Collies only relive themselves in the woods and not on the pasture unless the grass is really think and deep. Lucy was so intent on serving that she would just sit and wait at the back porch. If we didn’t walk her into the woods, she would not relieve herself but only wait for us.

Lucy had boundless energy and enthusiasm. After doing a little research, we quickly learned that Border Collies need to work. They are like gifted children who have an essential need to put their talents to use. If they don’t have a venue for their talents, they turn to mischief and can eventually develop antisocial type behaviors. It was obvious that Lucy had herding talents that needed to be expressed. As a thoroughbred needs to run, a herding dog needs to herd. It is a part of their genetic structure. As we had no livestock at the time, we taught her to catch a Frisbee. We tired out her out with this a few times a day but that was really not enough for her. I felt personally responsible to help Lucy develop her gifts and actualize the herding dog she was destined to become. That is one of the wonderful things about being a parent or pet owner or supervisor. You are responsible to create the conditions for your charges to become their best and that makes you change and grow. There were a lot of forces within our family unit pulling for a homestead and these forces began pulling the homesteader out of me, a change for the better.

A year or so after Lucy came to live with us, we began to acquire livestock. Each new animal added a different element and condition to our lives. Unfortunately, we were unable to train Lucy to herd properly. We did not know how to train her and we were juggling so many balls that we never had the time or the resources to either learn ourselves or bring her to somebody else to train her. More often than not, Lucy would do the opposite of what we wanted her to do when it came to herding. We tended to drive the animals from behind so Lucy would get in front of the animals and push them back towards us. This is not what we wanted her to do but we later learned how this made sense from her point of view. We also learned that Border Collies are so sensitive and eager to please that they can easily have their spirits broken by harsh words and treatment. That is why you’re not supposed to say “No!” to them. Instead you say, “That’ll do.” We tried to remember this and usually praised her for doing the slightest thing right. But there were times of frustration, of course and deep down Lucy must have known that she was just sort of “pretend herding”.

She is now about four years old. I was getting concerned that the window of opportunity for her to learn to be a proper herding dog was probably closing. She is such a valued member of our family and such a contributor to the joy of our homestead that I felt, to some extent, that we had failed her. We have been making videos of our homestead for months now. We had just completed the video series “A Day on Our Homestead”. The next series was scheduled to be a day in the life of our Border Collie. And in the magic that is a spirit’s need to actualize itself, Lucy had a major herding breakthrough a week before we shot her video. She suddenly just got it one day and ran out into the pasture and brought the cows to us to be milked and then took them back out to the pasture when milking was done. She has been doing it ever since as you will see on the videos. As soon as Lucy hears the rattling of milking pails she runs out into the pasture and brings Phoebe up to the gate to be milked. By the time we make it to the gate the two of them are standing there waiting for us. This has been wonderful for us and for Lucy.

We are still fine-tuning her skills but now Lucy is a genuine contributor to the work of the homestead and has become what she was meant to become – a herding dog. When we first got her, her temporary name was Blair. That was not her real name though. Almost immediately after bringing her home, the name Lucy came through. “Lucy” means light and that is what you see in her eyes and that is what you feel being around her. She lights up the area wherever she goes and people everywhere respond to her that way. We are lucky to have her.  The videos are embedded below.

Docudharma Times Saturday Oct. 27

This is an Open Thread: Speak To Me



USA

‘I Don’t Think This Place Is Worth Another Soldier’s Life’

Oct. 26 Their line of tan Humvees and Bradley Fighting Vehicles creeps through another Baghdad afternoon. At this pace, an excruciating slowness, they strain to see everything, hoping the next manhole cover, the next rusted barrel, does not hide another bomb. A few bullets pass overhead, but they don’t worry much about those.


“I hate this road,” someone says over the radio.

They stop, look around. The streets of Sadiyah are deserted again. To the right, power lines slump down into the dirt. To the left, what was a soccer field is now a pasture of trash, combusting and smoking in the sun. Packs of skinny wild dogs trot past walls painted with slogans of sectarian hate.

From CIA Jails, Inmates Fade Into Obscurity

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — On Sept. 6, 2006, President Bush announced that the CIA’s overseas secret prisons had been temporarily emptied and 14 al-Qaeda leaders taken to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. But since then, there has been no official accounting of what happened to about 30 other “ghost prisoners” who spent extended time in the custody of the CIA.


Some have been secretly transferred to their home countries, where they remain in detention and out of public view, according to interviews in Pakistan and Europe with government officials, human rights groups and lawyers for the detainees. Others have disappeared without a trace and may or may not still be under CIA control.

63 years later, Army exonerates black troops

By Jonathan Martin


Seattle Times staff reporter

For more than a half-century, the convictions of 28 African-American soldiers for a riot that ended in the lynching of an Italian prisoner of ISTANBUL, Turkey – Turkey’s leadership will hold off on ordering an offensive against Kurdish guerrilla bases in northern Iraq until the prime minister visits Washington early next month, the military chief said Friday.war at Seattle’s Fort Lawton during World War II has held an uneasy place in history.


It was the Army’s largest court-martial of the war, and it was one of the region’s worst conflicts between blacks and whites.

Merrill Lynch Weighs Ouster of Top Officer

The board of Merrill Lynch, its frustration mounting over the brokerage firm’s credit losses and the decision-making of its embattled chief executive, E. Stanley O’Neal, has begun to actively consider whether to replace him and with whom, according to people briefed on the board’s deliberations.

The discussions underscore Mr. O’Neal’s precarious position. Once credited with turning Merrill Lynch around, Mr. O’Neal is struggling to retain his job in the wake of a third-quarter loss of $2.3 billion and an $8.4 billion charge for failed credit and mortgage-related investments. He has also clashed with his directors over an approach he made to a rival bank, Wachovia, for a possible merger, The New York Times reported yesterday.


Middle East

Turkey: Wait-and-see approach in Iraq

ISTANBUL, Turkey – Turkey’s leadership will hold off on ordering an offensive against Kurdish guerrilla bases in northern Iraq until the prime minister visits Washington early next month, the military chief said Friday.

The country’s civilian leaders, meanwhile, said they were not satisfied with proposals from Iraq’s U.S.-backed government for dealing with Turkish Kurd separatist fighters who take shelter across the border.

Discontent boils among Egypt workers

By Jeffrey Fleishman, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

October 27, 2007

EL MAHALLA EL KUBRA, EGYPT — President Hosni Mubarak faces discontent from many quarters, but perhaps the most intense criticism resonates from the banners and shaking fists of militant workers who have broken away from government-controlled unions and staged sporadic strikes across the nation.


The Egyptian government frequently muffles free speech and political dissent, but these ragged and often disorganized picket lines present a widening crisis for a president viewed as detached from the working class and unable to lift wages and stem double-digit inflation.


“Mubarak doesn’t care about workers at all anymore,” said Mohammed Shorbagy, who held a Koran in a plastic bag and stood amid litter and lean-tos during a strike last month at the Misr Spinning and Weaving Factory in this Nile Delta city. “Why is the president asleep? We’ve been here for four days and he’s done nothing.”


Europe

Litvinenko worked for British intelligence: report

LONDON (AFP) – Murdered Russian former agent Alexander Litvinenko had been working for British secret intelligence service MI6, the Daily Mail newspaper reported Saturday.

Citing unnamed diplomatic and intelligence sources, it said that Litvinenko, who died last November in London of radiation poisoning, was receiving a monthly retainer of about 2,000 pounds from MI6 when he was murdered.


Sir John Scarlett, who is now the head of MI6 and was once based in Moscow, was involved in recruiting Litvinenko, the paper added.

Europe faces tough choices on Iran

By Kim Murphy, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

October 27, 2007

LONDON — With tough new U.S. sanctions against Iran now in place, the next step falls to European nations: Will they agree on biting measures of their own, the only way to make the unilateral U.S. action truly effective?


European officials expressed worry Friday that the Bush administration’s designation of Iranian agencies and firms as supporters of terrorism and purveyors of weapons threatens efforts to bring Iran back into the fold of diplomacy. That could erect a formidable barricade against relations with Tehran for years to come, some analysts warned.


Latin America

Court drops charges vs. Pinochet family

SANTIAGO, Chile – A Chilean appeals court on Friday dropped corruption charges against former dictator Gen. Augusto Pinochet’s widow and four of his children, who had been accused of misuse of state funds related to multimillion-dollar overseas bank accounts.

The Santiago Court of Appeals also dropped charges against 10 of the late dictator’s former associates and aides, court President Juan Eduardo Fuentes said.


A judge failed to question the Pinochet family and former associates before indicting them on the corruption charges, the appeals court ruled.

Film casts light on rough justice in Rio

This heavily armed group wears black uniforms and their faces are often masked, and their symbol includes a skull with crossed pistols.

It is not some illegal paramilitary force but an elite battalion of the police in Rio de Janeiro known as Bope, the Battalion for Special Police Operations.


They were created to deal with kidnappings, but their job now is to take on the most dangerous drug gangs in the country, a battle fought with high-calibre weapons in the city’s favelas or shanty towns


Africa

2 Darfur rebel groups shun peace talks

SIRTE, Libya – Darfur peace mediators vowed to press on with negotiations due to start Saturday in Libya despite the decision by two main rebel groups to boycott the talks, saying time was running out for the Sudanese region torn by years of fighting.

Officials from the United Nations and the African Union plan to open the negotiations with a call for an immediate cease-fire commitment from all parties attending the talks.


Asia

Militants behead security officers in Pakistan’s northwest

SLAMABAD (AFP) – Militants kidnapped and beheaded four security officers in northwest Pakistan after government troops clashed with supporters of a pro-Taliban cleric, a senior official said Saturday.

The men were seized while shopping at a bazaar in Matta in the outskirts of Swat by unknown militants, local sources said, and their bodies were later displayed in the village, although this could not be confirmed by officials.


Heavy fighting erupted in the scenic Swat valley in North West Frontier Province on Friday between troops and militants loyal to the radical cleric, who has been driving a fierce campaign to introduce pro-Taliban laws.

US caught in South Korean scandal

By Donald Kirk


SEOUL – The United States faces a Faustian decision that may influence the outcome of Korea’s presidential election in December and shape the immediate future of US-Korean relations.


Much though US leaders would like to avoid the whole nasty topic, they’ve got to decide soon when or whether to extradite to Korea a runaway financier whose sorry story of a scandal is linked to the conservative presidential candidate Lee Myung-bak. Lee’s peop

Asian News For The Week Of October 22

Monday October 22
China, Taiwan

Religion mentioned in CPC Constitution
(Xinhua)
2007-10-22 06:48

BEIJING — For the first time in its history, the Communist Party of China (CPC) has mentioned the word “religion” in an amendment to its Constitution adopted on Sunday at the closing session of the 17th CPC National Congress.

To incorporate into its Constitution the principles and policies the Party has formulated for guiding efforts to strengthen the work related to ethnic and religious affairs, among others, is conducive to their full implementation and getting better results in the Party’s work in this area, said a resolution on the amendment to the Constitution.

It said the insertion has been made in light of the new circumstances and tasks.

The CPC is atheistic but allows freedom of religious beliefs. China is home to 100 million religious faithful, largely Buddhists, Taoists, Christians, Catholics and Islamites

Chen touts positives of UN referendum
OPTIMISTIC: The president said that although the referendum bid had angered both China and the US, it would ultimately improve relations between the three countries

STAFF WRITER, WITH CNA
Monday, Oct 22, 2007, Page 1

President Chen Shui-bian (???) continued to push for the referendum on Taiwan’s bid to join the UN under the name “Taiwan” yesterday, saying that a vote on the bid would generate at least four major influences, including a re-evaluation of the “one China” policy by the US.

Under the influence of the Taiwan UN-bid referendum, Chen calculated that Washington would review the “one China” policy it has followed for decades in favor of the People’s Republic of China and consider whether the US should politically recognize both China and Taiwan.

Tuesday October 23
Japan, Korea

Ex-defense official sought engine deal for trader
Moriya denies any impropriety
Kyodo News

Former Vice Defense Minister Takemasa Moriya indirectly asked a Defense Ministry official earlier this year to forge a contract with a defense equipment trader for supply of a U.S.-made engine for the Air Self-Defense Force’s next-generation transport aircraft, sources said Monday.

The allegation involves Nihon Mirise Corp., a spinoff launched in September 2006 by a former senior managing director of defense trading house Yamada Corp., with which Moriya has close ties.

It is unusual for a top government official to intervene in a specific contract with a company.

Presidential Candidates Take Stand on Troops in Iraq
  The United New Democratic Party on Monday formally decided to oppose the extension of Korean troops’ mandate in Iraq, transforming the matter into a hot topic for the presidential election campaign. The Chosun Ilbo looks at what the presidential candidates had to say on the issue.

The Zaytun Unit’s mission in Irbil, northern Iraq, began at the request of the U.S. in June 2004 with a contingent of 3,600 troops. The current troop level is 1,090. Last year, the National Assembly approved a government plan to extend the unit’s mission for another year on condition that it added a pullout plan for the end of this year.

Wednesday October 24
India, Pakistan

ACP Rathi and nine other policemen get life term
All ten people convicted for killing two innocent businessmen in a fake encounter at Connaught Place in New Delhi in 1997, including suspended Assistant Commissioner of Police SS Rathi, get life term.

A Delhi court had, on October 16, held all the ten policemen including ACP Rathi guilty for gunning down two Haryana-based businessmen Pradeep Goyal and Jagjit Singh on March 31, 1997.

Earlier, the CBI on Wednesday sought death penalty for suspended Assistant Commissioner of Police SS Rathi and two other policemen, who, along with seven others were convicted of killing two innocent businessmen in a fake encounter at Connaught Place in New Delhi, ten years ago.

Benazir backs NATO’s stay in Afghanistan
Bureau Report

KARACHI-Chairperson, Pakistan People’s Party (PPP), Benazir Bhutto Tuesday said that NATO forces should stay in Afghanistan further for elimination of terrorism. The former prime minister, Benazir Bhutto, stated this while talking to media at Bilawal House here.
She said that the future of Pakistan was linked with Afghanistan and NATO forces should further stay in Afghanistan till terrorism was curbed in the neighbour state of Pakistan. She also called upon international community for striving to find out the conspiracy behind the blasts in PPP procession.
Benazir Bhutto also called for an independent and impartial Election Commission in Pakistan for next general elections and also to complete its members. She claimed that a comprehensive plan was available with PPP, which was capable to eliminate almost 50 percent terrorism from the country. Education development was also part of the plan of PPP, she added. She said that the election should not be cancelled due to Karachi blasts in PPP rally. Benazir also called for provision of full security to leaders of all political parties.
Pakistan Peoples Party has welcomed the statement by the United Nations Security Council strongly condemning Thursday’s bomb attacks on PPP rally in Karachi. In a statement Tuesday spokesperson of the Party former Senator Farhatullah Babar said that the unanimously adopted statement by the UNSC vindicated the Party’s position for an impartial inquiry that can only be insured only if forensic and technical experts from the international community wee also involved in it.

Thursday October 25
Australia, New Zealand

Hospitals in poor health,say medics

Natasha Wallace
October 25, 2007 – 12:05PM
Australia’s hospital system has been given an ‘F’ for failure by the Australian Medical Association, which is blaming state and federal governments.

The AMA identified systems breakdowns and personal tragedies in public hospitals that it said were endangering patient care right across the country in its Public Hospital Report Card 2007.

“Our hard-working doctors and nurses are being let down by a lack of proper funding and resources and poor management,” said AMA President, Dr Rosanna Capolingua, who released the findings today outside Sydney’s Royal North Shore Hospital, which has been the target of allegations of poor care.

Hundreds march before Tame Iti court hearing
2:03PM Thursday October 25, 2007
By Juliet Rowan
Hundreds of protesters have staged a march outside the Rotorua Court House today ahead of Maori activist Tame Iti’s court appearance.

They carried signs with slogans such as: “Free Tame” and “NZ Police are terrorists” during the march.

Police closed streets around the courthouse to allow the march, which lasted around 45 minutes this lunchtime, to go ahead.

Cats: Good or Evil?

(I thought this was on the FP? Well I’m putting it back. – promoted by On The Bus)

I’m all doped up on pain meds, so  I am not commenting much. But since I am all doped up on pain meds…..and surfing the toobz….seeing these videos back to back brought up the eternal question in the title.

“I am not a cat man, but a dog man, and all felines can tell this at a glance — a sharp, vindictive glance.” — James Thurber

“I have studied many philosophers and many cats. The wisdom of cats is infinitely superior.”
– Hippolyte Taine

“A cat is more intelligent than people believe, and can be taught any crime.”
-Mark Twain Notebook, 1895

“I love cats because I love my home and after a while they become its visible soul.”
– Jean Cocteau

“There is, incidentally, no way of talking about cats that enables one to come off as a sane person.”
– Dan Greenberg


via videosift.com

via videosift.com

Bonus Cat Video: Quality Nip

via videosift.com

Sky News EuroReport: Secret Gore-Sarkozy Negotiations