Showing posts with label football. Show all posts
Showing posts with label football. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

It is not for the dead . . . .

It is not for the dead that the bell tolls, 
but for those who are left behind.



October 22, 2013

Civilian Deaths in Drone Strikes Cited in Report
By DECLAN WALSH and IHSANULLAH TIPU MEHSUD
LONDON — In the telling of some American officials, the C.I.A. drone campaign in Pakistan has been a triumph with few downsides: In more than 300 missile attacks there since 2008, dozens of Qaeda and Taliban leaders have been killed, and the pace of the strikes, which officials frequently describe as “surgical” and “contained,” has dropped sharply over the past year.
But viewed from Miram Shah, the frontier Pakistani town that has become a virtual test laboratory for drone warfare, the campaign has not been the antiseptic salve portrayed in Washington. . . .
“The drones are like the angels of death,” said Nazeer Gul, a shopkeeper in Miram Shah. “Only they know when and where they will strike.”
Their claims of distress are now being backed by a new Amnesty International investigation that found, among other points, that at least 19 civilians in the surrounding area of North Waziristan had been killed in just two of the drone attacks since January 2012 — a time when the Obama administration has held that strikes have been increasingly accurate and free of mistakes.
The study is to be officially released on Tuesday along with a separate Human Rights Watch report on American drone strikes in Yemen, as the issue is again surfacing on other fronts. On Wednesday, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, a vocal critic of the drone campaign, is to meet with President Obama in the White House. . . .
But nowhere has the issue played out more directly than in Miram Shah, in northwestern Pakistan. It has become a fearful and paranoid town, dealt at least 13 drone strikes since 2008, with an additional 25 in adjoining districts — more than any other urban settlement in the world.
Even when the missiles do not strike, buzzing drones hover day and night, scanning the alleys and markets with roving high-resolution cameras.
That is because their potential quarry is everywhere in Miram Shah — Islamist fighters with long hair, basketball shoes and AK-47 rifles who roam the streets, fraternize in restaurants and, in some cases, even direct traffic in the central bazaar. The men come from an array of militant groups that take shelter in Waziristan and nearby, including Al Qaeda and the Afghan and Pakistani Taliban. . . .
Unusually for the overall American drone campaign, the strikes in the area mostly occur in densely populated neighborhoods. The drones have hit a bakery, a disused girls’ school and a money changers’ market, residents say. . . .
While the strike rate has dropped drastically in recent months, the constant presence of circling drones — and accompanying tension over when, or whom, they will strike — is a crushing psychological burden for many residents.
Sales of sleeping tablets, antidepressants and medicine to treat anxiety have soared, said Hajji Gulab Jan Dawar, a pharmacist in the town bazaar. Women were particularly troubled, he said, but men also experienced problems. “We sell them this,” he said, producing a packet of pills that purported to treat erectile dysfunction under the brand name Rocket.
Despite everything, a semblance of normal life continues in Miram Shah. On market day, farmers herding goats and carrying vegetables stream in from the surrounding countryside.. . .  On the edge of town, where buildings melt into low, tree-studded hills, young boys play soccer on the banks of the Tochi River. As in so many other countries, some youngsters wear the jersey of the English soccer club Manchester United. . . .
But the new Amnesty International report, which examines the 45 known strikes in North Waziristan between January 2012 and August 2013, asserts that in several cases drones killed civilians indiscriminately.
Last October, it says, American missiles killed a 68-year-old woman named Mamana Bibi as she picked vegetables in a field close to her grandchildren. In July 2012, 18 laborers, including a 14-year-old boy, were killed near the Afghan border.
Ms. Bibi’s son, Rafiq ur-Rehman, and two of her injured grandchildren are due to travel to the United States next week to speak about their experiences.
“The killing of Mamana Bibi appears to be a clear case of extrajudicial execution,” said Mustafa Qadri, the report’s author, in an interview. “It is extremely difficult to se

e how she could have been mistaken for a militant, let alone an imminent threat to the U.S.”
Declan Walsh reported from London, and Ihsanullah Tipu Mehsud from Miram Shah, Pakistan. Zia ur-Rehman contributed reporting from Karachi, Pakistan.
∼  ∼  ∼




Drone strikes are not like baseball strikes:  they carry a pretty big punch.




Daily life in Miran Shah





Carrying goods to market



Manchester United is a favorite team



North Waziristani like their open carry laws . . .







. . . as do some Texans.
San Antonio, Texas, 14 Sep 13



Death of loved ones is painful to those left behind, whether in North Waziristan . . . .

. . . or Sandy Hook, Conn. 

Empathy goes a long way toward mutual understanding of some of our commonality.

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Israel's Home-made Existential Crisis

Israel and the Palestinians are trading explosions, killing each other, and Israel is threatening another invasion of the Gaza Strip.

Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi and cabinet members are visiting Gaza as a show of solidarity, and has recalled his ambassador to Israel.  See the Washington Post article after the jump.

Israel's misguided leaders are renewing threats to Bomb Iran unilaterally, misguided because doing so will not stop Iran from Getting the Bomb [see Council on Foreign Relations,
 Oxford Research Group: 
Iran: Consequences of a War] and will cast Israel out of the Family of Nations.

Egypt's Grand Mufti Ali Gomaa recently issued a a fatwa declaring Shia (Iran) and Sunni (Arab) versions of  the Quran compatible, ending 1,600 year of animosity between the two, so far as Egypt is concerned.

Th Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood is siding more decidedly with the Muslim Palestinians.

Russia has Islamist radicals in its southern Republics who have done Russia much more harm than they ever have done to the US.  Russia can use help from Iran and from Egypt and can offer plenty of help in return.

Israel has more than a million Palestinians living as second-class persons under its control.  Israel cannot continue as it is and remain a democratic nation.

In short:

Make Peace between Israel and a Palestinian State.

Dom't Bomb Iran.

Images of potential brotherhood between Israel and Palestine follow.











Make football, not war!


Tuesday, March 20, 2012

War with Iran:A Demand for Peace



Some Old White Men are looking to stir up strife with Iran, among them . . .

Paul Wolfowitz
Prominent Neocon, responsible along with others for the Iraq War;
Disgraced former head of the International Monetary Fund

Benjamin Netanyahu
Israeli prime minister and spokesperson
for a minority of Jews in Israel

Ehud Barak
Israeli defense minister, who, when told told
hat most of Israel's military and intelligence services
 oppose a first strike on Iran, said, 
"The services look up to me and the prime minister; 
We look up only 
to the Sky."

Jack Rosen
President of the American Jewish Congress, 
who speaks for  the half of American Jews
 who like War with Iran

Speaking for American Jews who
promote a just and lasting Israel is 
Jeremy Ben -Ami
President of J Street
 (to which some of us also belong.  
And so should you.)


Republican presidential candidates (Ron Paul excepted) also wish us to go to War with Iran. . .


Mitt Romney
"Look like the time; bear welcome in your eye, 
Your hand, your tongue: look like the innocent flower, 
   But be the serpent under't."
MacBeth, Act 1 Scene  5

 Newton Leroy Gingrich
fI do not love thee, Dr Fell,
The reason why I cannot tell;
But this I know, and know full well,
I do not love thee, Dr Fell.


 Rik Santorum
Boy Scout Law
A Scout is:
Trustworthy,
Loyal,
Helpful,
Friendly,
Courteous,
Kind,
Homophobic
Obedient,
Cheerful,
Thrifty,
Brave,
Clean,
Intolerant of others,
and Reverent.



These gentlemen all favor a preemptive strike against Iran, which might well make Iraq look like the "walk in the park" it was advertised to be..

  Look what the Iraq war got us.

A quick snapshot of the country these Old White Men would start a War with:



Iran has a near-perfect literacy rate and nearly all speak Persian; and about  60% of Iran's peoples speak Persian - or "Farsi" as it is known in the Persian language - as their native 
or a language in the Persian language family.  





The folks just to the East of Iran are the Tajiks in Afghanistan and, of course, in Tajikistan.  They can understand Persians in Iran as well as South Carolinians can understand Dubliners.

The Tajiks in Afghanistan make up the Northern Alliance, mortal enemies of the Taliban, folks we should be allied with instead of Pashtuns if we hope to get out of Afghanistan in one piece.  For information on the Tajik Afghan province right next to Iran's East, see here. 

Herat, Afghanistan, the only successful Afghan province, and
run by Tajiks










About 40% of the population of Iran are native Turkic speakers.

Turkic speaking countries, and the Trukic Council


Immediately to the north of Iran is Azerbaijan, a member of the Turkic Council.  Azeris can understand Turkish the way Texans can understand Scots.




Some scenes fo Azerbaijan:

 Celebrating an Azeri football victory



Beach football has reached Azerbaijan . . . before Hawaii!



Wrestling is the Azeri national sport, as it is in Iran.


Farid Mansurov, Vice-chair of the Azeri National Wrestling Conference

Interesting, but not as interesting as the oil wresting in neighboring Turkey:











Horses are important to Azeris, as they are 
to all Turkic speaking people.  And Texans.





Azerbaijan has just been made a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council.  It is rich in oil and has a democratic, moderate, Shiite government.  It is friendly with the United States, and especially friendly with our oil companies.

In an recent interview, Azerbaijan Presidential Administration Social and Political Department Chief Ali Hasanov spoke of the stable relationship Azerbaijan has with Iran, and noted

"Iran is home to tens of millions of our countrymen. We do not want problems with this country, and we try to keep good relations with Iran, we seek not to interfere in the internal affairs of each other, to prevent the use of our territories against other states, and also against each other," he noted.


Azerbaijan has been at war with its Christian neighbor, Armenia, for years, over control of Nagorno-Karabakh, an area between the two counties.







Although Armenia is a Christian country and Azerbaijan is Shia, Shia Iran has sided with Armenia, and still, relations between Azerbaijan ad Iran remain normal.

What do the Azeris know that wee could learn?

In any event, Azeris would not be pleased if we were to bomb Tabriz, the capital of the Iranian province of  East-Azerbaijan, home to many Azeris, a major industrial area of Iran, and the province that the Iraqis are doing business with.  



 Tabriz footballer



 Tabriz carpet maker, who would make a carpet for you,
if you asked nicely



Pro-democracy demonstrators in  Tabriz.  Iran, for all its beauty and favorable neighbors, is a theocratic dictatorship which some day soon will see a change.


 Tabriz football team.  I would not like us to 
kill
the football team or the pro-democracy demonstrators.
Let 'em work it out for themeless.  Help where we can.



 Tabriz shop


 Tabriz metal worker


IS SHORT - -

We'd make the Iraqis and the Azerbaijani and the Tajiks mad at us, and we'd cause unforeseeable complications with the Kurds, the Balochi, and the Pakistanis (described in a later post) if we bombed Iran.  

Israeli leaders now want to bomb Iran, and think the consequences would be a mere 100 dead: they do not think they would be among he dead;  they are dead wrong, according to their own intelligence estimates. 

Republican presidential candidates and other Old White Men want to bomb Iran and don't' know or won't say what the consequences, in lives and treasure, would be or how we are to pay for the adventure.

We'd  make the Saudis happy, and I think they are worse, and more our enemy, than Iran.




DON'T BOMB IRAN.  





LIVE WITH ONE MORE COUNTRY WITH THE BOMB if need be.  It won't be worse than North Korea's having the Bomb, and we've heard nary a peep out of them except a piteous plea for food.



Written by an Old White Man, but not one of  Them.