Fourteen years of U.S. war crimes in Afghanistan

QANDI (Democracy Now) Sept 21 2015

October 7th will be the 14th anniversary of the longest war in US history–the monstrous US-NATO war on the people of Afghanistan. Democracy Now, Rolling Stone, & The Nation magazine have all reported about heinous war crimes committed by Green Beret operatives between 2012-2013 in Wardak province where they tortured, disappeared, & murdered 17 Afghans. Their bodies were later uncovered just outside the US military base after the Green Beret were driven out of the area by protests against the murders. Matthieu Aikins is the investigative reporter who uncovered the story.

The man in this photo is named Qandi, a man detained with the murdered men, who was tortured & held for nearly a year & then released without charge. In his testimony he said simply “I saw with my own eyes that they killed people.”

Aikins’ investigation is very important & the publicity has prompted the Pentagon to the fourth phony criminal investigation of the charges against the Green Beret. The first three exonerated the murderers & so will this one. Impunity from criminal charges for war crimes was in issue between the US & Iraq as well as the US & Afghanistan. The US negotiates what they call bilateral security agreements specifically exempting US soldiers from being prosecuted in the occupied country so the military can let them off scot-free.

What Aikins’ investigation should not obscure is that the Afghanistan War began in 2001 with US war crimes too gruesome to contemplate. When US special forces & their Afghan allies (the Northern Alliance) defeated Taliban forces on November 9th 2001 at Mazer-e-Sharif, hundreds of Taliban soldiers surrendered. At least 800 were confined to a prison compound which US bombers pummeled for three days as witnessed by journalists & Red Cross representatives. The BBC reported that Afghan troops holding the prisoners continued to shoot at Taliban bodies in the compound debris after the bombing siege to make sure they were dead.

The US & Northern Alliance then moved 168 km (105 miles) to lay siege to Kunduz where thousands more Taliban surrendered. Afghan general Abdul Rashid Dostum, collaborating with US special forces, then stuffed about 2,000 Taliban prisoners into closed metal shipping containers without food or water for transport to a prison 301 km (187 miles) away. They were intentionally suffocated & when they arrived at the prison witnesses testified they saw blood & other body fluids flowing from the containers. According to a declassified US State Department intelligence report, 1,500 were buried in a mass grave in Dasht-i-Leili under the supervision of US special forces. The same report of the incident said Afghan witnesses (like the truck drivers) were later tortured or killed.

These monstrous crimes were in the first month & a-half of the war against Afghanistan & they have not ceased. The infamous Bagram prison is a US rendition center for torture & interrogation–not of suspected “terrorists” but of students, farmers, workers.

A great tragedy of our era is the weakness of the international antiwar movement in responding to the horrors of the wars against Afghanistan & Iraq. Nothing is more imperative than marshaling those forces in defense of Afghans who have sustained over 30 years of war. Find a rally or organize one to demand “US-NATO out of Afghanistan!”

(Photo of Qandi is still shot from video interview on Democracy Now)

Behold the jester for Israeli apartheid: Pharrell Williams

Pharrell Williams (Thomas Hawk:Flickr) Sept 21 2015

Behold the jester for Israeli apartheid! Pharrell Williams just shot himself in the ass by continuing with his performance today in Cape Town, South Africa as part of an endorsement deal with Woolworth’s, a grocery chain that sells Israeli products. The BDS movement promised to protest his gig if he did not cancel.

The City of Cape Town shamefully imposed a limit of only 150 BDS activists protesting the event. During the barbaric 2014 carpet bombing siege of Gaza, protests across South Africa, including Cape Town, included hundreds of thousands of people.

Electronic Intifada reports that Saturday a South African High Court found the 150 limit unconstitutional & ruled the protest could include up to 16,000 people. The judge isn’t stupid. Once a protest hits 10,000, who’s counting? And who’s going to stop them from growing to 40,000 which is what some media is predicting?

A salute to the Palestinian solidarity movement in Cape Town. In the words of 1960s protesters, “sock it to him!” We only wish we were there to join you but we send our solidarity. Please post pictures so we can savor the moment.

(Photo by Thomas Hawk/Flickr)

A tender moment on a hard journey for Syrian refugees

Syrian family (Muhammed Muheisen:AP)

These are really epic times we’re living through, confusing & stressful times. It calls on us to unravel & understand complex historic processes at a time when media obfuscates & stands justice on its head. Just getting the facts straight is an ordeal.

Every once in a while we need to pause & just get back to basics so we don’t lose our bearings–the basics of what human life is really all about. There’s so much human suffering created by inequality & realpolitik. But still despite so many disunities we create music, poetry, art, stories to charm one another–& the bonds of human love.

Muhammed Muheisen is a photojournalist who captures some of those things midst the squalor of refugee life, usually of Afghans in Pakistan, but here of Syrians in Croatia near the Hungarian border. This is 13 year-old Laila Abdulkarim holding her 6 month-old brother Zain who 6 year-old Mohammed is reaching up to kiss.

There are many photos of young refugees traveling alone, huddled, & bereft. The toughness is a marvel of human endurance because most of us get thrown for a loop if the hot water goes out for a day or the lights go out. These are dispossessed of everything.

This is just a tender moment on a hard journey that lets us know they will prevail.

(Photo by Muhammed Muheisen/AP)

Turkish government cracking down on refugees

Refugees marching to Greek border from Greece (Bulent Kilic:AFP:Getty Images) Sept 20 2015

This is Syrian refugees marching along a Turkish highway to the Greek border. Turkish authorities continue to obstruct their movement, holding some back from traveling & in some instances using aggressive border police against them. Turkey is allowing the US to use its airbases to launch air strikes but assaults refugees fleeing from the bombing.

It’s clear to all except the halfwits that run the European Union that the movement of refugees is not going to be held back by razor wire & brutalities at every damn border. You cannot stop hundreds of thousands of people fleeing war & bombing. You can hassle them along the way & make their life a living hell but you won’t stop them.

The EU is holding a summit this Wednesday to figure out how to handle this crisis but no one should hold their breath because the last time this cabal met they instituted a military naval operation against African refugees.

No one denies the logistics of managing this crisis or doing the paperwork/visa thing is daunting. It’s so much easier & expedites movement if you just provide humanitarian assistance–like busses–along the way & help people get to their destination.

Immigration is a human right which unfortunately neoliberalism, the barbaric phase of capitalism, makes necessary. Open the damn borders.

(Photo by Bulent Kilic/AFP/Getty Images)

Neither do vanity nor ever underestimate yourself

In the past short while I’ve been called a brilliant journalist a few times. I’m always a little embarrassed at such praise & don’t get too puffed up about it (maybe a little for a moment)–though surely I’m flattered. So you can keep it coming if you like–just to test the limits of my humility or vanity.

But let me admit to something so that others–especially young people & those timorous about their abilities & who they are–will take heart & learn to respect the contributions they can make to a better world.

As a working class woman I was often accused of plagiarism for my writing, most often discouraged (sometimes snidely) & though I continued to write for social movements I always suspected my writings weren’t up to snuff. I admit this not to get sympathy or admiration but so that others who are put down or convinced they are insufficient will challenge that baloney by trying, by stretching, by defying expectations. And never allowing others to define the limits of your commitment.