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 <title>John Pilger | ukwatch.net</title>
 <link>http://www.ukwatch.net/author/john_pilger</link>
 <description>Recent articles by watch area on ukwatch.net</description>
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<item>
 <title>The New World War - The Silence Is A Lie </title>
 <link>http://www.ukwatch.net/article/the_new_world_war_the_silence_is_a_lie</link>
 <description>&lt;p&gt;Britain&amp;#8217;s political conference season of 2008 will be remembered as The Great Silence. Politicians have come and gone and their mouths have moved in front of large images of themselves, and they often wave at someone. There has been lots of news about each other. Adam Boulton, the political editor of Sky News, and billed as &amp;#8220;the husband of Blair aide Anji Hunter&amp;#8221;, has published a book of gossip derived from his &amp;#8220;unrivalled access to No 10&amp;#8221;. His revelation is that Tony Blair&amp;#8217;s mouthpiece told lies. The war criminal himself has been absent, but the former mouthpiece has been signing his own book of gossip, and waving. The club is celebrating itself, including all those, Labour and Tory, who gave the war criminal a standing ovation on his last day in parliament and who have yet to vote on, let alone condemn, Britain&amp;#8217;s part in the wanton human, social and physical destruction of an entire nation. Instead, there are happy debates such as, &amp;#8220;Can hope win?&amp;#8221; and, my favourite, &amp;#8220;Can foreign policy be a Labour strength?&amp;#8221; As Harold Pinter said of unmentionable crimes: &amp;#8220;Nothing ever happened. Even while it was happening, it wasn&amp;#8217;t happening. It didn&amp;#8217;t matter. It was of no interest.&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The Guardian&amp;#8217;s economics editor, Larry Elliott, has written that the Prime Minister &amp;#8220;resembles a tragic hero in a Hardy novel: an essentially good man brought down by one error of judgement&amp;#8221;. What is this one error of judgement? The bank- rolling of two murderous colonial adventures? No. The unprecedented growth of the British arms industry and the sale of weapons to the poorest countries? No. The replacement of manufacturing and public service by an arcane cult serving the ultra-rich? No. The Prime Minister&amp;#8217;s &amp;#8220;folly&amp;#8221; is &amp;#8220;postponing the election last year&amp;#8221;. This is the March Hare Factor.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Reality can be detected, however, by applying the Orwell Rule and inverting public pronouncements and headlines, such as &amp;#8220;Aggressor Russia facing pariah status, US warns&amp;#8221;, thereby identifying the correct pariah; or by crossing the invisible boundaries that fix the boundaries of political and media discussion. &amp;#8220;When truth is replaced by silence,&amp;#8221; said the Soviet dissident Yevgeny Yevtushenko, &amp;#8220;the silence is a lie.&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Understanding this silence is critical in a society in which news has become noise. Silence covers the truth that Britain&amp;#8217;s political parties have converged and now follow the single-ideology model of the United States. This is different from the political consensus of half a century ago that produced what was known as social democracy. Today&amp;#8217;s political union has no principled social democratic premises. Debate has become just another weasel word and principle, like the language of Chaucer, is bygone. That the poor and the state fund the rich is a given, along with the theft of public services, known as privatisation. This was spelt out by Margaret Thatcher but, more importantly, by new Labour&amp;#8217;s engineers. In The Blair Revolution: Can New Labour Deliver? Peter Mandelson and Roger Liddle declared Britain&amp;#8217;s new &amp;#8220;economic strengths&amp;#8221; to be its transnational corporations, the &amp;#8220;aerospace&amp;#8221; industry (weapons) and &amp;#8220;the pre-eminence of the City of London&amp;#8221;. The rest was to be asset-stripped, including the peculiar British pursuit of selfless public service. Overlaying this was a new social authoritarianism guided by a hypocrisy based on &amp;#8220;values&amp;#8221;. Mandelson and Liddle demanded &amp;#8220;a tough discipline&amp;#8221; and a &amp;#8220;hardworking majority&amp;#8221; and the &amp;#8220;proper bringing-up [sic] of children&amp;#8221;. And in formally launching his Murdochracy, Blair used &amp;#8220;moral&amp;#8221; and &amp;#8220;morality&amp;#8221; 18 times in a speech he gave in Australia as a guest of Rupert Murdoch, who had recently found God.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;A &amp;#8220;think tank&amp;#8221; called Demos exemplified this new order. A founder of Demos, Geoff Mulgan, himself rewarded with a job in one of Blair&amp;#8217;s &amp;#8220;policy units&amp;#8221;, wrote a book called Connexity. &amp;#8220;In much of the world today,&amp;#8221; he offered, &amp;#8220;the most pressing problems on the public agenda are not poverty or material shortage . . . but rather the disorders of freedom: the troubles that result from having too many freedoms that are abused rather than constructively used.&amp;#8221; As if celebrating life in another solar system, he wrote: &amp;#8220;For the first time ever, most of the world&amp;#8217;s most powerful nations do not want to conquer territory.&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;That reads, now as it ought to have read then, as dark parody in a world where more than 24,000 children die every day from the effects of poverty and at least a million people lie dead in just one territory conquered by the most powerful nations. However, it serves to remind us of the political &amp;#8220;culture&amp;#8221; that has so successfully fused traditional liberalism with the lunar branch of western political life and allowed our &amp;#8220;too many freedoms&amp;#8221; to be taken away as ruthlessly and anonymously as wedding parties in Afghanistan have been obliterated by our bombs.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The product of these organised delusions is rarely acknowledged. The current economic crisis, with its threat to jobs and savings and public services, is the direct consequence of a rampant militarism comparable, in large part, with that of the first half of the last century, when Europe&amp;#8217;s most advanced and cultured nation committed genocide. Since the 1990s, America&amp;#8217;s military budget has doubled. Like the national debt, it is currently the largest ever. The true figure is not known, because up to 40 per cent is classified &amp;#8220;black&amp;#8221; &amp;#8211; it is hidden. Britain, with a weapons industry second only to the US, has also been militarised. The Iraq invasion has cost $5trn, at least. The 4,500 British troops in Basra almost never leave their base. They are there because the Americans demand it. On 19 September, Robert Gates, the American defence secretary, was in London demanding $20bn from allies like Britain so that the US invasion force in Afghanistan could be increased to 44,000. He said the British force would be increased. It was an order.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;In the meantime, an American invasion of Pakistan is under way, secretly authorised by President Bush. The &amp;#8220;change&amp;#8221; candidate for president, Barack Obama, had already called for an invasion and more aircraft and bombs. The ironies are searing. A Pakistani religious school attacked by American drone missiles, killing 23 people, was set up in the 1980s with &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;CIA&lt;/span&gt; backing. It was part of Operation Cyclone, in which the US armed and funded mujahedin groups that became al-Qaeda and the Taliban. The aim was to bring down the Soviet Union. This was achieved; it also brought down the Twin Towers.&lt;br /&gt;
War of the world&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;On 20 September the inevitable response to the latest invasion came with the bombing of the Marriott Hotel in Islamabad. For me, it is reminiscent of President Nixon&amp;#8217;s invasion of Cambodia in 1970, which was planned as a diversion from the coming defeat in Vietnam. The result was the rise to power of Pol Pot&amp;#8217;s Khmer Rouge. Today, with Taliban guerrillas closing on Kabul and Nato refusing to conduct serious negotiations, defeat in Afghanistan is also coming.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;It is a war of the world. In Latin America, the Bush administration is fomenting incipient military coups in Venezuela, Bolivia, and possibly Paraguay, democracies whose governments have opposed Washington&amp;#8217;s historic rapacious intervention in its &amp;#8220;backyard&amp;#8221;. Washington&amp;#8217;s &amp;#8220;Plan Colombia&amp;#8221; is the model for a mostly unreported assault on Mexico. This is the Merida Initiative, which will allow the United States to fund &amp;#8220;the war on drugs and organised crime&amp;#8221; in Mexico &amp;#8211; a cover, as in Colombia, for militarising its closest neighbour and ensuring its &amp;#8220;business stability&amp;#8221;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Britain is tied to all these adventures &amp;#8211; a British &amp;#8220;School of the Americas&amp;#8221; is to be built in Wales, where British soldiers will train killers from all corners of the American empire in the name of &amp;#8220;global security&amp;#8221;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;None of this is as potentially dangerous, or more distorted in permitted public discussion, than the war on Russia. Two years ago, Stephen Cohen, professor of Russian Studies at New York University, wrote a landmark essay in the Nation which has now been reprinted in Britain.* He warns of &amp;#8220;the gravest threats [posed] by the undeclared Cold War Washington has waged, under both parties, against post-communist Russia during the past 15 years&amp;#8221;. He describes a catastrophic &amp;#8220;relentless winner-take-all of Russia&amp;#8217;s post-1991 weakness&amp;#8221;, with two-thirds of the population forced into poverty and life expectancy barely at 59. With most of us in the West unaware, Russia is being encircled by US and Nato bases and missiles in violation of a pledge by the United States not to expand Nato &amp;#8220;one inch to the east&amp;#8221;. The result, writes Cohen, &amp;#8220;is a US-built reverse iron curtain [and] a US denial that Russia has any legitimate national interests outside its own territory, even in ethnically akin former republics such as Ukraine, Belarus and Georgia. [There is even] a presumption that Russia does not have fully sovereignty within its own borders, as expressed by constant US interventions in Moscow&amp;#8217;s internal affairs since 1992 . . . the United States is attempting to acquire the nuclear responsibility it could not achieve during the Soviet era.&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;This danger has grown rapidly as the American media again presents US-Russian relations as &amp;#8220;a duel to the death &amp;#8211; perhaps literally&amp;#8221;. The liberal Washington Post, says Cohen, &amp;#8220;reads like a bygone Pravda on the Potomac&amp;#8221;. The same is true in Britain, with the regurgitation of propaganda that Russia was wholly responsible for the war in the Caucasus and must therefore be a &amp;#8220;pariah&amp;#8221;. Sarah Palin, who may end up US president, says she is ready to attack Russia. The steady beat of this drum has seen Moscow return to its old nuclear alerts. Remember the 1980s, writes Cohen, &amp;#8220;when the world faced exceedingly grave Cold War perils, and Mikhail Gorbachev unexpectedly emerged to offer a heretical way out. Is there an American leader today ready to retrieve that missed opportunity?&amp;#8221; It is an urgent question that must be asked all over the world by those of us still unafraid to break the lethal silence.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;http://www.johnpilger.com&quot; title=&quot;www.johnpilger.com&quot;&gt;www.johnpilger.com&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;


</description>
 <comments>http://www.ukwatch.net/article/the_new_world_war_the_silence_is_a_lie#comments</comments>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/watch_area/foreign_policy">Foreign Policy</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/watch_area/terror/war">Terror/War</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/taxonomy/term/3184">Georgia</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/gordon_brown">gordon brown</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/taxonomy/term/3167">Russia</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/author/john_pilger">John Pilger</category>
 <pubDate>Thu, 25 Sep 2008 14:11:41 +0000</pubDate>
 <dc:creator>Alex Doherty</dc:creator>
 <guid isPermaLink="false">6523 at http://www.ukwatch.net</guid>
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<item>
 <title>A murderous theatre of the absurd</title>
 <link>http://www.ukwatch.net/article/a_murderous_theatre_of_the_absurd</link>
 <description>&lt;p&gt;Try to laugh, please. The news is now officially parody and a game for all the family to play.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;First question: Why are “we” in Afghanistan? Answer: “To try to help in the country’s rebuilding programme.” Who says so? Huw Edwards, the BBC’s principal newsreader. What wags the Welsh are.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Second question: Why are “we” in Iraq? Answer: To “plant a western-style open democracy”. Who says so? Paul Wood, the former &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BBC&lt;/span&gt; defence correspondent, and his boss Helen Boaden, director of &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BBC&lt;/span&gt; News. To prove her point, Boaden supplied Medialens.org with 2,700 words of quotations from Tony Blair and George W Bush. Irony? No, she meant it.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Take Andrew Martin, divisional adviser at &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BBC&lt;/span&gt; Complaints, who has been researching Bush’s speeches for “evidence” of noble democratic reasons for laying to waste an ancient civilisation. Says he: “The ‘D’ word is not there, but the phrase ‘united, stable and free’ [is] clearly an allusion to it.” After all, he says, the invasion of Iraq “was launched as ‘Operation Iraqi Freedom’”. Moreover, says the &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BBC&lt;/span&gt; man, “in Bush’s 1 May 2003 speech (the one on the aircraft carrier) he talked repeatedly about freedom and explicitly about the Iraqi transition to democracy . . . These examples show that these were on Bush’s mind before, during and after the invasion.”&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Try to laugh, please.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Laughing may be difficult, I agree, given the slaughter of civilians in Afghanistan by “coalition” aircraft, including those directed by British forces engaged in “the country’s rebuilding programme”. The bombing of civilian areas has doubled, along with the deaths of civilians, says Human Rights Watch. Last month, “our” aircraft slaughtered nearly 100 civilians, two-thirds of them children between the ages of three months and 16 years, while they slept, according to eyewitnesses. &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BBC&lt;/span&gt; television news initially devoted nine seconds to the Human Rights Watch report, and nothing to the fact that “less than peanuts” (according to an aid worker) is being spent on rebuilding anything in Afghanistan.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;As for the notion of a “united, stable and free” Iraq, consider the no-bid contracts handed to the major western oil companies for ownership of Iraq’s oil. “Theft” is a more truthful word. Written by the companies themselves and US officials, the contracts have been signed off by Bush and Nouri al-Maliki, “prime minister” of Iraq’s “democratic” government that resides in an air-conditioned American fortress. This is not news.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Try to laugh, please, while you consider the devastation of Iraq’s health, once the best in the Middle East, by the ubiquitous dust from British and US depleted uranium weapons. A World Health Organisation study reporting a cancer epidemic has been suppressed, says its principal author. This has been reported in Britain only in the &lt;em&gt;Glasgow Sunday Herald&lt;/em&gt; and the &lt;em&gt;Morning Star&lt;/em&gt;. According to a study last year by Basra University Medical College, almost half of all deaths in the contaminated southern provinces were caused by cancer.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Try to laugh, please, at the recent happy-clappy Nurembergs from which will come the next president of the United States. Those paid to keep the record straight have strained to present a spectacle of choice. Barack Obama, the man of “change”, wants to “build a 21st-century military . . . to stay on the offensive everywhere”. Here comes the new Cold War, with promises of more bombs, more of the militarised society with its 730 bases worldwide, on which Americans spend 42 cents of every tax dollar.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;At home, Obama offers no authentic measure that might ease America’s grotesque inequality, such as basic health care. John McCain, his Republican opponent, may well be a media cartoon figure – the fake “war hero” now joined with a Shakespeare-banning, gun-loving, religious fanatic – yet his true significance is that he and Obama share essentially the same dangerous prescriptions.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Thousands of decent Americans came to the two nominating conventions to express the dissenting opinion of millions of their compatriots who believe, with good cause, that their democracy is evaporating. They were intimidated, arrested, beaten, pepper-gassed; and they were patronised or ignored by those paid to keep the record straight.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;In the meantime, Justin Webb, the BBC’s North America editor, has launched a book about America, his “city on a hill”. It is a sort of Mills &amp;amp; Boon view of the rapacious system he admires with such obsequiousness. The book is called &lt;em&gt;Have a Nice Day&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Try to laugh, please.&lt;/p&gt;


</description>
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 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/watch_area/media">Media</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/watch_area/terror/war">Terror/War</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/afghanistan">Afghanistan</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/imperialism">imperialism</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/iraq">iraq</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/propaganda">propaganda</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/taxonomy/term/3168">US</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/author/john_pilger">John Pilger</category>
 <pubDate>Thu, 11 Sep 2008 11:19:16 +0000</pubDate>
 <dc:creator>JamieSW</dc:creator>
 <guid isPermaLink="false">6441 at http://www.ukwatch.net</guid>
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<item>
 <title>Obama, The Prince Of Bait-And-Switch</title>
 <link>http://www.ukwatch.net/article/obama_the_prince_of_baitandswitch</link>
 <description>&lt;p&gt;On 12 July, the London Times devoted two pages to Afghanistan. It was mostly a complaint about the heat. The reporter, Magnus Linklater, described in detail his discomfort and how he had needed to be sprayed with iced water. He also described the &amp;#8220;high drama&amp;#8221; and &amp;#8220;meticulously practised routine&amp;#8221; of evacuating another overheated journalist. For her US Marine rescuers, wrote Linklater, &amp;#8220;saving a life took precedence over [their] security&amp;#8221;. Alongside this was a report whose final paragraph offered the only mention that &amp;#8220;47 civilians, most of them women and children, were killed when a US aircraft bombed a wedding party in eastern Afghanistan on Sunday&amp;#8221;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Slaughters on this scale are common, and mostly unknown to the British public. I interviewed a woman who had lost eight members of her family, including six children. A 500lb US Mk82 bomb was dropped on her mud, stone and straw house. There was no &amp;#8220;enemy&amp;#8221; nearby. I interviewed a headmaster whose house disappeared in a fireball caused by another &amp;#8220;precision&amp;#8221; bomb. Inside were nine people &amp;#8211; his wife, his four sons, his brother and his wife, and his sister and her husband. Neither of these mass murders was news. As Harold Pinter wrote of such crimes: &amp;#8220;Nothing ever happened. Even while it was happening it wasn&amp;#8217;t happening. It didn&amp;#8217;t matter. It was of no interest.&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;A total of 64 civilians were bombed to death while The Times man was discomforted. Most were guests at the wedding party. Wedding parties are a &amp;#8220;coalition&amp;#8221; speciality. At least four of them have been obliterated &amp;#8211; at Mazar and in Khost, Uruzgan and Nangarhar provinces. Many of the details, including the names of victims, have been compiled by a New Hampshire professor, Marc Herold, whose Afghan Victim Memorial Project is a meticulous work of journalism that shames those who are paid to keep the record straight and report almost everything about the Afghan War through the public relations facilities of the British and American military.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The US and its allies are dropping record numbers of bombs on Afghanistan. This is not news. In the first half of this year, 1,853 bombs were dropped: more than all the bombs of 2006 and most of 2007. &amp;#8220;The most frequently used bombs,&amp;#8221; the Air Force Times reports, &amp;#8220;are the 500lb and 2,000lb satellite-guided . . .&amp;#8221; Without this one-sided onslaught, the resurgence of the Taliban, it is clear, might not have happened. Even Hamid Karzai, America&amp;#8217;s and Britain&amp;#8217;s puppet, has said so. The presence and the aggression of foreigners have all but united a resistance that now includes former warlords once on the CIA&amp;#8217;s payroll.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The scandal of this would be headline news, were it not for what George W Bush&amp;#8217;s former spokesman Scott McClellan has called &amp;#8220;complicit enablers&amp;#8221; &amp;#8211; journalists who serve as little more than official amplifiers. Having declared Afghanistan a &amp;#8220;good war&amp;#8221;, the complicit enablers are now anointing Barack Obama as he tours the bloodfests in Afghanistan and Iraq. What they never say is that Obama is a bomber.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;In the New York Times on 14 July, in an article spun to appear as if he is ending the war in Iraq, Obama demanded more war in Afghanistan and, in effect, an invasion of Pakistan. He wants more combat troops, more helicopters, more bombs. Bush may be on his way out, but the Republicans have built an ideological machine that transcends the loss of electoral power &amp;#8211; because their collaborators are, as the American writer Mike Whitney put it succinctly, &amp;#8220;bait-and-switch&amp;#8221; Democrats, of whom Obama is the prince.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Those who write of Obama that &amp;#8220;when it comes to international affairs, he will be a huge improvement on Bush&amp;#8221; demonstrate the same wilful naivety that backed the bait-and-switch of Bill Clinton &amp;#8211; and Tony Blair. Of Blair, wrote the late Hugo Young in 1997, &amp;#8220;ideology has surrendered entirely to &amp;#8216;values&amp;#8217; . . . there are no sacred cows [and] no fossilised limits to the ground over which the mind might range in search of a better Britain . . .&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Eleven years and five wars later, at least a million people lie dead. Barack Obama is the American Blair. That he is a smooth operator and a black man is irrelevant. He is of an enduring, rampant system whose drum majors and cheer squads never see, or want to see, the consequences of 500lb bombs dropped unerringly on mud, stone and straw houses.&lt;/p&gt;


</description>
 <comments>http://www.ukwatch.net/article/obama_the_prince_of_baitandswitch#comments</comments>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/watch_area/media">Media</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/watch_area/terror/war">Terror/War</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/afghanistan">Afghanistan</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/barack_obama">Barack Obama</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/blair">Blair</category>
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 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/war">war</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/author/john_pilger">John Pilger</category>
 <pubDate>Fri, 25 Jul 2008 13:46:46 +0000</pubDate>
 <dc:creator>Ellie Keen</dc:creator>
 <guid isPermaLink="false">6217 at http://www.ukwatch.net</guid>
</item>
<item>
 <title>How Britain wages war</title>
 <link>http://www.ukwatch.net/article/how_britain_wages_war</link>
 <description>&lt;p&gt;Five photographs together break a silence. The first is of a former Gurkha regimental sergeant major, Tul Bahadur Pun, aged 87. He sits in a wheelchair outside 10 Downing Street. He holds a board full of medals, including the Victoria Cross, the highest award for bravery, which he won serving in the British army.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;He has been refused entry to Britain and treatment for a serious heart ailment by the National Health Service: outrages rescinded only after a public campaign. On 25 June, he came to Down ing Street to hand his Victoria Cross back to the Prime Minister, but Gordon Brown refused to see him.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The second photograph is of a 12-year-old boy, one of three children. They are Kuchis, nomads of Afghanistan. They have been hit by Nato bombs, American or British, and nurses are trying to peel away their roasted skin with tweezers. On the night of 10 June, Nato planes struck again, killing at least 30 civilians in a single village: children, women, schoolteachers, students. On 4 July, another 22 civilians died like this. All, including the roasted children, are described as &amp;#8220;militants&amp;#8221; or &amp;#8220;suspected Taliban&amp;#8221;. The Defence Secretary, Des Browne, says the invasion of Afghan istan is &amp;#8220;the noble cause of the 21st century&amp;#8221;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The third photograph is of a computer-generated aircraft carrier not yet built, one of two of the biggest ships ever ordered for the Royal Navy. The £4bn contract is shared by &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BAE&lt;/span&gt; Systems, whose sale of 72 fighter jets to the corrupt tyranny in Saudi Arabia has made Britain the biggest arms merchant on earth, selling mostly to oppressive regimes in poor countries. At a time of economic crisis, Browne describes the carriers as &amp;#8220;an affordable expenditure&amp;#8221;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The fourth photograph is of a young British soldier, Gavin Williams, who was &amp;#8220;beasted&amp;#8221; to death by three non-commissioned officers. This &amp;#8220;informal summary punishment&amp;#8221;, which sent his body temperature to more than 41 degrees, was intended to &amp;#8220;humiliate, push to the limit and hurt&amp;#8221;. The torture was described in court as a fact of army life.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The final photograph is of an Iraqi man, Baha Mousa, who was tortured to death by British soldiers. Taken during his post-mortem, it shows some of the 93 horrific injuries he suffered at the hands of men of the Queen&amp;#8217;s Lancashire Regiment who beat and abused him for 36 hours, including double-hooding him with hessian sacks in stifling heat. He was a hotel receptionist. Although his murder took place almost five years ago, it was only in May this year that the Ministry of Defence responded to the courts and agreed to an independent inquiry. A judge has described this as a &amp;#8220;wall of silence&amp;#8221;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;A court martial convicted just one soldier of Mousa&amp;#8217;s &amp;#8220;inhumane treatment&amp;#8221;, and he has since been quietly released. Phil Shiner of Public Interest Lawyers, representing the families of Iraqis who have died in British custody, says the evidence is clear &amp;#8211; abuse and torture by the British army is systemic.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Shiner and his colleagues have witness statements and corroborations of prima facie crimes of an especially atrocious kind usually associated with the Americans. &amp;#8220;The more cases I am dealing with, the worse it gets,&amp;#8221; he says. These include an &amp;#8220;incident&amp;#8221; near the town of Majar al-Kabir in 2004, when British soldiers executed as many as 20 Iraqi prisoners after mutilating them. The latest is that of a 14-year-old boy who was forced to simulate anal and oral sex over a prolonged period.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&amp;#8220;At the heart of the US and UK project,&amp;#8221; says Shiner, &amp;#8220;is a desire to avoid accountability for what they want to do. Guantanamo Bay and extraordinary renditions are part of the same struggle to avoid accountability through jurisdiction.&amp;#8221; British soldiers, he says, use the same torture techniques as the Americans and deny that the European Convention on Human Rights, the Human Rights Act and the UN Convention on Torture apply to them. And British torture is &amp;#8220;commonplace&amp;#8221;: so much so, that &amp;#8220;the routine nature of this ill-treatment helps to explain why, despite the abuse of the soldiers and cries of the detainees being clearly audible, nobody, particularly in authority, took any notice&amp;#8221;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Unbelievably, says Shiner, the Ministry of Defence under Tony Blair decided that the 1972 Heath government&amp;#8217;s ban on certain torture techniques applied only in the UK and Northern Ireland. Consequently, &amp;#8220;many Iraqis were killed and tortured in UK detention facilities&amp;#8221;. Shiner is working on 46 horrific cases.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;A wall of silence has always surrounded the British military, its arcane rituals, rites and practices and, above all, its contempt for the law and natural justice in its various imperial pursuits. For 80 years, the Ministry of Defence and compliant ministers refused to countenance posthumous pardons for terrified boys shot at dawn during the slaughter of the First World War. British soldiers used as guinea pigs during the testing of nuclear weapons in the Indian Ocean were abandoned, as were many others who suffered the toxic effects of the 1991 Gulf War. The treatment of Gurkha Tul Bahadur Pun is typical. Having been sent back to Nepal, many of these &amp;#8220;soldiers of the Queen&amp;#8221; have no pension, are deeply impoverished and are refused residence or medical help in the country for which they fought and for which 43,000 of them have died or been injured. The Gurkhas have won no fewer than 26 Victoria Crosses, yet Browne&amp;#8217;s &amp;#8220;affordable expenditure&amp;#8221; excludes them.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;An even more imposing wall of silence ensures that the British public remains largely unaware of the industrial killing of civilians in Britain&amp;#8217;s modern colonial wars. In his landmark work &lt;em&gt;Unpeople: Britain&amp;#8217;s Secret Human Rights Abuses&lt;/em&gt;, the historian Mark Curtis uses three main categories: direct responsibility, indirect responsibility and active inaction.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&amp;#8220;The overall figure [since 1945] is between 8.6 and 13.5 million,&amp;#8221; Curtis writes. &amp;#8220;Of these, Britain bears direct responsibility for between four million and six million deaths. This figure is, if anything, likely to be an underestimate. Not all British interventions have been included, because of lack of data.&amp;#8221; Since his study was published, the Iraq death toll has reached, by reliable measure, a million men, women and children.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The spiralling rise of militarism within Britain is rarely acknowledged, even by those alerting the public to legislation attacking basic civil liberties, such as the recently drafted Data Com muni cations Bill, which will give the government powers to keep records of all electronic communication. Like the plans for identity cards, this is in keeping what the Americans call &amp;#8220;the national security state&amp;#8221;, which seeks the control of domestic dissent while pursuing military aggression abroad. The £4bn aircraft carriers are to have a &amp;#8220;global role&amp;#8221;. For global read colonial. The Ministry of Defence and the Foreign Office follow Washington&amp;#8217;s line almost to the letter, as in Browne&amp;#8217;s preposterous description of Afghanistan as a noble cause. In reality, the US-inspired Nato invasion has had two effects: the killing and dispossession of large numbers of Afghans, and the return of the opium trade, which the Taliban had banned. According to Hamid Karzai, the west&amp;#8217;s puppet leader, Britain&amp;#8217;s role in Helmand Province has led directly to the return of the Taliban.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The militarising of how the British state perceives and treats other societies is vividly demonstrated in Africa, where ten out of 14 of the most impoverished and conflict-ridden countries are seduced into buying British arms and military equipment with &amp;#8220;soft loans&amp;#8221;. Like the British royal family, the British Prime Minister simply follows the money. Having ritually condemned a despot in Zimbabwe for &amp;#8220;human rights abuses&amp;#8221; &amp;#8211; in truth, for no longer serving as the west&amp;#8217;s business agent &amp;#8211; and having obeyed the latest US dictum on Iran and Iraq, Brown set off recently for Saudi Arabia, exporter of Wahhabi fundamentalism and wheeler of fabulous arms deals.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;To complement this, the Brown government is spending £11bn of taxpayers&amp;#8217; money on a huge, pri vatised military academy in Wales, which will train foreign soldiers and mercenaries recruited to the bogus &amp;#8220;war on terror&amp;#8221;. With arms companies such as Raytheon profiting, this will become Britain&amp;#8217;s &amp;#8220;School of the Americas&amp;#8221;, a centre for counter-insurgency (terrorist) training and the design of future colonial adventures.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;It has had almost no publicity.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Of course, the image of militarist Britain clashes with a benign national regard formed, wrote Tolstoy, &amp;#8220;from infancy, by every possible means &amp;#8211; class books, church services, sermons, speeches, books, papers, songs, poetry, monuments [leading to] people stupefied in the one direction&amp;#8221;. Much has changed since he wrote that. Or has it? The shabby, destructive colonial war in Afghanistan is now reported almost entirely through the British army, with squaddies always doing their Kipling best, and with the Afghan resistance routinely dismissed as &amp;#8220;outsiders&amp;#8221; and &amp;#8220;invaders&amp;#8221;. Pictures of nomadic boys with Nato-roasted skin almost never appear in the press or on television, nor the after-effects of British thermobaric weapons, or &amp;#8220;vacuum bombs&amp;#8221;, designed to suck the air out of human lungs. Instead, whole pages mourn a British military intelligence agent in Afghanis tan, because she happens to have been a 26-year-old woman, the first to die in active service since the 2001 invasion.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Baha Mousa, tortured to death by British soldiers, was also 26 years old. But he was different. His father, Daoud, says that the way the Ministry of Defence has behaved over his son&amp;#8217;s death convinces him that the British government regards the lives of others as &amp;#8220;cheap&amp;#8221;. And he is right.&lt;/p&gt;


</description>
 <comments>http://www.ukwatch.net/article/how_britain_wages_war#comments</comments>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/watch_area/foreign_policy">Foreign Policy</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/watch_area/terror/war">Terror/War</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/arms_trade">arms trade</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/iraq">iraq</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/military">military</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/torture">torture</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/author/john_pilger">John Pilger</category>
 <pubDate>Thu, 10 Jul 2008 23:15:47 +0000</pubDate>
 <dc:creator>JamieSW</dc:creator>
 <guid isPermaLink="false">6136 at http://www.ukwatch.net</guid>
</item>
<item>
 <title>From Triumph to Torture</title>
 <link>http://www.ukwatch.net/article/from_triumph_to_torture</link>
 <description>&lt;p&gt;Two weeks ago, I presented a young Palestinian, Mohammed Omer, with the 2008 Martha Gellhorn Prize for Journalism. Awarded in memory of the great US war correspondent, the prize goes to journalists who expose establishment propaganda, or &amp;#8220;official drivel&amp;#8221;, as Gellhorn called it. Mohammed shares the prize of &amp;pound;5,000 with Dahr Jamail. At 24, he is the youngest winner. His citation reads: &amp;#8220;Every day, he reports from a war zone, where he is also a prisoner. His homeland, Gaza, is surrounded, starved, attacked, forgotten. He is a profoundly humane witness to one of the great injustices of our time. He is the voice of the voiceless.&amp;#8221; The eldest of eight, Mohammed has seen most of his siblings killed or wounded or maimed. An Israeli bulldozer crushed his home while the family were inside, seriously injuring his mother. And yet, says a former Dutch ambassador, Jan Wijenberg, &amp;#8220;he is a moderating voice, urging Palestinian youth not to court hatred but seek peace with Israel&amp;#8221;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Getting Mohammed to London to receive his prize was a major diplomatic operation. Israel has perfidious control over Gaza&amp;#8217;s borders, and only with a Dutch embassy escort was he allowed out. Last Thursday, on his return journey, he was met at the Allenby Bridge crossing (to Jordan) by a Dutch official, who waited outside the Israeli building, unaware Mohammed had been seized by Shin Bet, Israel&amp;#8217;s infamous security organisation. Mohammed was told to turn off his mobile and remove the battery. He asked if he could call his embassy escort and was told forcefully he could not. A man stood over his luggage, picking through his documents. &amp;#8220;Where&amp;#8217;s the money?&amp;#8221; he demanded. Mohammed produced some US dollars. &amp;#8220;Where is the English pound you have?&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&amp;#8220;I realised,&amp;#8221; said Mohammed, &amp;#8220;he was after the award stipend for the Martha Gellhorn prize. I told him I didn&amp;#8217;t have it with me. &amp;#8216;You are lying&amp;#8217;, he said. I was now surrounded by eight Shin Bet officers, all armed. The man called Avi ordered me to take off my clothes. I had already been through an x-ray machine. I stripped down to my underwear and was told to take off everything. When I refused, Avi put his hand on his gun. I began to cry: &amp;#8216;Why are you treating me this way? I am a human being.&amp;#8217; He said, &amp;#8216;This is nothing compared with what you will see now.&amp;#8217; He took his gun out, pressing it to my head and with his full body weight pinning me on my side, he forcibly removed my underwear. He then made me do a concocted sort of dance. Another man, who was laughing, said, &amp;#8216;Why are you bringing perfumes?&amp;#8217; I replied, &amp;#8216;They are gifts for the people I love&amp;#8217;. He said, &amp;#8216;Oh, do you have love in your culture?&amp;#8217; &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&amp;#8220;As they ridiculed me, they took delight most in mocking letters I had received from readers in England. I had now been without food and water and the toilet for 12 hours, and having been made to stand, my legs buckled. I vomited and passed out. All I remember is one of them gouging, scraping and clawing with his nails at the tender flesh beneath my eyes. He scooped my head and dug his fingers in near the auditory nerves between my head and eardrum. The pain became sharper as he dug in two fingers at a time. Another man had his combat boot on my neck, pressing into the hard floor. I lay there for over an hour. The room became a menagerie of pain, sound and terror.&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;An ambulance was called and told to take Mohammed to a hospital, but only after he had signed a statement indemnifying the Israelis from his suffering in their custody. The Palestinian medic refused, courageously, and said he would contact the Dutch embassy escort. Alarmed, the Israelis let the ambulance go. The Israeli response has been the familiar line that Mohammed was &amp;#8220;suspected&amp;#8221; of smuggling and &amp;#8220;lost his balance&amp;#8221; during a &amp;#8220;fair&amp;#8221; interrogation, Reuters reported yesterday.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Israeli human rights groups have documented the routine torture of Palestinians by Shin Bet agents with &amp;#8220;beatings, painful binding, back bending, body stretching and prolonged sleep deprivation&amp;#8221;. Amnesty has long reported the widespread use of torture by Israel, whose victims emerge as mere shadows of their former selves. Some never return. Israel is high in an international league table for its murder of journalists, especially Palestinian journalists, who receive barely a fraction of the kind of coverage given to the BBC&amp;#8217;s Alan Johnston.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The Dutch government says it is shocked by Mohammed Omer&amp;#8217;s treatment. The former ambassador Jan Wijenberg said: &amp;#8220;This is by no means an isolated incident, but part of a long-term strategy to demolish Palestinian social, economic and cultural life &amp;#8230; I am aware of the possibility that Mohammed Omer might be murdered by Israeli snipers or bomb attack in the near future.&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;While Mohammed was receiving his prize in London, the new Israeli ambassador to Britain, Ron Proser, was publicly complaining that many Britons no longer appreciated the uniqueness of Israel&amp;#8217;s democracy. Perhaps they do now.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;http://www.johnpilger.com/&quot;&gt;johnpilger.com&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;


</description>
 <comments>http://www.ukwatch.net/article/from_triumph_to_torture#comments</comments>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/watch_area/international">International</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/israel_palestine">Israel-Palestine</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/journalism">journalism</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/taxonomy/term/3005">Mohammed Omer</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/torture">torture</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/author/john_pilger">John Pilger</category>
 <pubDate>Wed, 02 Jul 2008 20:43:17 +0000</pubDate>
 <dc:creator>Ellie Keen</dc:creator>
 <guid isPermaLink="false">6078 at http://www.ukwatch.net</guid>
</item>
<item>
 <title>Cowardice of silence</title>
 <link>http://www.ukwatch.net/article/cowardice_of_silence</link>
 <description>&lt;p&gt;When I phoned Aung San Suu Kyi&amp;#8217;s home in Rangoon yesterday, I imagined the path to her door that looks down on Inya Lake. Through ragged palms, a trip-wire is visible, a reminder that this is the prison of a woman whose party was elected by a landslide in 1990, a democratic act extinguished by men in ludicrous uniforms. Her phone rang and rang; I doubt if it is connected now. Once, in response to my &amp;#8220;How are you?&amp;#8221; she laughed about her piano&amp;#8217;s need of tuning. She also spoke about lying awake, breathless, listening to the thumping of her heart.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Now her silence is complete. This week, the Burmese junta renewed her house arrest, beginning the 13th year. As far as I know, a doctor has not been allowed to visit her since January, and her house was badly damaged in the cyclone. And yet the secretary-general of the United Nations, Ban Ki-moon, could not bring himself to utter her name on his recent, grovelling tour of Burma. It is as if her fate and that of her courageous supporters, who on Tuesday beckoned torture and worse merely by unfurling the banners of her National League for Democracy, have become an embarrassment for those who claim to represent the &amp;#8220;international community&amp;#8221;. Why?&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Where are the voices of those in governments and their related institutions who know how to help Burma? Where are the honest brokers who once eased the oppressed away from their shadows, the true and talented peacemakers who see societies not in terms of their usefulness to &amp;#8220;interests&amp;#8221; but as victims of it? Where are the Dennis Hallidays and Hans von Sponecks who rose to assistant secretary-general of the UN by the sheer moral force of their international public service?&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The answer is simple. They are all but extinguished by a virus called the &amp;#8220;war on terror&amp;#8221;. Where once men and women of good heart and good intellect and good faith stood in parliaments and world bodies in defence of the human rights of others, there is now cowardice. Think of the parliament at Westminster, which cannot even cajole itself into holding an inquiry into the criminal invasion of Iraq, let alone to condemn it and speak up for its victims. Last year, 100 eminent British doctors pleaded with the minister for international development, then Hilary Benn, for emergency medical aid to be sent to Iraqi children&amp;#8217;s hospitals: &amp;#8220;Babies are dying for want of a 95 pence oxygen mask,&amp;#8221; they wrote. The minister turned them down flat.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;I mention that because medical aid for children is exactly the kind of assistance the British government now insists the Burmese junta should accept without delay. &amp;#8220;There are people suffering in Burma,&amp;#8221; said an indignant Gordon Brown. &amp;#8220;There are children going without food &amp;#8230; it is utterly unacceptable that when international aid is offered, the regime will try to prevent that getting in.&amp;#8221; David Miliband chimed in with &amp;#8220;malign neglect&amp;#8221;. Say that to the children of Iraq and Afghanistan and Gaza, where Britain&amp;#8217;s role is as neglectful and malign as any. As scores of children in Shia areas of Baghdad are blown to bits by America and what the &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BBC&lt;/span&gt; calls Iraq&amp;#8217;s &amp;#8220;democratic government&amp;#8221;, the British are silent, as ever. &amp;#8220;We&amp;#8221; say nothing while Israel torments and starves the children of Gaza, ignoring every attempt to bring a ceasefire with Hamas, all in the name of a crusade that dares not say its name. What might have been a new day for humanity in the post-cold war years, even a renewal of the spirit of the Declaration of Human Rights, of &amp;#8220;never again&amp;#8221; from Palestine to Burma, was cancelled by the ambitions of a sole rapacious power that has cowed all. The &amp;#8220;war on terror&amp;#8221; allows Australia and Israel to train Burma&amp;#8217;s internal security thugs. It consumes both most humanitarian aid indirectly and the very internationalism capable of bringing the &amp;#8220;clever&amp;#8221; pressure on Burma, about which Aung San Suu Kyi once spoke.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Dismissing the idiocy of a military intervention in her country, she asked: &amp;#8220;What about all those who trade with the generals, who give them many millions of dollars that keep them going?&amp;#8221; She was referring to the huge oil and gas companies, Total and Chevron, which effectively hand the regime $2.7bn a year, and the Halliburton company (former chief executive Vice-President Dick Cheney) that backed the construction of the Yadana pipeline, and the British travel companies that send tourists across bridges and roads built with forced labour. Audley Travel promotes its Burma holidays in the &lt;em&gt;Guardian&lt;/em&gt;. The &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BBC&lt;/span&gt;, in contravention of its charter, has just bought 75% of Lonely Planet travel guides, a truculent defender of &amp;#8220;our&amp;#8221; right to be tourists in Burma regardless of slave labour, or cyclones, or the woman beyond the trip-wire. Shame. &lt;/p&gt;


</description>
 <comments>http://www.ukwatch.net/article/cowardice_of_silence#comments</comments>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/watch_area/foreign_policy">Foreign Policy</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/burma">Burma</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/gaza">Gaza</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/iraq">iraq</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/israel">Israel</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/author/john_pilger">John Pilger</category>
 <pubDate>Sat, 31 May 2008 23:00:47 +0000</pubDate>
 <dc:creator>JamieSW</dc:creator>
 <guid isPermaLink="false">5916 at http://www.ukwatch.net</guid>
</item>
<item>
 <title>The prisoner of Dhaka</title>
 <link>http://www.ukwatch.net/article/the_prisoner_of_dhaka</link>
 <description>&lt;p&gt;There is a decent, brave man sitting in a dungeon in a country where the British empire began &amp;#8211; a country of poets, singers, artists, free thinkers and petty tyrants. I have known him since a moonless night in 1971 when he led me clandestinely into what was then East Pakistan and is now Bangladesh, past villages the Pakistani army had raped and razed. His name is Moudud Ahmed and he was then a young lawyer who had defended the Bengali independence leader Sheikh Mujibur Rahman.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&amp;#8220;Why have you come when even crows are afraid to fly over our house,&amp;#8221; said Begum Mujib, the sheikh&amp;#8217;s wife. This was typical of Moudud, whose tumultuous life carries more than a hint of Tom Paine.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;As a schoolboy, Moudud wet his shirt with the blood of a young man killed demonstrating against the imposition of &amp;#8220;Urdu and only Urdu&amp;#8221; as the official language of Bangla-speaking East Pakistan. When the British attacked Egypt in 1956, he tried to haul down the union flag at the British consulate in Dhaka, and was bayoneted by police: a wound he still suffers.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;When Bangladesh &amp;#8211; free Bengal &amp;#8211; was declared in 1971, Moudud brought a rally to its feet when he held up the front page of the Daily Mirror, which carried my report beneath the headline, &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BIRTH&lt;/span&gt; OF A &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;NATION&lt;/span&gt;. &amp;#8220;We are alive, but we are not yet free,&amp;#8221; he said, prophetically.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Once in power, Sheikh Mujib turned on his own democrats and held show trials at which Moudud was their indefatigable defender until he himself was arrested.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Assassination, coup and counter coup eventually led to a parliamentary period headed by Zia ur-Rahman, a liberation general with whom Moudud agreed to serve as deputy prime minister on condition Zia resigned from the army. Together they formed a grassroots party, but when Moudud insisted that it must be democratic, he was sacked.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Whenever he came to London he would phone those of us who had reported the liberation of Bangladesh and we would meet for a curry. His pinstriped suit and inns-of-court manner belied his own enduring struggle and that of his homeland: recurring floods and the conflict between feudalists and democrats and, later, fundamentalists.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&amp;#8220;I am the prime minister now,&amp;#8221; he once said, as if we had not heard. Outspoken about his people&amp;#8217;s &amp;#8220;right to social and economic justice&amp;#8221;, especially women, he was duly arrested again, then won his parliamentary seat from prison.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;On April 12 last year, late at night, 25 soldiers smashed into Moudud&amp;#8217;s house in Dhaka. They had no warrant. They stripped his home and &amp;#8220;rendered&amp;#8221; him, blindfolded, to a place known only as &amp;#8220;the black hole&amp;#8221;. There, he was interrogated and tortured and forced to sign a confession. He was finally charged with the possession of alcohol &amp;#8211; a few bottles of wine and cans of beer had been found. The supreme court declared his prosecution and detention illegal. This was ignored by the government, which calls itself a &amp;#8220;caretaker&amp;#8221; administration, but is a front for a military dictatorship.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Moudud is suffering from a pituitary tumour and has been denied medication for six months. He is terribly ill, says his wife, the poet Hasna Jasimuddin Moudud. &amp;#8220;Thousands of people have been detained for being activists, or just supporters,&amp;#8221; she says. &amp;#8220;The country is a prison, and the world must know.&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;There are striking similarities between Moudud&amp;#8217;s case and that of the Malaysian opposition leader, Anwar Ibrahim, who this week all but overturned the old, autocratic regime. Both were framed in order to silence them. The difference is that Anwar Ibrahim&amp;#8217;s case became an international cause celebre, whereas there is only silence for Moudud Ahmed, locked in his cell, ill, without charge or trial.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;In the next few days, Dr Fakhruddin Ahmed, the &amp;#8220;chief adviser&amp;#8221; to the caretaker government &amp;#8211; in effect, the head of Bangladesh&amp;#8217;s government &amp;#8211; will visit London. He is said to have a meeting arranged at 10 Downing Street. I and others have written to Dr Fakhruddin, asking him to comply with the supreme court&amp;#8217;s ruling and to release Moudud. He has not replied. If Gordon Brown&amp;#8217;s recent pronouncements on liberty have a shred of meaning, it is the question he must ask.&lt;/p&gt;


</description>
 <comments>http://www.ukwatch.net/article/the_prisoner_of_dhaka#comments</comments>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/watch_area/civil_liberties">Civil Liberties</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/watch_area/foreign_policy">Foreign Policy</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/bangladesh">Bangladesh</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/human_rights">human rights</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/moudud_ahmed">Moudud Ahmed</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/author/john_pilger">John Pilger</category>
 <pubDate>Wed, 12 Mar 2008 14:04:33 +0000</pubDate>
 <dc:creator>JamieSW</dc:creator>
 <guid isPermaLink="false">5552 at http://www.ukwatch.net</guid>
</item>
<item>
 <title>Bringing down the new Berlin Walls</title>
 <link>http://www.ukwatch.net/article/bringing_down_the_new_berlin_walls</link>
 <description>&lt;p&gt;The recent breakout of the people of Gaza provided a heroic spectacle unlike any other since the Warsaw ghetto uprising and the smashing down of the Berlin Wall. Whereas on the occupied West Bank, Ariel Sharon’s master plan of walling in the population and stealing their land and resources has all but succeeded, requiring only a Palestinian Vichy to sign it off, the people of Gaza have defied their tormentors, however briefly, and it is a guarantee they will do so again. There is profound symbolism in their achievement, touching lives and hopes all over the world.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;“[Sharon’s] fate for us,” wrote Karma Nabulsi, a Palestinian, “was a Hobbesian vision of an anarchic society: truncated, violent, powerless, destroyed, cowed, ruled by disparate militias, gangs, religious ideologues and extremists, broken up into ethnic and religious tribalism, and co-opted [by] collaborationists. Look to the Iraq of today – that is what he had in store for us and he nearly achieved it.”&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Israel’s and America’s experiments in mass suffering nearly achieved it. There was First Rains, the code name for a terror of sonic booms that came every night and sent Gazan children mad. There was Summer Rains, which showered bombs and missiles on civilians, then extrajudicial executions, and finally a land invasion. Ehud Barak, the current Israeli defence minister, has tried every kind of blockade: the denial of electricity for water and sewage pumps, incubators and dialysis machines and the denial of fuel and food to a population of mostly malnourished children. This has been accompanied by the droning, insincere, incessant voices of western broadcasters and politicians, one merging with the other, platitude upon platitude, tribunes of the “international community” whose response is not to help, but to excuse an indisputably illegal occupation as “disputed” and damn a democratically elected Palestinian Authority as “Hamas militants” who “refuse to recognise Israel’s right to exist” when it is Israel that demonstrably refuses to recognise the Palestinians’ right to exist.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;“What is being hidden from the [Israeli] public,” wrote Uri Avnery, a founder of Gush Shalom, the Israeli peace movement, on 26 January, “is that the launching of the Qassams [rockets from Gaza] could be stopped tomorrow. Several months ago, Hamas proposed a ceasefire. It repeated the offer this week&amp;#8230;Why doesn’t our government jump at this proposal? Simple: to make such a deal, we must speak to Hamas&amp;#8230;It is more important to boycott Hamas than to put an end to the suffering of Sderot. All the media co-operate with this pretence.” Hamas long ago offered Israel a ten-year ceasefire and has since recognised the “reality” of the Jewish state. This is almost never reported in the west.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The inspiration of the Palestinian breakout from Gaza was dramatically demonstrated by the star Egyptian midfielder Mohamed Aboutreika. Helping his national side to a 3-0 victory over Sudan in the African Nations Cup, he raised his shirt to reveal a T-shirt with the words “Sympathise with Gaza” in English and Arabic. The crowd stood and cheered, and hundreds of thousands of people around the world expressed their support for him and for Gaza. An Egyptian journalist who joined a delegation of sports writers to Fifa to protest against Aboutreika’s yellow card said: “It is actions like his that bring many walls down, walls of silence, walls in our minds.”&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;In the murdochracies, where most of the world is viewed as useful or expendable, we have little sense of this. The news selection is unremittingly distracting and disabling. The cynicism of an identical group of opportunists laying claim to the White House is given respectability as each of them competes to support the Bush regime’s despotic war-making. John McCain, almost certainly the Republican nominee for president, wants a “hundred-year war”. That the leading Democratic candidates are a woman and a black man is of supreme irrelevance; the fanatical Condoleezza Rice is both female and black. Look into the murky world behind Hillary Clinton and you find the likes of Monsanto, a company that produced Agent Orange, the war chemical that continues to destroy Vietnam. One of Barack Obama’s chief whisperers is Zbigniew Brzezinski, architect of Operation Cyclone in Afghanistan, which spawned jihadism, al-Qaeda and 9/11.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;This malign circus has been silent on Palestine and Gaza and almost anything that matters, including the following announcement, perhaps the most important of the century: “The first use of nuclear weapons must remain in the quiver of escalation as the ultimate instrument to prevent the use of weapons of mass destruction.” Inviting incredulity, these words may require more than one reading. They come from a statement written by five of the west’s top military leaders, an American, a Briton, a German, a Frenchman and a Dutchman, who help run the club known as Nato. They are saying the west should nuke countries that have weapons of mass destruction – with the exclusion, that is, of the west’s nuclear arsenal. Nuking will be necessary because “the west’s values and way of life are under threat”.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Where is this threat coming from? “Over there,” say the generals.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Where? In “the brutal world”.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;On 21 January, on the eve of the Nato announcement, Gordon Brown also out-Orwelled Orwell. He said that “the race for more and bigger stockpiles of nuclear destruction [sic]” is over. The reason he gave was that “the international community” (basically, the west) was facing “serious challenges”. One of these challenges is Iran, which has no nuclear weapons and no programme to build them, according to America’s National Intelligence Estimates. This is in striking contrast to Brown’s Britain, which, in defiance of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, has commissioned an entirely new Trident nuclear arsenal at a cost believed to be as much as £25bn. What Brown was doing was threatening Iran on behalf of the Bush regime, which wants to attack Iran before the end of the presidential year.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Jonathan Schell, author of the seminal Fate of the Earth, provides compelling evidence in his recently published The Seventh Decade: the New Shape of Nuclear Danger that nuclear war has now moved to the centre of western foreign policy even though the enemy is invented. In response, Russia has begun to restore its vast nuclear arsenal. Robert McNamara, the US defence secretary during the Cuban crisis, describes this as “Apocalypse Soon”. Thus, the wall dismantled by young Germans in 1989 and sold to tourists is being built in the minds of a new generation.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;For the Bush and Blair regimes, the invasion of Iraq and the campaigns against Hamas, Iran and Syria are vital in fabricating this new “nuclear threat”. The effect of the Iraq invasion, says a study cited by Noam Chomsky, is a “sevenfold increase in the yearly rate of fatal jihadist attacks”.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Behold Nato’s instant “brutal world”.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Of course, the highest and oldest wall is that which separates “us” from “them”. This is described today as a great divide of religions or “a clash of civilisations”, which are false concepts, propagated in western scholarship and journalism to provide what Edward Said called “the other” – an identifiable target for fear and hatred that justifies invasion and economic plunder. In fact, the foundations for this wall were laid more than 500 years ago when the privileges of “discovery and conquest” were granted to Christopher Columbus in a world that the then all-powerful pope considered his property, to be disposed of according to his will.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Nothing has changed. The World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, the World Trade Organisation and now Nato are invested with the same privileges of conquest on behalf of the new papacy in Washington. The goal is what Bill Clinton called the “integration of countries into the global free-market community”, the terms of which, noted the New York Times, “require the United States to get involved in the plumbing and wiring of other nations’ internal affairs more deeply than ever before”.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;This modern system of dominance requires sophisticated propaganda that presents its aims as benign, even “promoting democracy in Iraq”, according to &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BBC&lt;/span&gt; executives responsible for responding to sceptical members of the public. That “we” in the west have the unfettered right to exploit the economies and resources of the poor world while maintaining tariff walls and state subsidies is taught as serious scholarship in the economics departments of leading universities. This is neoliberalism – socialism for the rich, capitalism for the poor. “Rather than acknowledging,” wrote Chalmers Johnson, “that free trade, privatisation and the rest of their policies are ahistorical, self-serving economic nonsense, apologists for neoliberalism have also revived an old 19th-century and neo-Nazi explanation for developmental failure – namely, culture.”&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;What is rarely discussed is that liberalism as an open-ended, violent ideology is destroying liberalism as a reality. Hatred of Muslims is widely advertised by those claiming the respectability of what they call “the left”. At the same time, opponents of the new papacy are routinely smeared, as seen in the recent fake charges of narcoterrorism against Hugo Chávez. Having insinuated their way into public debate, the smears deflect authentic critiques of Chávez’s Venezuela and prepare the ground for an assault on it.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;This is the role that journalism has played in the invasion of Iraq and the great injustice in Palestine. It also represents a wall, on which Aldous Huxley, describing his totalitarian utopia in Brave New World, might have written: “Opposition is apostasy. Fatalism is ideal. Silence is preferred.” If the people of Gaza can disobey all three, why can’t we?&lt;/p&gt;


</description>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/watch_area/activism">Activism</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/watch_area/media">Media</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/watch_area/politics">Politics</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/empire">empire</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/gaza">Gaza</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/imperialism">imperialism</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/israel">Israel</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/palestine">Palestine</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/walls">walls</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/author/john_pilger">John Pilger</category>
 <pubDate>Thu, 14 Feb 2008 17:49:42 +0000</pubDate>
 <dc:creator>JamieSW</dc:creator>
 <guid isPermaLink="false">5448 at http://www.ukwatch.net</guid>
</item>
<item>
 <title>Our model dictator</title>
 <link>http://www.ukwatch.net/article/our_model_dictator</link>
 <description>&lt;p&gt;In my film Death of a Nation, there is a sequence filmed on board an Australian aircraft flying over the island of Timor. A party is in progress, and two men in suits are toasting each other in champagne. &amp;#8220;This is an historically unique moment,&amp;#8221; says one of them, &amp;#8220;that is truly uniquely historical.&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;This was Gareth Evans, Australia&amp;#8217;s then foreign minister. The other man was Ali Alatas, the principal mouthpiece of the Indonesian dictator General Suharto, who died yesterday. The year was 1989, and the two were making a grotesquely symbolic flight to celebrate the signing of a treaty that would allow Australia and the international oil and gas companies to exploit the seabed off East Timor, then illegally and viciously occupied by Suharto. The prize, according to Evans, was &amp;#8220;zillions of dollars&amp;#8221;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Beneath them lay a land of crosses: great black crosses etched against the sky, crosses on peaks, crosses in tiers on the hillsides. Filming clandestinely in East Timor, I would walk into the scrub, and there were the crosses. They littered the earth and crowded the eye. In 1993, the foreign affairs committee of Australia&amp;#8217;s parliament reported that &amp;#8220;at least 200,000&amp;#8221; had died under Indonesia&amp;#8217;s occupation: almost a third of the population. Yet East Timor&amp;#8217;s horror, foretold and nurtured by the US, Britain and Australia, was a sequel. &amp;#8220;No single American action in the period after 1945,&amp;#8221; wrote the historian Gabriel Kolko, &amp;#8220;was as bloodthirsty as its role in Indonesia, for it tried to initiate the massacre.&amp;#8221; He was referring to Suharto&amp;#8217;s seizure of power in 1965-6, which caused the violent deaths of up to a million people.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;To understand the significance of Suharto is to look beneath the surface of the current world order: the so-called global economy and the ruthless cynicism of those who run it. Suharto was our model mass murderer &amp;#8211; &amp;#8220;our&amp;#8221; is used here advisedly. &amp;#8220;One of our very best and most valuable friends,&amp;#8221; Thatcher called him. For three decades the south-east Asian department of the Foreign Office worked tirelessly to minimise the crimes of Suharto&amp;#8217;s gestapo, known as Kopassus, who gunned down people with British-supplied Heckler &amp;amp; Koch machine guns from British-supplied Tactica &amp;#8220;riot control&amp;#8221; vehicles.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;A Foreign Office speciality was smearing witnesses to the bombing of East Timorese villages by British-supplied Hawk aircraft &amp;#8211; until Robin Cook was forced to admit it was true. Almost a billion pounds in export credit guarantees financed the sale of the Hawks, paid for by the British taxpayer while the arms industry reaped the profit.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Only the Australians were more obsequious. &amp;#8220;We know your people love you,&amp;#8221; the prime minister Bob Hawke told the dictator to his face. His successor, Paul Keating, regarded the tyrant as a father figure. Paul Kelly, a prominent Murdoch retainer, led a group of major newspaper editors to Jakarta, to fawn before the mass murderer even though they all knew his grisly record.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Here lies a clue as to why Suharto, unlike Saddam Hussein, died not on the gallows but surrounded by the finest medical team his secret billions could buy. Ralph McGehee, a senior &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;CIA&lt;/span&gt; operations officer in the 1960s, describes the terror of Suharto&amp;#8217;s takeover in 1965-6 as &amp;#8220;the model operation&amp;#8221; for the US-backed coup that got rid of Salvador Allende in Chile seven years later. &amp;#8220;The &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;CIA&lt;/span&gt; forged a document purporting to reveal a leftist plot to murder Chilean military leaders,&amp;#8221; he wrote, &amp;#8220;[just like] what happened in Indonesia in 1965.&amp;#8221; The US embassy in Jakarta supplied Suharto with a &amp;#8220;zap list&amp;#8221; of Indonesian Communist party members and crossed off the names when they were killed or captured. Roland Challis, &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BBC&lt;/span&gt; south-east Asia correspondent at the time, told me how the British government was secretly involved in this slaughter. &amp;#8220;British warships escorted a ship full of Indonesian troops down the Malacca Straits so they could take part in the terrible holocaust,&amp;#8221; he said. &amp;#8220;I and other correspondents were unaware of this at the time &amp;#8230; There was a deal, you see.&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The deal was that Indonesia under Suharto would offer up what Richard Nixon had called &amp;#8220;the richest hoard of natural resources, the greatest prize in south-east Asia&amp;#8221;. In November 1967 the greatest prize was handed out at a remarkable three-day conference sponsored by the Time-Life Corporation in Geneva. Led by David Rockefeller, all the corporate giants were represented: the major oil companies and banks, General Motors, Imperial Chemical Industries, British American Tobacco, Siemens, US Steel and many others. Across the table sat Suharto&amp;#8217;s US-trained economists who agreed to the corporate takeover of their country, sector by sector. The Freeport company got a mountain of copper in West Papua. A US/European consortium got the nickel. The giant Alcoa company got the biggest slice of Indonesia&amp;#8217;s bauxite. America, Japanese and French companies got the tropical forests of Sumatra. When the plunder was complete, President Lyndon Johnson sent his congratulations on &amp;#8220;a magnificent story of opportunity seen and promise awakened&amp;#8221;. Thirty years later, with the genocide in East Timor also complete, the World Bank described the Suharto dictatorship as a &amp;#8220;model pupil&amp;#8221;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Shortly before the death of Alan Clark, who under Thatcher was the minister responsible for supplying Suharto with most of his weapons, I interviewed him, and asked: &amp;#8220;Did it bother you personally that you were causing such mayhem and human suffering?&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&amp;#8220;No, not in the slightest,&amp;#8221; he replied. &amp;#8220;It never entered my head.&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&amp;#8220;I ask the question because I read you are a vegetarian and are seriously concerned with the way animals are killed.&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&amp;#8220;Yeah?&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&amp;#8220;Doesn&amp;#8217;t that concern extend to humans?&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&amp;#8220;Curiously not.&amp;#8221; &lt;/p&gt;


</description>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/watch_area/foreign_policy">Foreign Policy</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/east_timor">East Timor</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/general_suharto">General Suharto</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/indonesia">Indonesia</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/author/john_pilger">John Pilger</category>
 <pubDate>Mon, 28 Jan 2008 09:43:05 +0000</pubDate>
 <dc:creator>JamieSW</dc:creator>
 <guid isPermaLink="false">5401 at http://www.ukwatch.net</guid>
</item>
<item>
 <title>The &#039;Good War&#039; Is a Bad War</title>
 <link>http://www.ukwatch.net/article/the_039_good_war_039_is_a_bad_war</link>
 <description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;&amp;#8220;To me, I confess, [countries] are pieces on a chessboard upon which is being played out a game for dominion of the world.&amp;#8221;&lt;/em&gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;strong&gt;Lord Curzon&lt;/strong&gt;, viceroy of India, speaking about Afghanistan, 1898&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;I had suggested to Marina that we meet in the safety of the Intercontinental Hotel, where foreigners stay in Kabul, but she said no. She had been there once and government agents, suspecting she was Rawa, had arrested her. We met instead at a safe house, reached through contours of bombed rubble that was once streets, where people live like earthquake victims awaiting rescue.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Rawa is the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan, which since 1977 has alerted the world to the suffering of women and girls in that country. There is no organisation on earth like it. It is the high bar of feminism, home of the bravest of the brave. Year after year, Rawa agents have travelled secretly through Afghanistan, teaching at clandestine girls’ schools, ministering to isolated and brutalised women, recording outrages on cameras concealed beneath their burqas. They were the Taliban regime’s implacable foes when the word Taliban was barely heard in the west: when the Clinton administration was secretly courting the mullahs so that the oil company Unocal could build a pipeline across Afghanistan from the Caspian.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Indeed, Rawa’s understanding of the designs and hypocrisy of western governments informs a truth about Afghanistan excluded from news, now reduced to a drama of British squaddies besieged by a demonic enemy in a “good war”. When we met, Marina was veiled to conceal her identity. Marina is her nom de guerre. She said: “We, the women of Afghanistan, only became a cause in the west following 11 September 2001, when the Taliban suddenly became the official enemy of America. Yes, they persecuted women, but they were not unique, and we have resented the silence in the west over the atrocious nature of the western-backed warlords, who are no different. They rape and kidnap and terrorise, yet they hold seats in [Hamid] Karzai’s government. In some ways, we were more secure under the Taliban. You could cross Afghanistan by road and feel secure. Now, you take your life into your hands.”&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The reason the United States gave for invading Afghanistan in October 2001 was “to destroy the infrastructure of al-Qaeda, the perpetrators of 9/11”. The women of Rawa say this is false. In a rare statement on 4 December that went unreported in Britain, they said: “By experience, [we have found] that the US does not want to defeat the Taliban and al-Qaeda, because then they will have no excuse to stay in Afghanistan and work towards the realisation of their economic, political and strategic interests in the region.”&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The truth about the “good war” is to be found in compelling evidence that the 2001 invasion, widely supported in the west as a justifiable response to the 11 September attacks, was actually planned two months prior to 9/11 and that the most pressing problem for Washington was not the Taliban’s links with Osama Bin Laden, but the prospect of the Taliban mullahs losing control of Afghanistan to less reliable mujahedin factions, led by warlords who had been funded and armed by the &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;CIA&lt;/span&gt; to fight America’s proxy war against the Soviet occupiers in the 1980s. Known as the Northern Alliance, these mujahedin had been largely a creation of Washington, which believed the “jihadi card” could be used to bring down the Soviet Union. The Taliban were a product of this and, during the Clinton years, they were admired for their “discipline”. Or, as the Wall Street Journal put it, “[the Taliban] are the players most capable of achieving peace in Afghanistan at this moment in history”.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The “moment in history” was a secret memorandum of understanding the mullahs had signed with the Clinton administration on the pipeline deal. However, by the late 1990s, the Northern Alliance had encroached further and further on territory controlled by the Taliban, whom, as a result, were deemed in Washington to lack the “stability” required of such an important client. It was the consistency of this client relationship that had been a prerequisite of US support, regardless of the Taliban’s aversion to human rights. (Asked about this, a state department briefer had predicted that “the Taliban will develop like the Saudis did”, with a pro-American economy, no democracy and “lots of sharia law”, which meant the legalised persecution of women. “We can live with that,” he said.)&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;By early 2001, convinced it was the presence of Osama Bin Laden that was souring their relationship with Washington, the Taliban tried to get rid of him. Under a deal negotiated by the leaders of Pakistan’s two Islamic parties, Bin Laden was to be held under house arrest in Peshawar. A tribunal of clerics would then hear evidence against him and decide whether to try him or hand him over to the Americans. Whether or not this would have happened, Pakistan’s Pervez Musharraf vetoed the plan. According to the then Pakistani foreign minister, Niaz Naik, a senior US diplomat told him on 21 July 2001 that it had been decided to dispense with the Taliban “under a carpet of bombs”.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Acclaimed as the first “victory” in the “war on terror”, the attack on Afghanistan in October 2001 and its ripple effect caused the deaths of thousands of civilians who, even more than Iraqis, remain invisible to western eyes. The family of Gulam Rasul is typical. It was 7.45am on 21 October. The headmaster of a school in the town of Khair Khana, Rasul had just finished eating breakfast with his family and had walked outside to chat to a neighbour. Inside the house were his wife, Shiekra, his four sons, aged three to ten, his brother and his wife, his sister and her husband. He looked up to see an aircraft weaving in the sky, then his house exploded in a fireball behind him. Nine people died in this attack by a US F-16 dropping a 500lb bomb. The only survivor was his nine-year-old son, Ahmad Bilal. “Most of the people killed in this war are not Taliban; they are innocents,” Gulam Rasul told me. “Was the killing of my family a mistake? No, it was not. They fly their planes and look down on us, the mere Afghan people, who have no planes, and they bomb us for our birthright, and with all contempt.”&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;There was the wedding party in the village of Niazi Qala, 100km south of Kabul, to celebrate the marriage of the son of a respected farmer. By all accounts it was a wonderfully boisterous affair, with music and singing. The roar of aircraft started when everyone was asleep, at about three in the morning. According to a United Nations report, the bombing lasted two hours and killed 52 people: 17 men, ten women and 25 children, many of whom were found blown to bits where they had desperately sought refuge, in a dried-up pond. Such slaughter is not uncommon, and these days the dead are described as “Taliban”; or, if they are children, they are said to be “partly to blame for being at a site used by militants” – according to the &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BBC&lt;/span&gt;, speaking to a US military spokesman.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The British military have played an important part in this violence, having stepped up high-altitude bombing by up to 30 per cent since they took over command of Nato forces in Afghanistan in May 2006. This translated to more than 6,200 Afghan deaths last year. In December, a contrived news event was the “fall” of a “Taliban stronghold”, Musa Qala, in southern Afghanistan. Puppet government forces were allowed to “liberate” rubble left by American B-52s.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;What justifies this? Various fables have been spun – “building democracy” is one. “The war on drugs” is the most perverse. When the Americans invaded Afghanistan in 2001 they had one striking success. They brought to an abrupt end a historic ban on opium production that the Taliban regime had achieved. A UN official in Kabul described the ban to me as “a modern miracle”. The miracle was quickly rescinded. As a reward for supporting the Karzai “democracy”, the Americans allowed Northern Alliance warlords to replant the country’s entire opium crop in 2002. Twenty-eight out of the 32 provinces instantly went under cultivation. Today, 90 per cent of world trade in opium originates in Afghanistan. In 2005, a British government report estimated that 35,000 children in this country were using heroin. While the British taxpayer pays for a £1bn military super-base in Helmand Province and the second-biggest British embassy in the world, in Kabul, peanuts are spent on drug rehabilitation at home.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Tony Blair once said memorably: “To the Afghan people, we make this commitment. We will not walk away . . . [We will offer] some way out of the poverty that is your miserable existence.” I thought about this as I watched children play in a destroyed cinema. They were illiterate and so could not read the poster warning that unexploded cluster bombs lay in the debris.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;“After five years of engagement,” reported James Fergusson in the London Independent on 16 December, “the [UK] Department for International Development had spent just £390m on Afghan projects.” Unusually, Fergusson has had meetings with Taliban who are fighting the British. “They remained charming and courteous throughout,” he wrote of one visit in February. “This is the beauty of malmastia, the Pashtun tradition of hospitality towards strangers. So long as he comes unarmed, even a mortal enemy can rely on a kind reception. The opportunity for dialogue that malmastia affords is unique.”&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;This “opportunity for dialogue” is a far cry from the surrender-or-else offers made by the government of Gordon Brown. What Brown and his Foreign Office advisers wilfully fail to understand is that the tactical victory in Afghanistan in 2001, achieved with bombs, has become a strategic disaster in south Asia. Exacerbated by the assassination of Benazir Bhutto, the current turmoil in Pakistan has its contemporary roots in a Washington-contrived war in neighbouring Afghanistan that has alienated the Pashtuns who inhabit much of the long border area between the two countries. This is also true of most Pakistanis, who, according to opinion polls, want their government to negotiate a regional peace, rather than play a prescribed part in a rerun of Lord Curzon’s Great Game.&lt;/p&gt;


</description>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/watch_area/terror/war">Terror/War</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/afghanistan">Afghanistan</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/author/john_pilger">John Pilger</category>
 <pubDate>Wed, 09 Jan 2008 16:07:39 +0000</pubDate>
 <dc:creator>Tim Holmes</dc:creator>
 <guid isPermaLink="false">5370 at http://www.ukwatch.net</guid>
</item>
<item>
 <title>Left for dead by New Labour, liberal Britain must urgently fight back</title>
 <link>http://www.ukwatch.net/article/left_for_dead_by_new_labour_liberal_britain_must_urgently_fight_back</link>
 <description>&lt;p&gt;The former Murdoch retainer Andrew Neil has described James Murdoch, the heir apparent, as a &amp;#8220;social liberal&amp;#8221;. What strikes me is his casual use of &amp;#8220;liberal&amp;#8221; for the new ruler of an empire devoted to the promotion of war, conquest and human division. Neil&amp;#8217;s view is not unusual. In the murdochracy that Britain has largely become, once noble terms such as democracy, reform, even freedom itself, have long been emptied of their meaning. In the years leading to Tony Blair&amp;#8217;s election, liberal commentators vied in their Tonier-than-thou obeisance to such a paragon of &amp;#8220;reborn liberalism&amp;#8221;. In these pages in 1995, Henry Porter celebrated an almost mystical politician who &amp;#8220;presents himself as a harmoniser for all the opposing interests in British life, a conciliator of class differences and tribal antipathies, a synthesiser of opposing beliefs&amp;#8221;. Blair was, of course, the diametric opposite.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;As events have demonstrated, Blair and the cult of New Labour have destroyed the very liberalism millions of Britons thought they were voting for. This truth is like a taboo and was missing almost entirely from last week&amp;#8217;s Guardian debate about civil liberties. Gone is the bourgeoisie that in good times would extend a few rungs of the ladder to those below. From Blair&amp;#8217;s pseudo-moralising assault on single parents a decade ago to Peter Hain&amp;#8217;s recent attacks on the disabled, the &amp;#8220;project&amp;#8221; has completed the work of Thatcher and all but abolished the premises of tolerance and decency, however amorphous, on which much of British public life was based. The trade-off has been mostly superficial &amp;#8220;social liberalism&amp;#8221; and the highest personal indebtedness on earth. In 2007, reported the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, the United Kingdom faced the highest levels of inequality for 40 years, with the rich getting richer and the poor poorer and more and more segregated from society. The International Monetary Fund has designated Britain a tax haven, and corruption and fraud in British business are almost twice the global average, while Unicef reports that British children are the most neglected and unhappiest in the &amp;#8220;rich&amp;#8221; world.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Abroad, behind a facade of liberal concern for the world&amp;#8217;s &amp;#8220;disadvantaged&amp;#8221;, such as waffle about millennium goals and anti-poverty stunts with the likes of Google and Vodafone, the Brown government, together with its EU partners, is demanding vicious and punitive free-trade agreements that will devastate the economies of scores of impoverished African, Caribbean and Pacific nations. In Iraq, the blood-letting of a &amp;#8220;liberal intervention&amp;#8221; may well have surpassed that of the Rwanda genocide, while the British occupiers have made no real attempt to help the victims of their lawlessness. And putting out more flags will not cover the shame. &amp;#8220;The mortality of children in Basra has increased by nearly 30% compared to the Saddam Hussein era,&amp;#8221; says Dr Haydar Salah, a paediatrician at Basra children&amp;#8217;s hospital. In January nearly 100 leading British doctors wrote to Hilary Benn, then international development secretary, describing how children were dying because Britain had not fulfilled its obligations under UN security resolution 1483. He refused to see them.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Even if a contortion of intellect and morality allows the interventionists to justify these actions, the same cannot be said for liberties eroded at home. These are too much part of the myth that individual freedom was handed down by eminent liberal gentlemen instead of being fought for at the bottom. Yet rights of habeas corpus, of free speech and assembly, and dissent and tolerance, are slipping away, undefended. Whole British communities now live in fear of the police. The British are distinguished as one of the most spied upon people in the world. A grey surveillance van with satellite tracking sits outside my local Sainsbury&amp;#8217;s. On the pop radio station Kiss 100, the security service MI5 advertises for ordinary people to spy on each other. These are normal now, along with the tracking of our intimate lives and a system of secretive justice that imposes 18-hour curfews on people who have not been charged with any crime and are denied the &amp;#8220;evidence&amp;#8221;. Hundreds of terrified Iraqi refugees are sent back to the infinite dangers of the country &amp;#8220;we&amp;#8221; have destroyed. Meanwhile, the cause of any real civil threat to Britons has been identified and confirmed repeatedly by the intelligence services. It is &amp;#8220;our&amp;#8221; continuing military presence in other people&amp;#8217;s countries and collusion with a Washington cabal described by the late Norman Mailer as &amp;#8220;pre-fascist&amp;#8221;. When famous liberal columnists wring their hands about the domestic consequences, let them look to their own early support for such epic faraway crimes.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;In broadcasting, a prime source of liberalism and most of our information, the unthinkable has been normalised. The murderous chaos in Iraq is merely internecine. Indeed, Bush&amp;#8217;s &amp;#8220;surge&amp;#8221; is &amp;#8220;working&amp;#8221;. The holocaust there has nothing to do with &amp;#8220;us&amp;#8221;. There are honourable exceptions, of course, as there are in those great liberal storehouses of knowledge, Britain&amp;#8217;s universities; but they, too, are normalised and left to natter about &amp;#8220;failed states&amp;#8221; and &amp;#8220;crisis management&amp;#8221; &amp;#8211; when the cause of the crisis is on their doorstep. As Terry Eagleton has pointed out, for the first time in two centuries almost no eminent British poet, playwright or novelist is prepared to question the foundations of western actions, let alone interrupt, as DJ Taylor once put it, all those &amp;#8220;demure ironies and mannered perceptions, their focus on the gyrations of a bunch of emotional poseurs &amp;#8230; to the reader infinitely reassuring &amp;#8230; and infinitely useless&amp;#8221;. Harold Pinter and Ronan Bennett are exceptions.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Britain is now a centralised single-ideology state, as secure in the grip of a superpower as any former eastern bloc country. The Whitehall executive has prerogative powers as effective as politburo decrees. Unlike Venezuela, critical issues such as the EU constitution or treaty are denied a referendum, regardless of Blair&amp;#8217;s &amp;#8220;solemn pledge&amp;#8221;. Thanks largely to a parliament in which a majority of the members cannot bring themselves to denounce the crime in Iraq or even vote for an inquiry, New Labour has added to the statutes a record 3,000 criminal offences: an apparatus of control that undermines the Human Rights Act. In 1977, at the height of the cold war, I interviewed the Charter 77 dissidents in Czechoslovakia. They warned that complacency and silence could destroy liberty and democracy as effectively as tanks. &amp;#8220;We&amp;#8217;re actually better off than you in the west,&amp;#8221; said a writer, measuring his irony. &amp;#8220;Unlike you, we have no illusions.&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;For those people who still celebrate the virtues and triumphs of liberalism &amp;#8211; anti-slavery, women&amp;#8217;s suffrage, the defence of individual conscience and the right to express it and act upon it &amp;#8211; the time for direct action is now. It is time to support those of courage who defy rotten laws to read out in Parliament Square the names of the current, mounting, war dead, and those who identify their government&amp;#8217;s complicity in &amp;#8220;rendition&amp;#8221; and its torture, and those who have followed the paper and blood trail of Britain&amp;#8217;s piratical arms companies. It is time to support the &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;NHS&lt;/span&gt; workers who up and down the country are trying to alert us to the destruction of a Labour government&amp;#8217;s greatest achievement. The list of people stirring is reassuring. The awakening of the rest of us is urgent. &lt;/p&gt;


</description>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/watch_area/politics">Politics</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/new_labour">new labour</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/author/john_pilger">John Pilger</category>
 <pubDate>Tue, 18 Dec 2007 07:31:39 +0000</pubDate>
 <dc:creator>JamieSW</dc:creator>
 <guid isPermaLink="false">5318 at http://www.ukwatch.net</guid>
</item>
<item>
 <title> How the Anglo-American elite shares its &#039;values&#039;</title>
 <link>http://www.ukwatch.net/article/how_the_anglo_american_elite_shares_its_039_values_039</link>
 <description>&lt;p&gt;When Prime Minister Gordon Brown spoke recently about his government&amp;#8217;s devotion to the United States, &amp;#8220;founded on the values we share&amp;#8221;, he was echoing his Foreign Office minister Kim Howells, who was preparing to welcome the Saudi dictator to Britain with effusions of &amp;#8220;shared values&amp;#8221;. The meaning was the same in both cases. The values shared are those of rapacious power and wealth, with democracy and human rights irrelevant, as the bloodbath in Iraq and the suffering of the Palestinians attest, to name only two examples.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The &amp;#8220;values we share&amp;#8221; are celebrated by a shadowy organisation that has just held its annual conference. This is the British-American Project for the Successor Generation (&lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BAP&lt;/span&gt;), set up in 1985 with money from a Philadelphia trust with a long history of supporting right-wing causes. Although the &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BAP&lt;/span&gt; does not publicly acknowledge this origin, the source of its inspiration was a call by President Reagan in 1983 for &amp;#8220;successor generations&amp;#8221; on both sides of the Atlantic to &amp;#8220;work together in the future on defence and security matters&amp;#8221;. He made numerous references to &amp;#8220;shared values&amp;#8221;. Attending this ceremony in the White House Situation Room were the ideologues Rupert Murdoch and the late James Goldsmith.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;As Reagan made clear, the need for the &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BAP&lt;/span&gt; arose from Washington&amp;#8217;s anxiety about the growing opposition in Britain to nuclear weapons, especially the stationing of cruise missiles in Europe. &amp;#8220;A special concern,&amp;#8221; he said, &amp;#8220;will be the successor generations, as these younger people are the ones who will have to work together in the future on defence and security issues.&amp;#8221; A new, preferably young elite &amp;#8211; journalists, academics, economists, &amp;#8220;civil society&amp;#8221; and liberal community leaders of one sort or another &amp;#8211; would offset the growing &amp;#8220;anti-Americanism&amp;#8221;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The aims of this latter-day network, according to David Willetts, the former director of studies at Britain&amp;#8217;s right-wing Centre for Policy Studies, now a member of the Tory shadow cabinet, are simply to &amp;#8220;help reinforce Anglo-American links, especially if some members already do or will occupy positions of influence&amp;#8221;. A former British ambassador to Washington, Sir John Kerr, was more direct. In a speech to &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BAP&lt;/span&gt; members, he said the organisation&amp;#8217;s &amp;#8220;powerful combination of eminent Fellows and close Atlantic links threatened to put the embassy out of a job&amp;#8221;. An American &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BAP&lt;/span&gt; organiser describes the &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BAP&lt;/span&gt; network as committed to &amp;#8220;grooming leaders&amp;#8221; while promoting &amp;#8220;the leading global role that [the US and Britain] continue to play&amp;#8221;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The BAP&amp;#8217;s British &amp;#8220;alumni&amp;#8221; are drawn largely from new Labour and its court. No fewer than four &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BAP&lt;/span&gt; &amp;#8220;fellows&amp;#8221; and one advisory board member became ministers in the first Blair government. The new Labour names include Peter Mandelson, George Robertson, Baroness Symons, Jonathan Powell (Blair&amp;#8217;s chief of staff), Baroness Scotland, Douglas Alexander, Geoff Mulgan, Matthew Taylor and David Miliband. Some are Fabian Society members and describe themselves as being &amp;#8220;on the left&amp;#8221;. Trevor Phillips, chair of the Equality and Human Rights Commission, is another member. They object to whispers of &amp;#8220;a conspiracy&amp;#8221;. The mutuality of class or aspiration is merely assured, unspoken, and the warm embrace of power flattering and often productive.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BAP&lt;/span&gt; conferences are held alternately in the US and Britain. This year&amp;#8217;s was in Newcastle, with the theme &amp;#8220;Faith and Justice&amp;#8221;. On the US board is Diana Negroponte, the wife of John Negroponte, Bush&amp;#8217;s former national security chief notorious for his associations with death-squad politics in central America. He follows another leading neocon, Paul Wolfowitz, architect of the invasion of Iraq and discredited head of the World Bank. Since 1985, &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BAP&lt;/span&gt; &amp;#8220;alumni&amp;#8221; and &amp;#8220;fellows&amp;#8221; have been brought together courtesy of Coca-Cola, Monsanto, Saatchi &amp;amp; Saatchi, Philip Morris and British Airways, among other multinationals. Nick Butler, formerly a top dog at BP, has been a leading light.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;For many, the conferences have the revivalist pleasures honed by American PR techniques, with management games, personal presentations, and a closing jolly revue to lighten the serious business. The 2002 conference report noted: &amp;#8220;Many &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BAP&lt;/span&gt; alumni are directly involved with US and UK military and defence establishments.&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BAP&lt;/span&gt; rarely gets publicity, which may have something to do with the high proportion of journalists who are alumni. Prominent &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BAP&lt;/span&gt; journalists are David Lipsey, Yasmin Alibhai-Brown and assorted Murdochites. The &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BBC&lt;/span&gt; is well represented. On the popular Today programme, James Naughtie, whose broadcasting has long reflected his own transatlantic interests, has been an alumnus since 1989. Today&amp;#8217;s newest voice, Evan Davis, formerly the BBC&amp;#8217;s zealous economics editor, is a member. And at the top of the &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BAP&lt;/span&gt; website home page is a photograph of the famous &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BBC&lt;/span&gt; broadcaster Jeremy Paxman and his endorsement. &amp;#8220;A marvellous way of meeting a varied cross-section of transatlantic friends,&amp;#8221; says he. &lt;/p&gt;


</description>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/watch_area/media">Media</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/watch_area/politics">Politics</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/pr">PR</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/values">values</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/author/john_pilger">John Pilger</category>
 <pubDate>Mon, 17 Dec 2007 11:32:18 +0000</pubDate>
 <dc:creator>JamieSW</dc:creator>
 <guid isPermaLink="false">5315 at http://www.ukwatch.net</guid>
</item>
<item>
 <title>Tainted Hands Across the Water</title>
 <link>http://www.ukwatch.net/article/tainted_hands_across_the_water</link>
 <description>&lt;p&gt;When Gordon Brown spoke recently about his government&amp;#8217;s devotion to the United States, &amp;#8220;founded on the values we share&amp;#8221;, he was echoing his Foreign Office minister Kim Howells, who was preparing to welcome the Saudi dictator to Britain with effusions of &amp;#8220;shared values&amp;#8221;. The meaning was the same in both cases. The values shared are those of rapacious power and wealth, with democracy and human rights irrelevant, as the bloodbath in Iraq and the suffering of the Palestinians attest, to name only two examples.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The &amp;#8220;values we share&amp;#8221; are celebrated by an organisation that has just held its annual conference. This is the British-American Project for the Successor Generation (&lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BAP&lt;/span&gt;), set up in 1985 with money from a Philadelphia trust with a long history of supporting right-wing causes. Although the &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BAP&lt;/span&gt; does not publicly acknowledge this origin, the source of its inspiration was a call by President Reagan in 1983 for &amp;#8220;successor generations&amp;#8221; on both sides of the Atlantic to &amp;#8220;work together in the future on defence and security matters&amp;#8221;. He made numerous references to &amp;#8220;shared values&amp;#8221;. Attending this ceremony in the White House Situation Room were the ideologues Rupert Murdoch and the late James Goldsmith.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;As Reagan made clear, the need for the &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BAP&lt;/span&gt; arose from Washington&amp;#8217;s anxiety about the growing opposition in Britain to nuclear weapons, especially the stationing of cruise missiles in Europe. &amp;#8220;A special concern,&amp;#8221; he said, &amp;#8220;will be the successor generations, as these younger people are the ones who will have to work together in the future on defence and security issues.&amp;#8221; A new, preferably young elite &amp;#8211; journalists, academics, economists, &amp;#8220;civil society&amp;#8221; and liberal community leaders of one sort or another &amp;#8211; would offset the growing &amp;#8220;anti-Americanism&amp;#8221;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The aims of this latter-day network, according to David Willetts, the former director of studies at the right-wing Centre for Policy Studies, now a member of the Tory shadow cabinet, are simply to &amp;#8220;help reinforce Anglo-American links, especially if some members already do or will occupy positions of influence&amp;#8221;. A former British ambassador to Washington, Sir John Kerr, was more direct. In a speech to &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BAP&lt;/span&gt; members, he said the organisation&amp;#8217;s &amp;#8220;powerful combination of eminent Fellows and close Atlantic links threatened to put the embassy out of a job&amp;#8221;. An American &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BAP&lt;/span&gt; organiser describes the &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BAP&lt;/span&gt; network as committed to &amp;#8220;grooming leaders&amp;#8221; while promoting &amp;#8220;the leading global role that [the US and Britain] continue to play&amp;#8221;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The BAP&amp;#8217;s British &amp;#8220;alumni&amp;#8221; are drawn largely from new Labour and its court. No fewer than four &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BAP&lt;/span&gt; &amp;#8220;fellows&amp;#8221; and one advisory board member became ministers in the first Blair government. The new Labour names include Peter Mandelson, George Robertson, Baroness Symons, Jonathan Powell (Blair&amp;#8217;s chief of staff), Baroness Scotland, Douglas Alexander, Geoff Mulgan, Matthew Taylor and David Miliband. Some are Fabian Society members and describe themselves as being &amp;#8220;on the left&amp;#8221;. Trevor Phillips, chair of the Equality and Human Rights Commission, is another member. They object to whispers of &amp;#8220;a conspiracy&amp;#8221;. The mutuality of class or aspiration is merely assured, unspoken, and the warm embrace of power flattering and often productive.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BAP&lt;/span&gt; conferences are held alternately in the US and Britain. This year&amp;#8217;s was in Newcastle, with the theme &amp;#8220;Faith and Justice&amp;#8221;. On the US board is Diana Negroponte, the wife of John Negroponte, Bush&amp;#8217;s former national security chief notorious for his associations with death-squad politics in central America. He follows another leading neocon, Paul Wolfowitz, architect of the invasion of Iraq and discredited head of the World Bank. Since 1985, &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BAP&lt;/span&gt; &amp;#8220;alumni&amp;#8221; and &amp;#8220;fellows&amp;#8221; have been brought together courtesy of Coca-Cola, Monsanto, Saatchi &amp;amp; Saatchi, Philip Morris and British Airways, among other multinationals. Nick Butler, formerly a top dog at BP, has been a leading light.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;For many, the conferences have the revivalist pleasures honed by American PR techniques, with management games, personal presen tations, and a closing jolly revue to lighten the serious business. The 2002 conference report noted: &amp;#8220;Many &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BAP&lt;/span&gt; alumni are directly involved with US and UK military and defence establishments.&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BAP&lt;/span&gt; rarely gets publicity, which may have something to do with the high proportion of journalists who are alumni. Prominent &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BAP&lt;/span&gt; journalists are David Lipsey, Yasmin Alibhai-Brown and assorted Murdochites. The &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BBC&lt;/span&gt; is well represented. On the &lt;em&gt;Today&lt;/em&gt; programme, James Naughtie, whose broadcasting has long reflected his own transatlantic interests, has been an alumnus since 1989. &lt;em&gt;Today&lt;/em&gt;&amp;#8216;s newest voice, Evan Davis, formerly the BBC&amp;#8217;s zealous economics editor, is a member. And at the top of the &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BAP&lt;/span&gt; website home page is a photograph of Jeremy Paxman and his endorsement. &amp;#8220;A marvellous way of meeting a varied cross-section of transatlantic friends,&amp;#8221; says he.&lt;/p&gt;


</description>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/watch_area/business/economy">Business/Economy</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/watch_area/foreign_policy">Foreign Policy</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/author/john_pilger">John Pilger</category>
 <pubDate>Thu, 13 Dec 2007 14:52:51 +0000</pubDate>
 <dc:creator>Tim Holmes</dc:creator>
 <guid isPermaLink="false">5304 at http://www.ukwatch.net</guid>
</item>
<item>
 <title>The Forgotten Fallen</title>
 <link>http://www.ukwatch.net/article/the_forgotten_fallen</link>
 <description>&lt;p&gt;On Remembrance Day 2007, the great and the good bowed their heads at the Cenotaph. Generals, politicians, newsreaders, football managers and stock-market traders wore their poppies. Hypocrisy was a presence. No one mentioned Iraq. No one uttered the slightest remorse for the fallen of that country. No one read the forbidden list.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The forbidden list documents, without favour, the part the British state and its court have played in the destruction of Iraq. Here it is:&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;1 Holocaust denial&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;On 25 October, Dai Davies MP asked Gordon Brown about civilian deaths in Iraq. Brown passed the question to the Foreign Secretary, David Miliband, who passed it to his junior minister, Kim Howells, who replied: &amp;#8220;We continue to believe that there are no comprehensive or reliable figures for deaths since March 2003.&amp;#8221; This was a deception. In October 2006, the &lt;em&gt;Lancet&lt;/em&gt; published research by Johns Hopkins University in the US and al-Mustansiriya University in Baghdad which calculated that 655,000 Iraqis had died as a result of the Anglo-American invasion. A Freedom of Information search revealed that the government, while publicly dismissing the study, secretly backed it as comprehensive and reliable. The chief scientific adviser to the Ministry of Defence, Sir Roy Anderson, called its methods &amp;#8220;robust&amp;#8221; and &amp;#8220;close to best practice&amp;#8221;. Other senior governments officials secretly acknowledged the survey&amp;#8217;s &amp;#8220;tried and tested way of measuring mortality in conflict zones&amp;#8221;. Since then, the British research polling agency, Opinion Research Business, has extrapolated a figure of 1.2 million deaths in Iraq. Thus, the scale of death caused by the British and US governments may well have surpassed that of the Rwanda genocide, making it the biggest single act of mass murder of the late 20th century and the 21st century.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;2 Looting&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The undeclared reason for the invasion of Iraq was the convergent ambitions of the neocons, or neo-fascists, in Washington and the far-right regimes of Israel. Both groups had long wanted Iraq crushed and the Middle East colonised to US and Israeli designs. The initial blueprint for this was the 1992 &amp;#8220;Defence Planning Guidance&amp;#8221;, which outlined America&amp;#8217;s post-Cold War plans to dominate the Middle East and beyond. Its authors included Dick Cheney, Paul Wolfowitz and Colin Powell, architects of the 2003 invasion. Following the invasion, Paul Bremer, a neocon fanatic, was given absolute civil authority in Baghdad and in a series of decrees turned the entire future Iraqi economy over to US corporations. As this was lawless, the corporate plunderers were given immunity from all forms of prosecution. The Blair government was fully com plicit and even objected when it looked as if UK companies might be excluded from the most profitable looting. British officials were awarded functionary colonial posts. A petroleum &amp;#8220;law&amp;#8221; will allow, in effect, foreign oil companies to approve their own contracts over Iraq&amp;#8217;s vast energy resources. This will complete the greatest theft since Hitler stripped his European conquests.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;3 Destroying a nation&amp;#8217;s health&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;In 1999, I interviewed Dr Jawad Al-Ali, a cancer specialist at Basra city hospital. &amp;#8220;Before the Gulf War,&amp;#8221; he said, &amp;#8220;we had only three or four deaths in a month from cancer. Now it&amp;#8217;s 30 to 35 patients dying every month. Our studies indicate that 40 to 48 per cent of the population in this area will get cancer.&amp;#8221; Iraq was then in the grip of an economic and humanitarian siege, initiated and driven by the US and Britain. The result, wrote Hans von Sponeck, the then chief UN humanitarian official in Baghdad, was &amp;#8220;genocidal . . . practically an entire nation was subjected to poverty, death and destruction of its physical and mental foundations&amp;#8221;. Most of southern Iraq remains polluted with the toxic debris of British and American explosives, including uranium- 238 shells. Iraqi doctors pleaded in vain for help, citing the levels of leukaemia among children as the highest seen since Hiroshima. Professor Karol Sikora, chief of the World Health Organisation&amp;#8217;s cancer programme, wrote in the &lt;em&gt;BMJ&lt;/em&gt;: &amp;#8220;Requested radiotherapy equipment, chemo-therapy drugs and analgesics are consistently blocked by United States and British advisers [to the Sanctions Committee].&amp;#8221; In 1999, Kim Howells, then trade minister, effectively banned the export to Iraq of vaccines that would protect mostly children from diphtheria, tetanus and yellow fever, which, he said, &amp;#8220;are capable of being used in weapons of mass destruction&amp;#8221;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Since 2003, apart from PR exercises for the embedded media, the British occupiers have made no attempt to re-equip and resupply hospitals that, prior to 1991, were regarded as the best in the Middle East. In July, Oxfam reported that 43 per cent of Iraqis were living in &amp;#8220;absolute poverty&amp;#8221;. Under the occupation, malnutrition rates among children have spiralled to 28 per cent. A secret Defence Intelligence Agency document, &amp;#8220;Iraq Water Treatment Vulnerabilities&amp;#8221;, reveals that the civilian water supply was deliberately targeted. As a result, the great majority of the population has neither access to running water nor sanitation &amp;#8211; in a country where such basic services were once as universal as in Bri tain. &amp;#8220;The mortality of children in Basra has increased by nearly 30 per cent compared to the Saddam Hussein era,&amp;#8221; said Dr Haydar Salah, a paediatrician at Basra children&amp;#8217;s hospital. &amp;#8220;Children are dying daily and no one is doing anything to help them.&amp;#8221; In January this year, nearly 100 leading British doctors wrote to Hilary Benn, then international development secretary, describing how children were dying because Britain had not fulfilled its obligations as an occupying power under UN Security Council Resolution 1483. Benn refused to see them.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;4 Destroying a society&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The UN estimates that 100,000 Iraqis are fleeing the country every month. The refugee crisis has now overtaken that of Darfur as the most catastrophic on earth. Half of Iraq&amp;#8217;s doctors have gone, along with engineers and teachers. The most literate society in the Middle East is being dismantled, piece by piece. Out of more than four million displaced people, Britain last year refused the majority of more than 1,000 Iraqis who applied to come here, while removing more &amp;#8220;illegal&amp;#8221; Iraqi refugees than any other European country. Thanks to tabloid-inspired legislation, Iraqis in Britain are often destitute, with no right to work and no support. They sleep and scavenge in parks. The government, says Amnesty, &amp;#8220;is trying to starve them out of the country&amp;#8221;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;5 Propaganda&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&amp;#8220;See in my line of work,&amp;#8221; said George W Bush, &amp;#8220;you got to keep repeating things over and over again for the truth to sink in, to kind of catapult the propaganda.&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Standing outside 10 Downing Street on 9 April 2003, the BBC&amp;#8217;s then political editor, Andrew Marr, reported the fall of Baghdad as a victory speech. Tony Blair, he told viewers, &amp;#8220;said they would be able to take Baghdad without a bloodbath, and that in the end the Iraqis would be celebrating. And on both of those points he has been proved conclusively right. And it would be entirely ungracious, even for his critics, not to acknowledge that tonight he stands as a larger man and a stronger prime minister as a result.&amp;#8221; In the United States, similar travesties passed as journalism. The difference was that leading American journalists began to consider the consequences of the role they had played in the build-up to the invasion. Several told me they believed that had the media challenged and investigated Bush&amp;#8217;s and Blair&amp;#8217;s lies, instead of echoing and amplifying them, the invasion might not have happened. A European study found that, of the major western television networks, the &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BBC&lt;/span&gt; permitted less coverage of dissent than all of them. A second study found that the &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BBC&lt;/span&gt; consistently gave credence to government propaganda that weapons of mass destruction existed. Unlike the &lt;em&gt;Sun&lt;/em&gt;, the &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BBC&lt;/span&gt; has credibility &amp;#8211; as does, or did, the &lt;em&gt;Observer&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;On 14 October 2001, the &lt;em&gt;Observer&lt;/em&gt;&amp;#8216;s front page said: &amp;#8220;US hawks accuse Iraq over anthrax&amp;#8221;. This was entirely false. Supplied by US intelligence, it was part of the &lt;em&gt;Observer&lt;/em&gt;&amp;#8216;s staunchly pro-war coverage, which included claiming a link between Iraq and al-Qaeda, for which there was no credible evidence and which betrayed the paper&amp;#8217;s honourable past. One report over two pages was headlined: &amp;#8220;The Iraqi connection&amp;#8221;. It, too, came from &amp;#8220;intelligence sources&amp;#8221; and was rubbish. The reporter, David Rose, concluded his barren inquiry with a heartfelt plea for an invasion. &amp;#8220;There are occasions in history,&amp;#8221; he wrote, &amp;#8220;when the use of force is both right and sensible.&amp;#8221; Rose has since written his mea culpa, including in these pages, confessing how he was used. Other journalists have still to admit how they were manipulated by their own credulous relationship with established power.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;These days, Iraq is reported as if it is exclusively a civil war, with a US military &amp;#8220;surge&amp;#8221; aimed at bringing peace to the scrapping natives. The perversity of this is breathtaking. That sectarian violence is the product of a vicious divide-and-conquer policy is beyond doubt. As for the largely media myth of al-Qaeda, &amp;#8220;most of the [American] pros will tell you&amp;#8221;, wrote Seymour Hersh, &amp;#8220;that the foreign fighters are a couple per cent, and then they&amp;#8217;re sort of leaderless&amp;#8221;. That a poorly armed, audacious resistance has not only pinned down the world&amp;#8217;s most powerful army but has agreed an anti-sectarian, anti al-Qaeda agenda, which opposes attacks on civilians and calls for free elections, is not news.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;6 The next blood letting&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;In the 1960s and 1970s, British governments secretly expelled the population of Diego Garcia, an island in the Indian Ocean whose people have British nationality. Women and children were loaded on to vessels resembling slave ships and dumped in the slums of Mauritius, after their homeland was given to the Americans for a military base. Three times, the High Court has found this atrocity illegal, calling it a defiance of the Magna Carta and the Blair government&amp;#8217;s refusal to allow the people to go home &amp;#8220;outrageous&amp;#8221; and &amp;#8220;repugnant&amp;#8221;. The government continues to use endless recourse to appeal, at the taxpayers&amp;#8217; expense, to prevent upsetting Bush. The cruelty of this matches the fact that not only has the US repeatedly bombed Iraq from Diego Garcia, but at &amp;#8220;Camp Justice&amp;#8221;, on the island, &amp;#8220;al-Qaeda suspects&amp;#8221; are &amp;#8220;rendered&amp;#8221; and &amp;#8220;tortured&amp;#8221;, according to the &lt;em&gt;Washington Post&lt;/em&gt;. Now the US Air Force is rushing to upgrade hangar facilities on the island so that stealth bombers can carry 14-tonne &amp;#8220;bunker busting&amp;#8221; bombs in an attack on Iran. Orchestrated propaganda in the media is critical to the success of this act of international piracy.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;On 22 May, the front page of the &lt;em&gt;Guardian&lt;/em&gt; carried the banner headline: &amp;#8220;Iran&amp;#8217;s secret plan for summer offensive to force US out of Iraq&amp;#8221;. This was a tract of unalloyed propaganda based entirely on anonymous US official sources. Through-out the media, other drums have taken up the beat. &amp;#8220;Iran&amp;#8217;s nuclear ambitions&amp;#8221; slips effortlessly from newsreaders&amp;#8217; lips, no matter that the International Atomic Energy Agency refuted Washington&amp;#8217;s lies, no matter the echo of &amp;#8220;Saddam&amp;#8217;s weapons of mass destruction&amp;#8221;, no matter that another bloodbath beckons.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Lest we forget.&lt;/p&gt;


</description>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/watch_area/terror/war">Terror/War</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/iraq">iraq</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/remembrance_day">Remembrance Day</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/author/john_pilger">John Pilger</category>
 <pubDate>Thu, 15 Nov 2007 14:46:09 +0000</pubDate>
 <dc:creator>Tim Holmes</dc:creator>
 <guid isPermaLink="false">5198 at http://www.ukwatch.net</guid>
</item>
<item>
 <title>The Hypocrites who say they back Democracy in Burma</title>
 <link>http://www.ukwatch.net/article/the_hypocrites_who_say_they_back_democracy_in_burma</link>
 <description>&lt;p&gt;The news is no more from Burma. The young monks are quiet in their cells, or they are dead. But words have escaped: the defiant, beautiful poetry of Aung Than and Zeya Aung; and we know of the unbroken will of the journalist U Win Tin, who makes ink out of brick powder on the walls of his prison cell and writes with a pen made from a bamboo mat – at the age of 77. These are the bravest of the brave.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;What honour they bring to humanity with their struggle; and what shame they bring to those whose hypocrisy and silence helps to feed the monster that rules Burma.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;When I began to write this, I had planned to quote a moving passage from my last interview with Aung San Suu Kyi, but I decided not to &amp;#8211; because of something Suu Kyi said to me when I last spoke to her. “Be careful of media fashion,” she said. “The media like this sentimental version of life that reduces everything down to personality. Too often this can be a distraction.”&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;I thought about that, and how typically self effacing it was, and how right she was. For the greatest distraction is the hypocrisy of those political figures in the democratic West, who claim to support the Burmese liberation struggle. Laura Bush and Condaleeza Rice come to mind. “The United States,” said Rice, “is determined to keep an international focus on the travesty that is taking place in Burma.” What she is less keen to keep a focus on is that the huge American company, Chevron, on whose board of directors she sat, is part of a consortium with the junta and the French company, Total, that operates in Burma’s offshore oil fields. The gas from these fields is exported through a pipeline that was built with forced labour and whose construction involved Halliburton, of which Vice President Cheney was Chief Executive.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;For many years, the Foreign Office in London promoted business as usual in Burma. When I interviewed Suu Kyi a decade ago I read her a Foreign Office press release that said, “Through commercial contacts with democratic nations such as Britain, the Burmese people will gain experience of democratic principles.” She smiled sardonically and said, “Not a bit of it.”&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;In Britain, the official public relations line has changed; Burma is a favourite New Labour&amp;#8217;s &amp;#8220;cause&amp;#8221;; Gordon Brown has written a chapter in a book about his admiration of Suu Kyi. How well his platitudes reflect on his counterfeit liberalism. When the last month’s uprising broke out in Rangoon, he referred to the sanctity of the “universal principles of human rights”. This week he wrote a letter to &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;PEN&lt;/span&gt; about Burma&amp;#8217;s writers; it waffles about prisoners of conscience and is a distraction: indeed part of his current, grand theme of distraction about &amp;#8220;returning liberty&amp;#8221; when of course none will be returned without a fight. Hands can be wrung; letters to &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;PEN&lt;/span&gt; can be spun; nothing can be done. As for Burma, the essence of Britain&amp;#8217;s compliance and collusion has not changed. British tour firms – like Orient Express and Asean Explorer – are able to make a handsome profit on the suffering of the Burmese people. Aquatic – a sort of mini Halliburton – has its snout in the same trough, together with Rolls Royce and all those posh companies that make a nice earner from Burmese teak.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;When did Brown or Blair ever use their close connections with business – their platforms at the &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;CBI&lt;/span&gt; and in the City London, among the bankers of Brussels &amp;#8211; to name and shame those British companies that make money on the back of the Burmese people? When did a British prime minister call for the European Union to plug the loopholes of arms supply to Burma, stopping, for example, the Italians from supplying military equipment? The reason ought to be obvious. The British government is itself one of the world’s leading arms suppliers, especially to regimes at war with their neighbours, democracies or dictatorships, who cares? Next week, the dictator of Saudi Arabia, King Abdullah, whose tyranny gorges itself on British arms, will receive a state visit. Last night, (On October 25) the Brown government approved Washington&amp;#8217;s latest fabricated prelude to a criminal attack on Iran &amp;#8211; as if the horrors of Iraq and Afghanistan were not enough for the &amp;#8220;liberal&amp;#8221; lionhearts in Downing Street and Whitehall.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;And when did a British prime minister call on its ally and client, Israel, to end its long and sinister relationship with the Burmese junta. Or does Israel’s immunity and impunity also cover its supply of weapons technology to Burma and its reported training of the junta’s most feared internal security thugs? Of course, that is not unusual. The Australian government – so vocal lately in its condemnation of the junta – has not stopped the Australian Federal Police from training Burma’s  internal security forces in  at the Australian-funded Centre for Law Enforcement Co-operation in Indonesia.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Those who care for freedom in Burma and Iraq and Iran and Saudi Arabia and beyond must not be distracted by the posturing and weasel pronouncements of our leaders, who themselves should be called to account as accomplices. We owe nothing less to Aung San Suu  Kyi, to Burma’s writers and to all the bravest of the brave.&lt;/p&gt;


</description>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/watch_area/foreign_policy">Foreign Policy</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/burma">Burma</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/tags/human_rights">human rights</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ukwatch.net/author/john_pilger">John Pilger</category>
 <pubDate>Sat, 27 Oct 2007 00:40:13 +0000</pubDate>
 <dc:creator>Ellie Keen</dc:creator>
 <guid isPermaLink="false">5135 at http://www.ukwatch.net</guid>
</item>
<item>
 <title>Class Is Still the Issue</title>
 <link>http://www.ukwatch.net/article/class_is_still_the_issue</link>
 <description>&lt;p&gt;A state of parallel worlds determines almost everything we do and how we do it, everything we know and how we know it. The word that once described it, class, is unmentionable, just as imperialism used to be. Thanks to George W Bush, the latter is back in the lexicon in Britain, if not at the &lt;span class=&quot;caps&quot;&gt;BBC&lt;/span&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Class is different. It runs too deep; it allows us to connect the present with the past and to understand the malignancies of a modern economic system based on inequity and fear. So it is seldom spoken about publicly, lest a Goldman Sachs chief executive on multimillions in pay or bonuses, or whatever they call their legalised heists, be asked how it feels to walk past office cleaners struggling on the minimum wage.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Just as elite power seeks to order other countries according to the demands of its privilege, so class remains at the root of our own society’s mutations and sorrows. In recent weeks, the killing of an 11-year-old Liverpool boy and other tragedies involving children have been thoroughly tabloided. Interviewing Keith Vaz, chairman of the House of Commons home affairs select committee, one journalist wondered if “we” should go out and deal personally with our vile, mugging, stabbing, shooting youth. To this, the nodding Vaz replied that the problem was “values”.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The main “value” is ruthless exclusion, such as the exile of millions of young people 