TOKYO MASTER BANNER

MINISTRY OF TOKYO
US-ANGLO CAPITALISMEU-NATO IMPERIALISM
Illegitimate Transfer of Inalienable European Rights via Convention(s) & Supranational Bodies
Establishment of Sovereignty-Usurping Supranational Body Dictatorships
Enduring Program of DEMOGRAPHICS WAR on Europeans
Enduring Program of PSYCHOLOGICAL WAR on Europeans
Enduring Program of European Displacement, Dismemberment, Dispossession, & Dissolution
No wars or conditions abroad (& no domestic or global economic pretexts) justify government policy facilitating the invasion of ancestral European homelands, the rape of European women, the destruction of European societies, & the genocide of Europeans.
U.S. RULING OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR TO SALVAGE HEGEMONY
[LINK | Article]

*U.S. OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR* | U.S. Empire's Casino Unsustainable | Destabilised U.S. Monetary & Financial System | U.S. Defaults Twice A Year | Causes for Global Financial Crisis of 2008 Remain | Financial Pyramids Composed of Derivatives & National Debt Are Growing | *U.S. OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR* | U.S. Empire's Casino Unsustainable | Destabilised U.S. Monetary & Financial System | U.S. Defaults Twice A Year | Causes for Global Financial Crisis of 2008 Remain | Financial Pyramids Composed of Derivatives & National Debt Are Growing | *U.S. OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR*

Who's preaching world democracy, democracy, democracy? —Who wants to make free people free?
[info from Craig Murray video appearance, follows]  US-Anglo Alliance DELIBERATELY STOKING ANTI-RUSSIAN FEELING & RAMPING UP TENSION BETWEEN EASTERN EUROPE & RUSSIA.  British military/government feeding media PROPAGANDA.  Media choosing to PUBLISH government PROPAGANDA.  US naval aggression against Russia:  Baltic Sea — US naval aggression against China:  South China Sea.  Continued NATO pressure on Russia:  US missile systems moving into Eastern Europe.     [info from John Pilger interview follows]  War Hawk:  Hillary Clinton — embodiment of seamless aggressive American imperialist post-WWII system.  USA in frenzy of preparation for a conflict.  Greatest US-led build-up of forces since WWII gathered in Eastern Europe and in Baltic states.  US expansion & military preparation HAS NOT BEEN REPORTED IN THE WEST.  Since US paid for & controlled US coup, UKRAINE has become an American preserve and CIA Theme Park, on Russia's borderland, through which Germans invaded in the 1940s, costing 27 million Russian lives.  Imagine equivalent occurring on US borders in Canada or Mexico.  US military preparations against RUSSIA and against CHINA have NOT been reported by MEDIA.  US has sent guided missile ships to diputed zone in South China Sea.  DANGER OF US PRE-EMPTIVE NUCLEAR STRIKES.  China is on HIGH NUCLEAR ALERT.  US spy plane intercepted by Chinese fighter jets.  Public is primed to accept so-called 'aggressive' moves by China, when these are in fact defensive moves:  US 400 major bases encircling China; Okinawa has 32 American military installations; Japan has 130 American military bases in all.  WARNING PENTAGON MILITARY THINKING DOMINATES WASHINGTON. ⟴  
Showing posts with label US Military Base. Show all posts
Showing posts with label US Military Base. Show all posts

July 01, 2016

US-Anglo Capitalist Theft & Human Rights Abuse



Chagos Archipelago
US-Anglo Capitalist Theft
& Human Rights Abuse
for Illegal Capitalist US Military Base

RT News
https://www.rt.com/uk/349042-chagos-islanders-supreme-court/

Chagos islanders forcibly evicted by UK told they STILL can’t go home

Published time: 30 Jun, 2016 16:24


Chagos islanders forcibly removed from their homes by the British government to make way for a US military base have been told they are still barred from returning in a UK Supreme Court ruling.

Britain’s highest court said the islanders could not go back to their homeland because life on the archipelago in the middle of the Indian Ocean is too precarious, despite the fact over 4,000 US and UK military personnel live on the island Diego Garcia.

Since their forced eviction in the 1960s and 1970s, the islanders have campaigned for the right to return to their homes, supported by politicians such as Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn.

The Supreme Court ruling is the latest in a protracted legal battle against the UK government.

In 2000, the High Court ruled the Chagos islanders could return to all islands except Diego Garcia, the site of a large US military base. This was overturned in 2008 by a 3/2 majority.

Thursday’s ruling by the same majority is the latest setback in the islanders’ struggle for justice, however they have not been deterred by the decision.

It is impossible to accept that other people can live and work on our birthplace while we are not able to,” said Chagos Refugee Group leader Louis Olivier Bancoult.

“We will not give up. Chagossians will be on Chagos very soon.

“It’s time for the UK government to put an end to all our suffering. We have not lost all the battle. It’s not the end of the road. Our case is a just case. We are asking for our dignity as people and fundamental rights as human beings.”

https://www.rt.com/uk/349042-chagos-islanders-supreme-court/



SUMMARY
[info from wikipedia unless otherwise marked]

-------/\/\/

Chagos Archipelago
aka Chagos Islands, Oil Islands
over 60 tropical islands
Indian Ocean, 500 km south of Maldives
British Indian Ocean Territory
home to Chagossians over 150 years
UK evicted them 1967 - 1973
to let USA build MILITARY BASE on Diego Garcia

Diego Garcia only inhabited by only military & civilian US personnel

- since 1971

Sovereignty of Chagos Archipelago disputed
b/w  Mauritius & UK
UK excised Chagos Archipelago from Mauritian territory 1965
before Mauritius gained 'independence' in 1968

ARABS
Arabs first to visit Mauritius 
Mauritius named:  Dina Arobi in Middle Ages by Arab sailors

PORTUGUESE
1507, Portuguese sailors visit

DUTCH
Dutch established colony in Mauritius 1638
Mauritius home of the dodo & other bird species

dodo terrestrial, flightless, likely ground nesting
no natural mammalian predators
live specimens sent to Europe & east
earliest European depiction in royal menagerie of Emperor Rudolph II, Prague
c. 1610 paintings
dodo fearless of humans
fearlessness & inability to fly = easy prey to sailors
some mass killings for ships' provisions
in 1600s human population in Mauritius never exceeded 50 persons
but introduced:  dogs, pigs, cats, rats & macaques
which plundered dodo nests & competed for food resources
meanwhile, humans destroyed forest habitat of dodos
impact of pigs & macaques particularly severe
last dodo sighting 1662, shipwrecked Dutch mariner
dodo extinction reported 1600s but not recognised to 1800s
partly due to religious reasons:  did not believe extinction possible
partly b/c scientists doubted dodo existence (believed it was myth)
first human-induced extinction reference in 1833 mag.

Mauritius was named after Dutch prince
prince Maurice van Nassau
Dutch East India Company administration
1638 Dutch East India Company INTRODUCED SLAVERY
Mauritius source of slave labour under DEIC = Batavia
Batavia = modern Jakarta, Indonesia
Batavia became Dutch colony that became modern Indonesia post WWII
Batavia, source of:  nutmeg, black pepper, cloves, cinnamon
+ non indigenous:  coffee, tea, cacao, tobacco, rubber, sugar & opium
Dutch East Indies colonial city of Batavia held 320 years
fell to Japanese occupation WWII
renamed:  Jakarta under Japanese occupation
Dutch renamed:  Batavia / to Indonesia independence 1949
Dutch had made attempts to develop slave trade in Indian Ocean
Dutch East India Company maintained control to 1710
DEIC left due to PIRACY & wars with FRANCE & BRITAIN

Dutch navigator Abel Tasman set out from Mauritius
to discover western part of Australia

1710 - Mauritius, Dutch abandoned colony

FRENCH
1715 - Mauritius became French colony (Isle de France)
important base on Europe to East trade routes
Mauritius under French East India Company admin.
French continue slave labour
under French admin, slaves imported from:  Africa & Madagascar

involved in power struggle b/w French & British

BRITISH
1810 - French surrender / terms with British
name reverted to Mauritius on British rule
British continued slavery & held political prisoners in Mauritius
1835, slavery abolished
1834 - 1921:  over 500,000 indentured labourers under British
brought in for work on:
    - sugar plantations
    - factories
    - transport
    - construction
plus:  8,740 Indian soldiers brought to Mauritius
Aapravasi Ghat, Port Louis, major reception centre for slaves & semi-slaves
/ more
ie indentured servants / labourers
indentured servitude = form of people trafficking & labour exploitation
mass immigration to 'New World', working for master for fixed term of years
to pay off debt of migration, at which point servants freed to work for self
INDENTURED SERVITUDE
widely used in BRITISH COLONIES, NORTH AMERICA & ELSEWHERE


1600 - 1700 

HALF THE WHITE IMMIGRANTS
TO AMERICA COLONIES INDENTURED SERVANTS

late 1600s to early 1700s, children from England and France
= kidnapped and sold into indentured labour in Caribbean
* term of '5 years' meant nothing:  contracts bought & sold
* some never obtained freedom

1939 - WWII - Mauritians volunteer to serve British, Africa & Near East
versus Germans & Italians
German subs sunk British ships 1943 in Port Louis
but Mauritius itself was never threatened

1948 - first general elections (Labour win)
1953 - Labour, demand for universal suffrage (bettering Labour position)
1955 to 1957, constitutional conferences held London
1959 - first universal adult suffrage
1959 - Harold Macmillan, Winds of Change Speech
    best option for UK:  'independence' of colonies
    since late 1950s, 'independence' of UK colonies paved

1961 - Constitutional Review Conference, London
1963 - elections
    candidates chosen on ETHNIC & CASTE considerations
    social probs, overpopulation & monoculture of sugar cane (ie single crop cult.)
= intense campaign to HALT POPULATION EXPLOSION / decade decline pop. growth
= *does not explain HOW decline pop. (ie emigration?)
1965 - Lancaster Conference - UK wants to relieve itself of Mauritius colony


1965 - UK excised Chagos Archipelago from Mauritius
    to form BRITISH INDIAN OCIAN TERRITORY (BIOT)
1968 - Mauritius became 'independent' state


1968 - new constitution + Mauritius 'independence' proclaimed
    republic within: 

Commonwealth of Nations
Queen Elizabeth II - head of state

UN tribunal ruled:  UK acted illegally
    on creating marine protected area around Chagos
    without consent of Mauritius
    depriving Mauritius of fishing rights

2009-2011, Truth & Justice Commission (Mauritius)
    explores impact of slavery & indentured servitude in Mauritius
    the 'official apology' inquiry
    involves museum + 'crimes against humanity' ideology
    intro of Creole in schools
    land grants
    critics accuse govt. commission of being:  'eyewash'

Mauritius penal system:   French civil law + British common law
judiciary alleged to be independent
The Heritage Foundation vouches for the legal system ...lol

Maldives must be a puppet state, then

The Heritage Foundation
THF think tank set up 1973
by US right-wing/conservatives
shilling for free trade, limiting govt services & strong military for capitalist wars
considerable influence in Washington DC, esp. Ronald Reagan era

set-up funding from Coors Beer empire
Richard Mellon Scaife, Mellon industrial & banking wealth

funding from orgs. w/ connections to Koch brothers

NOTE: 
The Heritage Foundation strong ties with
1.  London Institute of Economic Affairs
2.  Mont Pelerin Society


Mont Pelerin Society
international org comprised of:

  • economists
  • philosophers
  • historians
  • intellectuals
  • business leaders
  • & others
portrayed as committed to personal & political freedom
ADVOCATES OF FREE MARKET & 'OPEN SOCIETY'
advocates classical liberal ideas / ie neoliberal ideas

'Open Society' 
coined by Henri Bergson 1932
Henri Bergson, French citizen
father Polish Jew (original name:  Berekson)
great-grandmother patroness of Polish Jewry, Hasidic movement
mother, of English-Irish Jewish background
famous Jewish entrepreneurial family in Poland
great-great-grandfather, prominent banker
married cousin of Marcel Proust
Marcel Proust best man @ wedding
sister = Mina Berson
aka Moina Mathers
sister married British occultist:  Samuel Liddel MacGregor Mathers
founder of HERMETIC ORDER OF THE GOLDEN DAWN
Henri Bergson = French professor & author
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henri_Bergson

The Heritage Foundation

Founders:
  • American religious cuck
  • German-American Catholic described cuck
  • brewing heir (Coors Brewing Co):
    •         Coors Brewing Co
    •         anti trade union
    •         required new employees to take lie detector tests
Heritage Foundation d*ckheads:

formulated many of Reagan's campaign ideas
  • pro US (capitalist) military & other
  • to support anti-communist resistance movements worldwide
  • pushed for this strategy, known as REAGAN DOCTRINE
  • in Afghanistan, Angola, Cambodia, Nicaragua and other
The Heritage Foundation, worked closely with anti-communist movements
  • eg.  Nicaraguan contras
  • eg.  Jonas Savimbi's Unita movement (Angola)
  • purpose:  military, economic + political pressure on Soviet-aligned nations
Heritage Foundation extremely influential USG,
incl CIA, Defence Intel Agency & National Security Council & other govt agencies

Thanks to these c*ckheads, US-Anglo capitalism has:
won both covert and overt 'wars of liberation' against Soviet-aligned states
COMMENT:  THEREFORE ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR WORLDWIDE ASCENDENCY OF JIHADISTS
critics also note:  undue bloodshed third world & damaged US-Soviet relations
Heritage instrumental role in portraying Russia as 'evil empire' .. LMAO
while Heritage were physically present providing military & political support
to power-grabbers & oppressors that would serve US capitalist interests


Think Tanks Abound With Former Spies
ex-CIA analyst officials at think tanks
http://www.thinktankwatch.com/2012/11/think-tanks-abound-with-former-spies.html


 
-------/\/\/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chagos_Archipelago

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mauritius

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indentured_servant

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Truth_and_Justice_Commission

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Batavia,_Dutch_East_Indies

http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php/Heritage_Foundation

COMMENT

Think I might be like the British government ... I selectively take 'human rights' into consideration, depending who is involved and what is at stake.

I'm all for human rights in this instance:  you can't remove people from a territory, claim it as yours and put a military base on it, like the US-Anglo capitalist empire has done.  Well, you can if you're the British Empire and, later, the US-Anglo Capitalist Empire, and your courts let you get away with it.

I don't buy any of the 'human rights' ideology (because might is right & one's own interests are paramount, and that is all that there ideally is).  But as the 'human rights' ideology is so fondly used by the post-WWII capitalist Empire to attain its own agenda (particularly, in implementing the invasion of European societies program they have maintained for decades, to the detriment of the people that comprise their nations), if this false god can also be used to challenge the US-Anglo Evil Hypocritical Empire, why not?  LOL ... I don't care if anyone thinks I'm horrible. That's what I see.


These are the hypocrites who claimed the Third Reich Germans and the Soviet Russians were 'evil' threats to the world, and look at just some of what they have done historically and what they now do, for the sake of the aims and profits of their wealthy classes, while they DESTROY the ancestral homelands of their own people:  the helpless, betrayed by unions and leftist political parties, enslaved, without organisation & politically policed, working classes.

Look how clever the US-Anglo Evil Empire is and how they plan well in advance: they stripped Maldives of the territory they had already decided to steal in 1965 (at which point, I'd bet their US military base was already planned for Diego Garcia), while Maldives was still under official British rule, before it gained what is supposed to be 'independence' in 1968.  But I'd bet the independence is a lie and that all these colonies that gained 'independence' were by then economically bound to the Evil US-Anglo Empire.


What we have in the summary re the Chagos Archipelago is a portrait, in miniature, of how capitalism operates, past and present. The essence of capitalism is always the same:  destruction, rape, exploitation and greed, for the vast enrichment of the few.

Capitalists murdered the dodo, enslaved people, created all the problems that there is between people who have been transported to locations they don't belong in etc.

The COMMONWEALTH OF NATIONS, is the evil headquarters, in my opinion.  This is the Anglo heart of the still-beating imperialist empire that has destroyed European nations (I think this is the nerve centre ... not sure yet, but it feels that way).  

By the time Harold Macmillan give his 'Winds of Bullsh*t' speech in 1959, the US-Anglo empire had already plotted the destruction of European societies.

I've yet to look at the Macmillan speech, but that's my initial feeling, and I'd wager that these are the creeps responsible for destroying British and colonial European nations.


*I can't understand the military worship of some of the nationalist types, because the Western military is just a capitalists' attack-dog, that does the bidding on behalf of capitalism (at the expense of the working classes - both in numbers of dead and in destructive consequences to nations:  eg. damaged former soldiers; blowback terrorism potential, blowback third world invasion, in the overall program of invasion).  The military is the tool of wealthy capitalist elites, and nothing more.  The military is rarely used to defend capitalist nations from actual threat, and it mostly exploits the gullible.
Although, I suppose there are people who just want the lifestyle and the ability to commit aggression on others, for the thrill factor, from the safety of high-tech planes and ships (mostly), like when they bombed the children of Serbia.
And then there's the mercenaries.  Think they might like to get closer.  They're sort of like modern-day Samurai, maybe?  Not exactly.  Think they're from poor South American nations and therefore probably exploited, rather than living by some Samurai and clan code. 

April 05, 2016

US Ruling Oligarchy Imperialism: Panama & Panama Invasion 1989

Article
SOURCE
http://web.stanford.edu/class/e297a/Panama%20Imperialism%20and%20Struggle.htm


US Ruling Oligarchy Imperialism:  Panama

source - circa. 2003
http://web.stanford.edu/class/e297a/Panama%20Imperialism%20and%20Struggle.htm

Iraq: a Lesson from Panama Imperialism and Struggle for Sovereignty
By Coleen Acosta



            If History is to be the signifier of lessons learned, then why do wars continue to happen? The United States has never really been considered an Imperialist nation, but as history proves, the US has had a long stake in international geopolitical control over various countries, as well as economic markets that have made these countries dependent on the United States for survival. In light of recent events in Iraq, one should take a step back and look at the US’ history of hostile invasions to “make the world safe for democracy.”  This mantra had devastating [edit: consequences] on the tiny country of Panama 14 years ago. Why did the US invade Panama? To free Panama from its oppressive dictator, Manuel Noriega. The result was the a death toll of three thousand, and the country’s further dependence on the US for economic survival. Who again was the US trying to save Panama from? In reviewing the story of Panama, one is able to draw uncanny connections to the current situation in Iraq. The administration even has many of the same people that decided to invade Panama under Bush senior. Now the same minds have decided to invade Iraq under George W. Bush, under the same pretext of “freeing the Iraqi people.” Based on history however, what will be the consequences for the Iraqi people and the Iraqi nation?

            On December 20,1989 President Bush ordered US forces into Panama as he explained, “to safeguard the lives of Americans, to defend democracy in Panama, to combat drug trafficking, and to protect the integrity of the Panama Canal Treaty.”[1]   In December of 1989, 26,000 US soldiers occupied Panama in search of Manuel Noriega to be seized and tried on trafficking and racketeering charges in a US Federal court. The invasion ended two weeks later when Noriega was captured and transported to Miami. Subsequently, a new colonial government under the leadership of Guillermo Endara was hand-picked by the United States which was followed by economic and political disaster. What lead to such a drastic action against Latin America’s least populated country, and what were the lasting traumatic effects on a people faced with an imperialist, nationalist struggle?

            The situation in Panama in 1989 had been the result of a vacillating sense of national pride at odds with an eighty year old American imperialist presence. Panama had been the bearer of imperialist tensions since the turn of the century solely because of its strategic location and possible economic advantages that such a location would yield. Panama is a country that occupies the isthmus dividing North and South America. With its passage way saving sea-farers 5,000 miles of additional sailing around the tip of Tierra del Fuego, it is no wonder that Panama had been so highly sought out, and so strictly guarded.

            In 1903 President Theodore Roosevelt supported a Panamanian uprising that enabled the country to gain its independence from Colombia. Roosevelt promised that warships would be placed off the coast of Panama, allowing Panama to declare its independence on November 3rd. As a trade-off, Panama had conceded to the US sole rights to the isthmus. Following Panama’s declaration of independence, it entered into a treaty agreement with the United States allowing it to build the canal and gain sovereignty over a ‘canal zone’; a ten mile wide strip of territory along the canal that divided the nation in two. In effect, panama’s independence from one nation, marked its subjugation to another. This imperialist presence remained in place for the next eighty-five years with no significant changes until the Treaty of 1977.  On September 7th US President Jimmy Carter and Panamanian President Torrijos signed a treaty in Washington promising that the US would concede control of the waterway over to Panama on December 31st 1999.

            Midway between these years, World War II had a profound effect on Panama’s sense of nationalism. In spite of internal strife and class-conflicts that pervaded Latin America during this period, “the Panamanian people were bent on promoting development that would benefit everyone.”[2] This economic development was closely associated with the national recovery of the Canal and the closing down of US military bases. This “nationalist” feeling began to grow increasingly strong between World War II and the treaty of 1977 to the consternation of the United States. After 1977, this spirit of nationalism began to wane and the US government sought to retain control over one of its most strategic protectorates.[3]

            Upon approval of the 1977 Canal treaties, Panama lost much of its national stability as the country began to be divided. When the treaties were signed, much of the population expected immediate results, economically and geo-politically. When these results were not realized, civil unrest began to imbed itself
into the fabric of the Panamanian people. Economic recession only fueled this feeling of resentment at the government as well as imperialist powers still occupying the canal zone. When Torrijos Herrera came to power in 1968 as a result of a junta of National Guard officers in 1968, he embarked on an impressive public works program that in hindsight proved to be over-ambitious.[4] As a result, Panama declined into economic recession that only further instigated public dissatisfaction with the administration. In 1981, this instability came to a head when in 1981, Torrijos was killed in a plane crash. The result would be a power struggle leading up to the invasion of Panama in 1989.

            After Torrijos’ death, his dictatorship was usurped by Colonel Manuel Noriega Moreno, an army successor to Torrijos as well as Chief of Panamanian Secret Police and CIA operative. With Noriega’s ascendancy to dictator, civil strife worsened in Panama. Noriega instituted new economic reforms that called for a more centralized policy controlled by the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund
. This meant shifting emphasis from productive industry investments and raw materials to service activities.[5]     The economic             consequences proved to be increased unemployment coupled with factional aggravation between business groups belonging to the ‘national’ alliance verses that of a free market.

            Another change that Noriega instituted was the increased presence and strength of the Panamanian Defense Forces (PDF) to guarantee social order endangered by the new economic policy. Obviously this caused unrest at the notion of being watched and controlled by a military government. By 1988, the Panamanian government had turned into a military regime.

            Also during 1988, Noriega had been indicted by a U.S. Federal court in Miami on drug trafficking and racketeering charges. A year later the opposition leader, Guillermo Endara won the presidential race by a large margin. In response to his ouster, Noriega nullified the election and proceeded to install one of his own constituents as president on September 1st 1989. On December 15th after surviving a violent coup, Noriega sought to gain increased dictatorial powers from the legislature whose members were placed there by him. The corruption ensuing in Panama under Noriega was palpable. On the same day, Noriega declared war on the United States. One day later his regime solicited the harsh response by US upon killing an unarmed American Marine Officer. On the December 19th the US decided to go to war.

            The economic damage caused by the invasion and subsequent civil disobedience had been estimated to be between $1.5 and $2 billion balboas, which would be comparable to US dollars.[6]  Unemployment rose to record highs as the government infrastructure was left in chaos. According to the chamber of Commerce, 10,000 employees lost their jobs in the aftermath of the war.
            Sanctions that had been placed on Panama since 1988 had created staggering financial ruin as well. North American sanctions included the freezing of  $120 million in funds at the National Bank of Panama operating in the United States.[7] In addition, 200 US firms suspended their fiscal obligations which included payment of Panamanian taxes valued at $400 million annually.[8] Panama’s sugar quota had been suspended which accounted for 30,000 tons of sugar exports along with the prohibition on US loans, donations and economic assistance. The US also announced sanctions on those merchant ships registered in Panama.[9]

            Why however did the US respond with such a heavy hand to a country that posed no logical threat? When the US invaded Panama, it did so under the banner of restoring order, protecting its citizens and to defend democracy. Whose democracy was the US defending however? In the words of Xabier Gorostiaga, “The complexity of the Panamanian crisis is not only the product of a long history but of a dialectic struggle between the Panamanian people in search of sovereignty while living under the imperial eagle.[10]  This crisis was not a simple event related to the removal of one corrupt leader or the US’ concern for democracy. Philip E. Wheaton would argue that, “the fundamental motivation was US military control over Panama after the year 2,000.”[11] Wheaton argues that the time-table for Panama to achieve complete sovereignty was reaching a critical moment, with the United States facing the danger of losing its century-long control over the Isthmus.

            It is true that neither US defense of the canal or judicial prosecution of Noriega justified an invasion which has, “cost possibly a thousand lives or more, tremendous suffering and damage to the county, an action that has not resolved but complicated the emergence of democracy in Panama under a colonial government.”[12] US invasion into Panama served to remind the rest of the world that Washington retained hemispheric hegemony.

            Long before the invasion of Panama in 1989, the US sensed the budding seeds of nationalism within Panamanian society that lead to the treaty of 1977. The US however was not prepared to disavow the economic and strategic gains that control over the canal would provide. Throughout the 1980’s therefore, the Reagan administration strove to contain a stronghold on control of the canal. Since the Carter-Torrijos treaties had been ratified by the US congress and approved by a Panamanian plebiscite, the US would never be able to renege a treaty returning a geographical wonder back to its owners. At the same time however, the treaty had to be created in 1977 or else the US would have run the risk of being condemned as an imperial colonizer. The US wanted to disentangle itself from the world perception of Roosevelt and his 'big stick’ oppressing the people of Latin America. The US therefore had the task of circumventing popular perception by first creating the treaty of 1977 and then surreptitiously trying to weaken it so that it could legally retain control. As Luis Restrepo commented, “the Reagan Administration’s strategy was to weaken the treaties, to debilitate them through non-compliance, to condition their content and modify their implementation.”[13]

            Two examples of such debunking tactics may be found in the passage of ‘International Law 96-70’ which fostered and justified a judicial position for the United States over the canal through, “jurisdictional, operative and administrative powers which violently disrupt the spirit and wording of the Torrijos-Carter Treaties.”[14] The anti-juridical tactic of 96-70 denies the sovereignty of the Republic of Panama over the zone territory. In addition to subversive measures to retain power in the region, Reagan violated the Treaties on over 50 separate  occasions such as, “the establishment of a Panama Canal Commission linked to the executive branch, under direct authority of the US President.”[15] Another example of such a violation would be, the reduction of the oversight functions of the Joint Board of Directors, established by the Treaty, to a mere supervisory role.[16] The invasion of Panama therefore was merely an extension of the Reagan policy to circumvent the language of the Treaty in order to retain some degree of influence if not control.

            The persons most harmed by the ensuing power struggle over control of the canal, were the Panamanian people. Ambushed from all angles, the Panamanian people existed at the whims of dictatorial regimes at the local echelon and imperialist forces at the international echelon. As a result, the Panamanian people were locked into subjugation in all possibilities. Where were they to go if the greatest superpower in the world was manipulating their own government? Noriega, the dictator that relegated Panama’s government to a military dictatorship had been a former employee of the US government and an army successor to Torrijos who had been supported by the US. Now that the superpower and the dictator were at odds, what would be the alternative be upon ousting that same leader? A higher power able to install yet a new leader while undertaking the forceful invasion of the country. Who was worse then? Noriega or the US?

            The bitter feeling of entrapment in light of the 1989 invasion seems to have been the lasting sentiment among the Panamanian people. This is a sentiment stemming not only from the invasion of 1989 but also nearly a decade of control, influence and presence; the manipulation of their sovereign government so that the Panamanian people are left incapable of actually living under a democratic government; resentment towards the US for all of these maladies in addition to the arrogance with which such a policy is carried out. It seemed ludicrous to the Panamanian people that the US would pretext the invasion to “defending democracy” when democracy was non-existent due to US policy.

            Exemplified in an interview with ‘Chuchu’ Martinez, one of Torrijos’ personal confidant and member of his ‘personal security team,’ bitterness towards the US seems unabashedly clear. When asked a question about when the United States began planning the invasion, Martinez responds,The ‘gringos’ were absolutely firm about not losing their military presence in Panama after the year 2,000. The problem was how to accomplish this goal.”[17] He further makes a vehement remark about one of Bush’s comments; “‘If Endara doesn’t win, we invade.This is Washington’s so called democratic option: either vote for Endara or we invade. So, the Panamanians went to the polls thinking that if Noriega’s candidate wins, the Yankees will either kill Noriega or invade. . .”[18]  He later comments that, “There is only one progressive thing about Noriega’s government: his clash with the Empire. . .”

            In another interview Wheaton speaks with a Panamanian writer and a Chilean woman from an upper middle-class neighborhood, February 1990. In the first interview, an anecdote was shared that reflect some of the contradictions about the invasion and point to the difficulties facing those committed to building a new Panama.[19] The first involves a unique robbery by the US occupation forces, reminiscent of WWII;

            In Buenos Aires, Argentina word came to the intellectual circles here that the North American forces had stolen the entire library of Dr. Ernesto Castillero Pimental, along with the art collection of Noriega, valued in the millions of dollars, from the National Museum, thence taking it the United States . . . Incredible!


The robbery in this anecdote is important because it represents a premeditated crime but more importantly, the fact that the US thinks it has the right to steal such treasures precisely because they consider it a US colony.
          

            More than lasting resentment against the United States, it is important to take note of the thousands of people that lost their lives in this conflict. That fact, more than any imperialist ploy serves as a stinging reminder of US imperialism; that
these people died because the US was sending a “humanitarian mission” to make Panama safe for democracy. In one account from the Codehuca province, the fatalities from the bombings were described as somewhere between 700 and 800 people, both civilian and military.[20] Other accounts from the same province quote the US Army as carrying out ‘sanitation’ activities in which they use, “flamethrowers to burn hundreds of bodies. They also used common graves in which they buried hundreds of bodies.”[21] These activities can be linked to the rumors of disappearances of people reflecting the discrepancy between the numbers of missing persons and the lists of prisoners.

            Other accounts of torture tell of one the US military acting against a ‘Macho del Monte’, a soldier from the Panamanian Defense Force. The soldier reported that a wound on his lower leg was caused by a projectile which had lodged in the sole of his foot. US soldiers took a metal cable that had been used to hang up laundry and introduced it into the hole until it touched the projectile producing intense pain. Another Macho del Monte soldier was hung up by one arm on which he already had an injury to his elbow, though that wound had not been stitched up.[22]

            In another report from Coco Solo, Colon,[23] the headquarters of the of the Panamanian Defense Forces and the second largest city in the country, a reporter observes, “one can hardly see any remains from the battle. The headquarters are intact with only a few smoke stains around its main windows. There isn’t a single explosion hole in the facade, yet the three-hundred Panamanian soldiers who were inside died there without a single US soldier losing his life.”[24] It was speculated that the explanation for the unusual phenomenon is that a bomb landed inside the building with such force that it caused the building to implode instantly killing everyone.

            In another town of El Chorrillo,[25] some 14,000 persons were left homeless as a result of the bombing visited upon El Chorrillo barrio from December 20th onwards. In this report, it was estimated that approximately 3, 983 homes located around the central headquarters were destroyed. Census data shows that 14,170 people lived in that part of the barrio that was destroyed. Of that population, 40% were minors aged 14 years and younger.

            One of the few reports concerning attacks on places in the interior of the country came from the village of Pacora, near Panama City.[26] The village was bombed with chemical substances by helicopters and aircraft from Southern Command. Residents reported that this chemical substance, “burned their skin, producing intense stinging and diarrhea.”[27] Other people of Pacora reported that their town had been converted into a huge concentration camp surrounded by barbed wire,
as the Nazis used to do,”  so that its residents could not offer any assistance to Panamanian soldiers in the area.

            Panama also served as a testing ground for new US weapons.
On January 9, 1990, Reuters published an article that stated the US military as, “being proud of the demonstration of their new weapons and techniques used during the Panama invasion, ranging from 500-foot parachute jumps to high-tech apparatus for night vision.”[28] A ‘humanitarian mission’ seems like an inappropriate operation to show off military might. Given the level of opposition that US forces encountered, there was no need for much of the advance military fighters used to bomb Panama. For example, it was reporter in Reuters that, “the most exotic weapon in the invasion was the F-117A ‘Stealth bomber.’”

Reuters reported that at least one of these attack aircraft flew to Panama from its desert base in Tonopah, Nevada to command an attack on the FDP base in Rio Hato where it fired two 2,000 pound bombs to stun and disorient Noriega’s troops.[29] A fighter of that magnitude was clearly not necessary for the defeat of Noriega’s army. In a war most often referred to as the “invasion,” one may deduce how much military force would have been necessary.

            What then was the United States trying to demonstrate? Clearly it wanted to accomplish more than simply apprehending Noriega in order to save the people of Panama from its leader. Perhaps the US wanted to send a message to the Panamanian people that it is not to be intimidated, or much more importantly, denied continued control of the Panama Canal, specifically before the date which the Treaty had specified the US should turn over the canal.


            The invasion of Panama left an irrevocable mark on the psyche of the Panamanian people. The sense of trauma, grief and tremendous sense of loss suffered at the hands of a dictator as well as an imperial power began to emerge in the culture of Panama during and shortly after the invasion. The sense of Trauma could be summed up in the words of Dr. Mauro Zuniga, a popular civic leader; “From December 20th on, we no longer have a nation. . . In an attack without precedent in military history, the United States has leveled the defenses of the Panamanian army and in less than four days, that institution lays in ruin.”[30]  He continued to say that, “During this new period, the struggle will be for us Panamanians to define what we intend this nation to be. . .”[31]  That redifinement was subsequently expressed in cultural mediums. One such medium was that of literature and poetry. Norah de Alba wrote a poem in the early days of the invasion entitled Mortal Cry.

Alba is the earliest known poet to reflect on the suffering and protest of the Panamanian invasion.  In her poem she describes the outrage that the Panamanians felt in response to the US’ false banner of war and the hardships that incurred.

            Alba’s first stanza;

                                                The arrived

                                                as do thieves in the shadows

                                                --imperceptibly—

                                                In complicity with our sleep.



She describes the US military as “thieves,”  clearly expressing Panamanian sentiments towards the US as plunders that have been stealing from the people; stealing economic riches from the canal.  In a later stanza she remarks on the completely ludicrous claim that the US had come to help the Panamanian people;

                                                They arrived

                                                and said – casually –

                                                that they had come in the name

                                                of peace to make war;


                                                That they had come to “democratize”



            It is clear that the Panamanians were no better off after the US show of ‘democratization’. The economy was in ruins, 3,000 people were dead, the country was divided, people were homeless and the US retained control over the canal.

            In the aftermath of the invasion, the Panamanians moved quickly to rebuild their civilian constitutional government. On December 27, 1989, Panama’s Electoral Tribunal invalidated the Noriega regime’s annulment of the May 1989 election and confirmed the victory of the opposition candidates under the leadership of President Guillermo Endara. When President Endara took office, he pledged to foster Panama’s economic recovery, transform the Panamanian military into a police force under civilian control, and strengthen democratic institutions.[32] During the subsequent years, the Endara government struggled to meet the public’s high expectations for reform.

            An important US congressional concern was the status of Panama's economic recovery during the aftermath. Before the military intervention, the economy had been severely damaged by two years of  U.S. economic sanctions and economic disruption caused by the political crisis. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) had declined some 25% between 1987 and the end of 1989. The intervention added further to the economic decline. Some sections of Panama City were heavily damaged, leaving thousands homeless, and subsequent looting left businesses with damages in the hundreds of millions.

            The canal was indeed returned to Panama in just before midnight, December 31st 1999, ending nearly a century of American jurisdiction over one of the world’s most strategic waterways. There is still however  a large military presence in Panama. Today, Panamanians regard the US with mixed feelings. The invasion of 1989 remains a sore point in US-Panama relations however the relationship between the two countries is a mutually beneficial economic arrangement. Some observers maintain that Panama has to be concerned with other nations' views of its legitimacy and its independence from the United States. Others, however, would welcome the beginning of military base negotiations, and argue that many Panamanians favor a permanent U.S. presence because of jobs and income associated with the U.S. military facilities. Some 6,000 Panamanians work directly for the U.S. military, while thousands of others provide a variety of services to the U.S. military community.[33] The bases reportedly bring in about $360 million annually to the Panamanian economy, directly and indirectly.[34] Still other Panamanians oppose any kind of U.S. military presence. Some argue that only with the U.S. military out of the country will Panama be able to break the dependent relationship it has with the United States and recover its own national identity.


Bibliography
[ listed in original document ]

source
http://web.stanford.edu/class/e297a/Panama%20Imperialism%20and%20Struggle.htm



---------------------- ----------------------


COMMENT

Hey, so much for 'humanitarian' intervention ... again.

I'd say it's a war crime to bomb civilians, to use excessive force, to destroy civilian dwellings, to use chemical weapons & to use targets of aggression as guinea-pigs for weapons testing.

The invasion was probably illegal as well, but the Three Amigos (USA, Britain & France) vetoed condemnation of invasion) and therefore OK'd it in the UN (probably after extorting a 'no' (to condemnation) vote from a bunch of poor countries?).  So much for the UN farce.

US should have been sent the bill for the obscene, massive destruction of the country's infrastructure, which was probably done so US creditors and contractors could benefit reinstating what was destroyed, or so that the country is otherwise somehow dependent on the US oligarchy and friends.

Iraqi assets were also looted.  So were Germany's:  the Americans and British helped themselves.  US stole most of the patents, I think.

It's interesting that World Bank and IMF have a hand as money lenders to Noriega's govt. in advance of the destruction in 1989.  The impression I had was that they were the vultures that come in after a country or region has been destroyed, but maybe the lenders are a constant presence?

September 17, 2015

Assange: US Will Do Everything to Overthrow ‘Unwanted’ Governments

Article
SOURCE
http://sptnkne.ws/Kd7



US Will Do Everything to Overthrow ‘Unwanted’ Governments - Assange

15:04 16.09.2015   http://sptnkne.ws/Kd7
The United States uses all its available resources to overthrow “undesirable” governments in other countries, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange said, according to German website NEOPresse.

Washington uses everything from military intelligence to commercial organizations to remove foreign governments that it considers unwanted. At the same time, the United States keeps increasing its firepower, establishing military bases across the world.

The current American "empire" consists of over 1,400 military bases in more than 120 countries. Meanwhile, Russia has only 12 military bases, one of which is in Syria that the Americans are currently trying to close down. Washington tried to do the same in Crimea, Assange said.

The American government doesn't act on behalf of its people, but serves to the interests of largest US corporations, the WikiLeaks founder said.

The US government uses unorthodox methods to achieve its objectives — such as the use of mercenaries and other third parties to fight its wars, Assange said
Thus, if there is a government that the United States doesn't like and considers to be a threat to its perception of the world, Washington will do everything to try to get rid of it.

Assange, who has been residing in the Ecuadorian embassy in London under asylum for over three years, has been wanted for questioning by  Swedish authorities since 2010 over accusations of unlawful sexual coercion and rape.

The activist has denied the accusations, stating that Swedish extradition attempts are aimed at sending him to the United States, where he faces espionage charges for publishing thousands of leaked top-secret military documents and diplomatic cables online.
source
http://sputniknews.com/us/20150916/1027076965/us-spends-lots-of-resources-to-overthrow-foreign-governments-julian-assange.html

---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------
COMMENT

So that's 12 Russian military bases versus over 1,400 American military bases, in 120 countries.
And this is the staggering amount of American military spending versus what other nations spend - combined:

It's worthwhile considering these factors when the US, British, NATO and EU propaganda machines, in the service of the US empire, start making media noise about the threat of 'Russian aggression'.  lol
WikiLeaks have just published a book on the American empire and its geopolitical impact, and it sounds a really good read:
BOOK:
The WikiLeaks Files: The World According to US Empire
http://www.versobooks.com/books/1931-the-wikileaks-files

Transcript: Assange - UK-US Special Relationship - War On Syria, Corbyn, & The WikiLeaks Files  |  here

---------------------- ꕤ  ----------------------

Julian Assange
Australian Journalist
FAQ & Support
https://justice4assange.com/



July 15, 2014

US $11 BILLION ARMS DEAL TO QATAR

US, Qatar sign $11 bn arms deal

Washington, July 15 (IANS) 

US and Qatar have signed an arms deal on Qatar's purchase of US Patriot defence systems and Apache helicopters to the tune of $11 billion, the US Defence Department said in a statement on Monday.

US Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel hosted Qatar's Minister of State for Defence Affairs Hamad bin Ali al-Attiyah at the Pentagon on Monday to sign letters of offer and acceptance for Apache helicopters and Patriot and Javelin defence systems worth $11 billion, Xinhua reported.

"Today's signing ceremony underscores the strong partnership between the United States and Qatar in the area of security and defence and will help improve our bilateral cooperation across a range of military operations," said Pentagon Press Secretary John Kirby in a statement.

Secretary Hagel also used the meeting to express his appreciation for the support that Qatar provides US forces in the country. "Today's visit followed Secretary Hagel's visit to Doha last fall, where he met with al-Attiyah to sign and renew the US-Qatar Defence Cooperation Agreement," Kirby said.

"This is a critically important relationship in the region," the official said, adding that the secretary is pleased to be able to continue to make the US-Qatar ties stronger.

US Vice President Joe Biden welcomed al- Attiyah at the White House and the two sides discussed regional issues, including Syria, Iraq, Libya, and the Gaza crisis.

During their meeting, Biden noted that the signing of the arms deal will help strengthen strategic relationship between Qatar and the US.

The weapons deal was the biggest for the US in 2014 and would enhance its security and diplomatic ties with Qatar to counter the threat across the Gulf from Iran, experts said.

SOURCE - IANS - here
----------------------------------------------
COMMENT

US scores it's biggest 2014 arms deal with Qatar - $11 BILLION.

Cooperation between Qatar & US strategic in region because of alleged Iran threat.  [Also reserves of gas.  Also US regional control. Important regional US ally.  Also big money.]

So what's the background?

----------------------------------------------
FURTHER INFO
State of Qatar is a sovereign Arab country, located in Western Asia, occupying the small Qatar Peninsula on the north-easterly coast of the Arabian Peninsula. Its sole land border is with Saudi Arabia to the south, with the rest of its territory surrounded by the Persian Gulf.

Qatar is home to USA's biggest military base in the Middle East.

[Blogger's note:  Historically has been under British and Ottoman rule.]

Qatar was also an early member of OPEC and a founding member of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC). It is a member of the Arab League. The country has not accepted compulsory International Court of Justice jurisdiction.

Qatar hosts the Al Udeid Air Base, which acts as the hub for all American air operations in the Persian Gulf. Qatar has bilateral relationships with a variety of foreign powers. It has allowed American forces to use an air base to send supplies to Iraq and Afghanistan.

Qatar signed a defence co-operation agreement with Saudi Arabia, with whom it shares the largest single non-associated gas field in the world.

It was the second nation, the first being France, to have publicly announced its recognition of the Libyan opposition's National Transitional Council as the legitimate government of Libya amidst the 2011 Libyan civil war.  Qatar's relations with Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates are strained, owing to the perceived closeness between the Qatari government and the Muslim Brotherhood.

The Qatar Armed Forces are the military forces of Qatar. The country maintains a modest military force ...

Qatar has recently signed defence pacts with the United States and United Kingdom, as well as with France earlier in 1994.

Qatar plays an active role in the collective defence efforts of the Gulf Cooperation Council; the other five members are Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, the UAE, and Oman.

The presence of a large American military base in the country provides the country with a guaranteed source of defence and national security.

In 2008 Qatar spent US$2.355 billion on military expenditures, 2.3% of the gross domestic product.  Qatari special forces have been trained by French and other Western countries,... also helped the Libyan rebels during the 2011 Battle of Tripoli.

Oil was discovered in Qatar in 1940, in Dukhan Field. The discovery transformed the state's economy. Now, the country has a high standard of living. With no income tax, Qatar (along with Bahrain) is one of the countries with the lowest tax rates in the world. The unemployment rate in June 2013 was 0.1%.

Qatar has the highest GDP per capita in the world as of 2013, according to the CIA World Factbook and approximately 14% of households are dollar millionaires.

In 2012, Qatar retained its title of richest country in the world (according to per capita income) for the third time in a row, having first overtaken Luxembourg in 2010.

Oil production will not long remain at peak levels ... as oil fields are projected to be mostly depleted by 2023.

However, large natural gas reserves have been located off Qatar's north-east coast.

Qatar's proved reserves of gas are the third-largest in the world...

1991 ... North Field gas development. 
1996 ... Qatargas ..... began exporting liquefied natural gas (LNG) to Japan.

Further phases of North Field gas development costing billions of dollars are in various stages of planning and development.
[wikipedia]
----------------------------------------------

This is embarrassing, but I didn't even know Qatar existed.
It sure sounds important to the US.

Also, I think 'liquified natural gas' is what hydraulic fracturing or fracking is all about (I think).

Quick check:

Anti-fracking activists rally with opponents of LNG export ...
Free Speech Radio News ‎- 9 hours ago
That's leading anti-fracking groups to form an alliance with opponent of LNG export terminals. Melinda Tuhus reports from D.C
...

[I've not read the Free Speech Radio New's story, so I haven't linked.  It's just what come up on my Google.]

Fracking is why the Ukraine is also important to the US - as well as strategic/military regional importance in the Ukraine.