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 ISIS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ISIS. Show all posts

September 30, 2015

Syria - US Ambassador to UN Samantha Power - Monstrous Lies

Article
SOURCE
http://www.ronpaulinstitute.org/archives/neocon-watch/2015/september/14/samantha-power-slams-russias-support-for-assad-downplays-isis-threat/


Samantha Power Slams Russia's 'Support' For Assad, Downplays ISIS Threat
Written by Daniel McAdams

Monday September 14, 2015

More evidence that the current "Russia invaded Syria" media frenzy is a Washington-engineered psy-op to provide cover for a final US push against Bashar al-Assad, is provided in today's outburst from US Ambassador to the UN Samantha Power, the fuel injector in the neocon "regime change" engine.

While the US has conducted more than 2,500 airstrikes against ISIS in Syria over the past year to very little effect, Power has taken to warning Russia that its claimed "military deployment" to Syria is "not a winning strategy."

One can only imagine the guffaws in Moscow over the architect of the US interventionist fiascos in Libya and Syria advising anyone on how to craft a winning foreign policy strategy. But Power, evidently utterly incapable of seeing the world as those of us in the reality-based community see it, takes to revising history to provide "evidence" for her Russia advice.  [... lol]

Power repeats on CNN today the old discredited claim that Assad "gassed his own people" back in 2013 -- a claim so flimsy that Obama was forced to back down on his promise to begin bombing the country in retaliation. In other words, in the below statement to CNN today, the US Ambassador to the UN lied and she knew she was lying when she warned Russia that:

    Doubling down on a regime that gases its people, that barrel bombs its people, that tortures people who it arrests simply for protesting and for claiming their rights -- that's just not going to work.

Meanwhile, Power downplays the threat of ISIS vis Assad, suggesting that it is "Machiavellian" to get too worked up over the possibility of an ISIS victory in Syria:

    Even if you were Machiavelli and all you cared about was ISIL, to support a regime like this and to not take account of the views of the vast majority of the Syrian people that want to go in a different direction is not going to either bring peace or actually succeed in defeating terrorism, which is what President Putin says his priority is.
Of course Power has no way of knowing what the majority in Syria prefer. But we do know that when asked, they clearly prefer Assad over ISIS. So she lied again.

While the US and its allies -- Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and the other Gulf States -- have openly trained, funded, and equipped radical jihadists to further their policy of regime change in Syria, Power displays again her astonishing chutzpah by blaming the ensuing rise of terrorism on...Russia and Iran!

    Russia and Iran may be the place really where one should lodge much of that criticism for supporting a regime that is carrying out these monstrous attacks against civilians, and again fueling -- whether wittingly or unwittingly -- the rise of terrorism.

But the "humanitarian" Power, is "just focused on what is going to make things better in the here and now" in Syria. To her this apparently includes damning Russia for its opposition to al-Qaeda and ISIS in Syria and continuing to promote these same groups.

Power's chutzpah does not stop there -- indeed it seemingly knows no bounds. While US intervention and regime change policy has directly led to the massive exodus from the country and resulting refugee crisis in Europe, the US diplomat pins the blame on...not enough US interventionism!

    You can't look at 12 million people being displaced from their homes, and desperate families washing up on shores and be satisfied with where we are. I think the challenge is to find what is the policy tool that's going to make things better.

Here's a suggestion: leave Syria alone!
Let those in the neighborhood like Iran and Russia take care of the jihadist problem. The more the US "helps" the Syrians, the more Syrians die. 
Copyright © 2015 by RonPaul Institute. Permission to reprint in whole or in part is gladly granted, provided full credit and a live link are given.
Please donate to the Ron Paul Institute


http://www.ronpaulinstitute.org/archives/neocon-watch/2015/september/14/samantha-power-slams-russias-support-for-assad-downplays-isis-threat/

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



Watch this Repulsive C*nt Lie

U.S. to Russia: Backing Assad 'not a winning strategy'


*

COMMENT


LOL ... cannot stand that Power woman.   

What a lying cow.

Funny article.  Even funnier video after reading the article.  :)

Not so funny for the people that are victims of this kind of Machiavellian aggression and deceit, US proxy war (ie US & ally funded & equipped terrorist op to destabilise and effect regime change in Syria) and far from funny for victims of imminent US 'intervention' -- ie more US aggression.





September 20, 2015

US-Coalition Trained Free Syrian Army Militants Enter Syria via Turkey - USD$500-million Destabilisation Mission

Article
SOURCE
http://www.presstv.com/Detail/2015/09/20/429968/Syria-US-Turkey-SOHR-Rami-Abdel-Rahman



75 US-trained militants enter Syria via Turkey: Report

Sun Sep 20, 2015 9:38AM 
Militants from the so-called Free Syrian Army take part in a military training in Syria’s northwestern city of Aleppo, May 4, 2015. ©AFP

Militants from the so-called Free Syrian Army take part in a military training in Syria’s northwestern city of Aleppo, May 4, 2015. ©AFP

Dozens of militants, who were newly trained by the US-led coalition purportedly fighting Daesh Takfiris, have entered Syria from Turkey, a report says.

The so-called Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) said in a report on Sunday that 75 militants have crossed into northern Syria over the past few days in a convoy of a dozen cars with light weapons and ammunition.

The militants that were “trained in a camp near the Turkish capital, entered Aleppo province between Friday night and Saturday morning,” said SOHR Director Rami Abdel Rahman.

They were later assigned to the so-called Division 30 and Suqur al-Jabal (Falcons of the Mountain), two units for the US-trained forces.

The US-led train-and-equip program in Turkey was launched in May to train up to 5,400 so-called moderate militants a year in the alleged battle against Daesh in Syria. [ie  versus ISIS / Islamic State pretext]

Washington claims that the USD-500-million mission aims only to target Daesh elements. Analysts, however, argue that the project actually seeks to create more chaos in Syria and weaken the Syrian government.

Before the new dispatch of militants to Syria, the program had only managed to train some 60 militants.

Last month, Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Muallem slammed the US for making a distinction between the Takfiri groups fighting against the Damascus government, saying, “For us in Syria, there is no such thing as moderate or non-moderate opposition. Whoever that takes up arms against the Syrian state is a terrorist.”

Since September 2014, the US, along with some of its allies, has purportedly been conducting airstrikes against Daesh extremists inside Syria without any authorization from Damascus or a UN mandate.

The airstrikes in Syria are an extension of the US-led aerial campaign against alleged Daesh positions in Iraq, which started in August 2014. Many have criticized the ineffectiveness of the raids.

This is while many members of the same US-led alliance have been among the staunch supporters of the terrorist groups operating to topple the Syrian government over the past four years.
http://www.presstv.com/Detail/2015/09/20/429968/Syria-US-Turkey-SOHR-Rami-Abdel-Rahman
---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------

COMMENT

The West is has been fully invested in 4 years of producing Middle Eastern mayhem, to weaken Syria.
As Western proxies causing destabilisation in Syria continue to receive Western support via US-allied military training (and presumably armament) in Turkey (on Syria's northern border; Syria is the cream coloured region with cities marked), Germany's Merkel is pitching in by spending a staggering amount on absorbing what you might call the 'blow-back'  consequences of Western assaults on Syria and beyond.

 
Syria in relation to Turkey
ꕤ COPYRIGHT DISCLAIMER
Copyright Disclaimer under section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education and research.

Germany's proposed spending on immigration:



@ 1 million refugees per year

next 2  years could cost Berlin

[ie 2 million refugees @ 2yrs]

25 billion euros ($28.25 billion)

(@ 12,500 euros per migrant)



Japanese investment bank Mizuho calculation.
Over half a dozen banks contacted by Reuters broadly agreed with Mizuho's calculations.   [ibid]


If that's what a single country is spending on what amounts to a 'blow-back' mop-up op, imagine the amount of potential profit and strategic value that is really at stake to Western corporate interests, and how determined the West really is to possess control of Syria ... at any cost. 
What Germany, Europe and other US allies are spending is probably just 'petty cash', compared to the expected rewards that follow the destruction of a target nation.
Remember, the impact of what the West has been engaged in has spread right around Europe and through to US allies as far-flung as Australia.
Australia is spending the following for her part in participating in the 5-year Middle Eastern refugees mop up:

AUD$44-million - ie US$31-million
(by my estimation, taking in 138,750 persons 2015-2019 incl)
Whatever Syria has got, the Western powers (representing corporate interests) want badly.

According to this article, it's oil wars that are being waged by the West against Syria:

Cables released by Wikileaks demonstrate that control of the world's strategic energy reserves has always been a key factor in the direction of the "War on Terror"
http://t.co/vCJoqadlFs





Assange
Transnational Security Elite,
Carving Up the World Using Your Tax Money

London 
OCT8 Antiwar Mass Assembly (2011)
Link  |  here








September 11, 2015

TRANSCRIPT - VIDEO - Refugee Crisis: What The Media Is Hiding | Syrian Girl

TRANSCRIPT
[for quotation purposes, confirm audio]


SOURCE VIDEO

VIDEO TITLE

Refugee Crisis: What The Media Is Hiding




SYRIAN GIRL

This is Syrian Girl.

The media is painting the refugee crisis as an acute issue, but the Syrian war and the refugees have been there for four years, and Aylan wasn't the first child refugee to drown.

Last month, an 11 year old Syrian girl drowned off the coast of Egypt.

So, why is there such a media push now?

Well, it's just in time for when France, Britain and Australia were asked to join the US's war on Syria.

In fact, the US asked Australia to join its coalition a week before Aylan died.

So they're using sympathy for this child's death to drop bombs on more children, while crying crocodile tears over them as they run from those bombs.



Just look at this headline from:
The Sun
Bomb Syria | For Aylan

ꕤ COPYRIGHT DISCLAIMER
Copyright Disclaimer under section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education and research.

[aside]
Why Murdoch Pushes for War

by Craig Murray 

on September 7, 2015 1:33 pm

EXTRACT
Given the disgraceful Sun front page and middle spread urging war on Syria, and the all-out propaganda on Sky News, it is important to understand why Murdoch is pushing so hard for war. I therefore reproduce my article from February 2013. It is important to note that the links are to industry publications: this is very genuine, hard information. 
Israel Grants Oil Rights in Syria to Murdoch and Rothschild
Israel has granted oil exploration rights inside Syria, in the occupied Golan Heights, to Genie Energy. Major shareholders of Genie Energy – which also has interests in shale gas in the United States and shale oil in Israel – include Rupert Murdoch and Lord Jacob Rothschild. 


FULL AT SOURCE
https://www.craigmurray.org.uk/archives/2015/09/why-murdoch-pushes-for-war/
note:  article is not referred to in video | it is addition to this post

[transcript]
You'd think they'd make themselves less obvious.

This is the city that Aylan comes from.

The area was bombed to smithereens by the US.

Rupert Murdoch couldn't even wait for Aylan's body to go cold before he started exploiting it for more war in Syria.

Turkey's also causing the refugee crisis to push for the creation of a buffer zone in Syria, as part of their continued attempt at regime change.

So, before you wave "Refugees Welcome" while letting your government get away with murder there are a few things you need to know.

1:20
The whole Syrian war and refugees were caused in the first place because the US and NATO backed Islamist rebels in Syria in 2011.

In spite of this, politicians and the mass media are blaming the Syrian president, Assad, for Europe's entire refugee crisis and using that to convince people that there needs to be a war in Syria.

But how can Assad be blamed for the entire refugee crisis, when the majority of the refugees aren't even Syrian, but either: poor immigrant workers, or refugees from other wars, such as Iraq, Afghanistan, Somalia, and Libya.

All the other places that have suffered US interventions in the recent years, yet the media labels them all Syrian, anyway, to convince Europeans that that this problem can be solved by intervention in Syria.

They even go as far as to label Sub-Saharan Africans as Syrian because they believe their viewers are too ignorant to notice the difference.

How racist do you have to be to confuse Asia with Africa.

[cut to video footage]

MALE NARRATOR

Romania's coast guard rescued 70 migrants, mostly Syrians and Iraqis, packed onto a small fishing boat that was in danger of sinking, as they attempted to make the crossing to Europe in stormy seas on Saturday.

SYRIAN GIRL

The number of Syrian refugees is also being falsely conflated, because other immigrants and refugees are simply claiming to be Syrian and throwing their original passports away.

Pakistani and Bangladeshi passports are being found discarded near border crossings.

[CUT TO VIDEO FOOTAGE]

MALE

[... On our boat ... ] 29 persons

FEMALE

We're just four Syrian people --
MALE

[interjects] We're just four Syrian people --
[cross-talk]
MALE

[interjects] -- 25 in Iraq.  [ie 25 from Iraq]

ENGLISH SPEAKING WOMAN

All the rest of them are Iraqi?

FEMALES

They said: I don't have a passport
[cross-talk]
I don't have anything to say who I am.

So I am Syrian.

Where's your passport?

I don't have because the government in Germany allows everything for the Syrian people. You get a house, you get money, you get food.

ENGLISH SPEAKING WOMAN

So it pays to be a 'Syrian'?

FEMALE

"Yes."

SYRIAN GIRL

And some European politicians are exploiting the war in Syria, to push for an open border immigration policy.

So, was it the Syrian government that caused these refugees, or was it these same politicians and their liberal interventions that are now crying over the refugees deaths?

People like Angelina Jolie, ironically, the Ambassador of the UN Refugee program, caused these African refugees to drown off the coast of Libya, because she supported the Libyan rebels who ethnically cleansed them.

It was also Amnesty International who claimed Gaddafi was using black immigrants as mercenaries, which resulted in their ethnic cleansing.

Now, Amnesty International are raking in the donations over their deaths.

It was these same liberal interventionists who, in 2011, supported al-Qaeda affiliated rebels in Syria, and they dare yell: "Shame, shame, shame!", for not letting in the Syrian refugees.

How about shame on you, for ruining our beautiful country?

The refugee crisis didn't start when Syrians tried to cross into Europe, but when Europeans tried to cross into Syria to join ISIS.

Syrians are being pushed out their country while a multinational Islamic State moves in from all over the world.

But the so-called 'coalition' on ISIS is a lie.

The US and its allies actually have no intention of defeating ISIS.

Instead of working with the Syrian army, the only force capable of fighting ISIS on the ground, they are preventing the Syrian army from doing their job.

Only four years ago, Syria was a well off and prosperous country, that even accepted 2 million Iraqi refugees.

Now, we've become the refugees.

Syrian refugees want your help, yes. But to get back home to their own country.

Almost half of Syria's population are refugees:
  • 3 million outside of Syria; and
  • 7 million of them are internally displaced, inside Syria.

Shouting 'Refugees Welcome!," while well-meaning, is not enough.

You're not going to be able to airlift 10 million Syrians into Europe.

Displacing them further from their country is not ideal for anyone.

The refugees want to come home. Hear them out for yourself.

MALE
[speaking Arabic]

"My dream is for Syria to return to what it used to be. I will be one of the first people to return, because there is no place like Syria.

FEMALE
[Speaking English, with accent]

Er, my name is Rena. I wish to come back to the lovely country when the war will end.

MALE - MINOR
[Speaking English, with accent]

I like to - the war to be end. Just I can go to see my friends and my family in Syria.

MALE
[Speaking Arabic]

This terrorism is done via eternal conspiracy with external financing. But we are alive, and we are returning, we are returning, we are returning!

FEMALE #1
[Speaking English, with accent]

What happening now, happening by, by -- by foreign hands.

FEMALE #2
[Speaking English, with accent]
[cross-talk]

This is not freedom. This is not--

FEMALE #2
[Speaking English, with accent]

The Syrian we are a good people, and we want to complete our life in Syria.

[CUT TO]
FEMALE #3
[Speaking Arabic]

I miss everything. Everything.

Our neighbourhood, our house, our family, our gatherings.

[CUT TO]
MALE - MINOR
[Speaking English, with accent]

You just stop the war. We don't want to go to Europe.

SYRIAN GIRL

To help them come home, you need to:

  • pressure your government to stop the war in Syria, by:
    • stopping the US's Saudi Arabian, Qatari and Turkish allies from funding and facilitating ISIS: by ending the political support for al-Quaeda linked rebels and by preventing your government from entering a war against Syria.
    • end the sanctions on Syria.

      Aylan Kurdi's dad's infected teeth pushed him to try and get to Europe and fix them.

      Sanctions on Syria, prevented his family from sending the $14,000 required to fix them.

      If there were no sanctions on Syria, he would have got medical care at home, and Aylan would still be alive.

      Before the war, medical care in Syria was free.

      Sanctions prevent from rebuilding and fighting ISIS off itself.

      Rebuild Syria for refugees to return.

      Concentrate on donating to organisations that help refugees inside of Syria.

      This will decrease the pressure on refugee institutions inside of Syria, and help external refugees return, instead of getting on a creaky[?] boat and drowning on the way to Europe.

      Here are two such organisations:

      • WafaRelief Fund; and
      http://wafarelief.org.uk/donate/
        • the Syrian Red Crescent;

        The Syrian government wants refugees to return and have put forward a plan to do so.

        They have asked for help in implementing that plan.

        Blaming the refugees themselves for the wars NATO creates is not the solution.

        Suddenly, so many people are disrespecting Syrians, but those people never noticed Syrians in their country when we were inventing the iphone, not to mention all of Western civilisation.

        There are forces that want to estrange people from their homeland dissolve national identities altogether.

        Obama and other criminals are trying to make Syrians a people without a nation.

        A people without a nation suffer the worst humiliation.

        Look at what happened to the Palestinian people.

        One day, it could happen to you.

        So, defending your nationality doesn't mean disrespecting the nationality of others.

        By demonising Syrian refugees, right-wing nationalist are handing liberal interventionists moral victory on a silver platter.

        People are sympathetic to that boy and his family and any group that demonises them, comes off as being sociopaths and alienate everyone.

        For example, this UKIP politician had to apologise for his statement, "The little Syrian boy was well-clothed and well-fed. He died because his parents were greedy for the good life in Europe."

        Syrians had the good life before the UK government interfered.

        GROUP OF YOUNG FEMALES
        & MATURE MALE

        FEMALE
        [Speaking English - with accent]

        Nothing. I don't have a home.

        FEMALE
        [English accent]

        And what happened to your business in Aleppo, does it exist anymore?

        FEMALE
        [Speaking English - with accent]

        No it's not exist anymore

        FEMALE
        [English accent]

        Everything gone?

        FEMALE
        [Speaking English - with accent]

        Mmmm ...

        MALE
        [Speaking Arabic]

        I used to produce these. Now you just give me this. [Holding, wash cloth or napkin?]

        [Group Laughter]

        FEMALE INTERVIEWER
        [Speaking Arabic]

        Um Gasem, what was your life like four years ago?

        FEMALE RESPONDS

        I can't ... once I start thinking about my life four years ago ... [Distressed]

        We had a safe life.


        [CUT TO RT NEWS FOOTAGE]

        NANCY KASEM
        SYRIAN REFUGEE

        Yes, in Syria I had my own car. It's like a car you can drive. Not -- it's really hard to drive in this car.

        We still don't have a good job to buying [sic] a good car, like in Syria.

        CUT TO FEMALE

        FEMALE
        [Speaking Arabic]

        We were comfortably off.

        I was a housewife and my husband had work, thanks to God.

        We moved to the village, because the villages were safe.

        And then the war came to the villages.

        Islamists came and kidnapped him for a month.

        They broke his jaw.

        CUT TO REFUGEE TENT SITE SCENE

        FEMALE
        [Speaking Arabic]

        Sometimes we reminisce together about our home.

        Yes, we talk about things like that.

        So that our children continue to love their homeland, so they don't forget.

        Particularly here, I have children with me.

        SYRIAN GIRL

        People ask me, why don't the Syrians stay in Turkey.

        Well, Syrians who are used to a high standard of living get tired of three years in a tent in Turkey, with no prospects of a future.

        Numbers are very high -- in the million -- and conditions are bad.

        Turkey won't improve these conditions, but want to continue sending terrorists to Syria.

        People are also asking, why aren't Syrians being helped by other Muslim countries?

        Well, Turkey and Jordan have taken 1 million each.

        What these people are really asking is, why aren't the rich, Gulf Arab astates accepting Syrian refugees.

        Because, in the worlds of this Kuwaiti politician --

        [CUT TO MALE IN TRADITIONAL ARAB GARB, ON TV, GESTURING]

        -- we Syrians have a different culture and ethnicity to Arabs.

        They don't see Syrians as Arab, and they don't accept them as their kin.

        Since when have the Gulf lifted a finger to help the Palestinians, anyway?

        While it is true the people of the Levant have as little in common culturally with Arabs as they do with West Europe, this doesn't change the fact that it is the Gulf Arab states that caused the Syrian problem, by backing terrorists.

        They won't invest in helping Syrian refugees, because they are busy spending the money on ISIS and buying golden toilets.

        But, why doesn't Israel take any refugees.

        After all, it's in Syria's border and it's in the Levant, Syrian people's historical land.

        Israel has greyed out this image, as if it doesn't even warrant consideration.

        I guess, Israel is the only country in the world that's allowed to be racist.

        It's funny to hear Zionists talk about how Europe needs to accept Syrian refugees, when they won't even let Palestinian refugees return to their own homes and villages.

        I've also heard: Why Germany, not Greece?

        Well, I'll let this Syrian refugee tell you.

        CUT TO MALE - STREET SCENE
        [Speaking Arabic]

        I didn't stay in Greece because it doesn't offer any benefits or work.

        It can't help its own people let alone help us.

        SYRIAN GIRL

        The most honourable are the Syrians still in Syria fighting for their country.

        But how can one blame those that run, if they themselves aren't fighting with a gun in their hand.

        It's time to point that finger inward.

        Save your nation, and stop these governments from starting these wars.

        --- 13:24 end ---
        ---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------




        Assange
        Transnational Security Elite,
        Carving Up the World Using Your Tax Money

        London 
        OCT8 Antiwar Mass Assembly (2011)
        Link  |  here






        August 29, 2015

        Assange: 'What Wikileaks Teaches Us About How the US Operates' | Newsweek

        SOURCE
        http://www.newsweek.com/emb-midnight-827-assange-what-wikileaks-teaches-us-about-how-us-operates-366364
        OPINION

        Assange: What Wikileaks Teaches Us About How the U.S. Operates
        By Julian Assange 8/28/15 at 2:45 AM
        In an introduction to a new book, The WikiLeaks Files: The World According to U.S. Empire (Verso, 2015), Wikileaks editor-in-chief Julian Assange explains how the leaked U.S. documents have lifted the veil on the imperialist nature of American foreign policy.

        One day, a monk and two novices found a heavy stone in their path. “We will throw it away,” said the novices. But before they could do so, the monk took his ax and cleaved the stone in half. After seeking his approval, the novices then threw the halves away.

        “Why did you cleave the stone only to have us throw it away?” they asked. The monk pointed to the distance the half stones had traveled. Growing excited, one of the novices took the monk’s ax and rushed to where one half of the stone had landed. Cleaving it, he threw the quarter, whereupon the other novice grabbed the ax from him and rushed after it. He too cleaved the stone fragment and threw it afield.

        Speech has a short temporal range, but stone has a long one. Some writing methods, such as engraving into stone, suited the transmission of compressed institutional rules that needed to be safely communicated into future months and years. But these methods did not allow for rapidly unfolding events, or for official nuance or discretion: they were set in stone.

        To address the gaps, empires with slow writing systems still had to rely heavily on humanity’s oldest and yet most ephemeral communications medium: oral conventions, speech.

        Other methods, such as papyrus, were light and fast to create, but fragile. Such communications materials had the advantage of being easy to construct and transport, unifying occupied regions through rapid information flow that in turn could feed a reactive central management. Such a well connected center could integrate the streams of intelligence coming in and swiftly project its resulting decisions outwards, albeit with resulting tendencies toward short-termism and micromanagement.

        While a sea, desert, or mountain could be crossed or bypassed at some expense, and energy resources discovered or stolen, the ability to project an empire’s desires, structure and knowledge across space and time forms an absolute boundary to its existence.

        Cultures and economies communicate using all manner of techniques across the regions and years of their existence, from the evolution of jokes shared virally between friends to the diffusion of prices across trade routes.

        This does not by itself make an empire. The structured attempt at managing an extended cultural and economic system using communications is the hallmark of empire. And it is the records of these communications, never intended to be dissected, and so especially vulnerable to dissection, that form the basis for understanding the nature of the world’s sole remaining “empire.”

        Anatomy of the U.S. Empire

        And where is this empire?

        Each working day, 71,000 people across 191 countries representing twenty-seven [27] different US government agencies wake and make their way past flags, steel fences and armed guards into one of the 276 fortified buildings that comprise the 169 embassies and other missions of the US Department of State.

        They are joined in their march by representatives and operatives from twenty-seven [27] other US government departments and agencies, including the Central Intelligence Agency, the National Security Agency, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the various branches of the US military.

        Inside each embassy is an ambassador who is usually close to domestic US political, business or intelligence power; career diplomats who specialize in the politics, economy and public diplomacy of their host state; managers, researchers, military attachés, spies under foreign-service cover, personnel from other US government agencies (for some embassies this goes as far as overt armed military or covert special operations forces); contractors, security personnel, technicians, locally hired translators, cleaners and other service personnel.

        Above them, radio and satellite antennas scrape the air, some reaching back home to receive or disgorge diplomatic and CIA cables, some to relay the communications of US military ships and planes, others emplaced by the National Security Agency in order to mass-intercept the mobile phones and other wireless traffic of the host population.

        The US diplomatic service dates back to the Revolution, but it was in the post–World War II environment that the modern State Department came to be.

        Its origins coincided with the appointment of Henry Kissinger as secretary of state, in 1973. Kissinger’s appointment was unusual in several respects. Kissinger did not just head up the State Department; he was also concurrently appointed national security advisor, facilitating a tighter integration between the foreign relations and military and intelligence arms of the US government.
        While the State Department had long had a cable system, the appointment of Kissinger led to logistical changes in how cables were written, indexed and stored. For the first time, the bulk of cables were transmitted electronically. This period of major innovation is still present in the way the department operates today.

        The US Department of State is unique among the formal bureaucracies of the United States. Other agencies aspire to administrate one function or another, but the State Department represents, and even houses, all major elements of US national power. It provides cover for the CIA, buildings for the NSA mass-interception equipment, office space and communications facilities for the FBI, the military and other government agencies and staff to act as sales agents and political advisors for the largest US corporations.

        One cannot properly understand an institution like the State Department from the outside, any more than Renaissance artists could discover how animals worked without opening them up and poking about inside. As the diplomatic apparatus of the United States, the State Department is directly involved in putting a friendly face on empire, concealing its underlying mechanics.

        Every year, more than $1 billion is budgeted for “public diplomacy,” a circumlocutory term for outward-facing propaganda. Public diplomacy explicitly aims to influence journalists and civil society, so that they serve as conduits for State Department messaging.

        While national archives have produced impressive collections of internal state communications, their material is intentionally withheld or made difficult to access for decades, until it is stripped of potency. This is inevitable, as national archives are not structured to resist the blowback (in the form of withdrawn funding or termination of officials) that timely, accessible archives of international significance would produce.

        What makes the revelation of secret communications potent is that we were not supposed to read them. The internal communications of the US Department of State are the logistical by-product of its activities: their publication is the vivisection of a living empire, showing what substance flowed from which state organ and when.

        Diplomatic cables are not produced in order to manipulate the public, but are aimed at elements of the rest of the US state apparatus and are therefore relatively free from the distorting influence of public relations. Reading them is a much more effective way of understanding an institution like the State Department than reading reports by journalists on the public pronouncements of Hillary Clinton, or [White House Communications Director] Jen Psaki.

        While in their internal communications State Department officials must match their pens to the latest DC orthodoxies should they wish to stand out in Washington for the “right” reasons and not the “wrong” ones, these elements of political correctness are themselves noteworthy and visible to outsiders who are not sufficiently indoctrinated.

        Many cables are deliberative or logistical, and their causal relationships across time and space with other cables and with externally documented events create a web of interpretive constraints that reliably show how the US Department of State and the agencies that inter-operate with its cable system understand their place in the world.

        Only by approaching this corpus holistically—over and above the documentation of each individual abuse, each localized atrocitydoes the true human cost of empire heave into view.

        National Security Religiosity and the International Studies Association

        While there exists a large literature in the structural or realpolitik analysis of key institutions of US power, a range of ritualistic and even quasi-religious phenomena surrounding the national security sector in the United States suggests that these approaches alone lack explanatory power.

        These phenomena are familiar in the ritual of flag-folding, the veneration of orders and elaborate genuflection [grovelling / servility / on bended knee | fm Lat. genu (knee) flectere (to bend) - here] to rank, but they can be seen also in the extraordinary reaction to WikiLeaks’ disclosures, where it is possible to observe some of their more interesting features. 

        When WikiLeaks publishes US government documents with classification markings—a type of national-security “holy seal,” if you will—two parallel campaigns begin: first, the public campaign of downplaying, diverting attention from and reframing any revelations that are a threat to the prestige of the national security class; and, second, an internal campaign within the national security state itself to digest what has happened.

        When documents carrying such seals are made public, they are transubstantiated [transmuted] into forbidden objects that become toxic to the “state within a state”—the more than 5.1 million Americans (as of 2014) with active security clearances, and those on its extended periphery who aspire to its economic or social patronage.

        There is a level of hysteria and non-corporeality  [immateriality?] exhibited in this reaction to WikiLeaks’ disclosures that is not easily captured by traditional theories of power. Many religions and cults imbue their priestly class with additional scarcity value by keeping their religious texts secret from the public or the lower orders of the devoted. This technique also permits the priestly class to adopt different psychological strategies for different levels of indoctrination.
        What is laughable, hypocritical, or Machiavellian to the public or lower levels of “clearance” is embraced by those who have become sufficiently indoctrinated or co-opted into feeling that their economic or social advantage lies in accepting that which they would normally reject.

        Publicly, the US government has claimed, falsely, that anyone without a security clearance distributing “classified” documents is violating the Espionage Act of 1917. But the claims of the interior “state within a state” campaign work in the opposite direction. There, it orders the very people it publicly claims are the only ones who can legally read classified documents to refrain from reading documents WikiLeaks and associated media have published with classification markings on them, lest they be “contaminated” by them. 
        While a given document can be read by cleared staff when it issues from classified government repositories, it is forbidden for the same staff to set eyes on the exact same document when it emerges from a public source. Should cleared employees of the national security state read such documents in the public domain, they are expected to self-report their contact with the newly profaned object, and destroy all traces of it. 

        This response is, of course, irrational. The classified cables and other documents published by WikiLeaks and associated media are completely identical to the original versions officially available to those with the necessary security clearance, since this is where they originated. They are electronic copies.

        Not only are they indistinguishable—there is literally no difference at all between them. Not a word. Not a letter. Not a single bit.

        The implication is that there is a non-physical property that inhabits documents once they receive their classification markings, and that this magical property is extinguished not by copying the document but by making the copy public. The now public document has, to devotees of the national security state, not merely become devoid of this magical property and reverted to a mundane object, it has been inhabited by another non-physical property:  an evil one.

        This kind of religious thinking has consequences. Not only is it the excuse used by the US government to block millions of people working for the “state within a state” from reading more than thirty [30] different WikiLeaks domains—the same excuse that was used to block The New York Times, Guardian, Der Spiegel, Le Monde, El País and other outlets publishing WikiLeaks materials.

        In fact, in 2011 the US government sent what might be called a “WikiLeaks fatwa” to every federal government agency, every federal government employee, and every federal government security contractor:
        The recent disclosure of US Government documents by WikiLeaks has caused damage to our national security ... Classified information, whether or not already posted on public websites, disclosed to the media, or otherwise in the public domain remains classified and must be treated as such until such time it is declassified by an appropriate US government authority ...

        Contractors who inadvertently discover potentially classified information in the public domain shall report its existence immediately to their Facility Security Officers. Companies are instructed to delete the offending material by holding down the SHIFT key while pressing the DELETE key for Windows-based systems and clearing of the internet browser cache.
        After being contacted by an officer of the US Department of State, Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs warned its students to “not post links to these documents nor make comments on social media sites such as Facebook or through Twitter. Engaging in these activities would call into question your ability to deal with confidential information, which is part of most positions with the federal government.” 

        A swathe of government departments and other entities, including even the Library of Congress, blocked internet access to WikiLeaks. The US National Archives even blocked searches of its own database for the phrase “WikiLeaks.”

        So absurd did the taboo become that, like a dog snapping mindlessly at everything, eventually it found its mark—its own tail. By March 2012, the Pentagon had gone so far as to create an automatic filter to block any emails, including inbound emails to the Pentagon, containing the word “WikiLeaks.”

        As a result, Pentagon prosecutors preparing the case against US intelligence analyst PFC Manning, the alleged source of the Cablegate cables, found that they were not receiving important emails from either the judge or the defense.

        But the Pentagon did not remove the filter— instead, chief prosecutor Major Ashden Fein told the court that a new procedure had been introduced to check the filter daily for blocked WikiLeaks-related emails. Military judge Col. Denise Lind said that special alternative email addresses would be set up for the prosecution.

        While such religious hysteria seems laughable to those outside the US national security sector, it has resulted in a serious poverty of analysis of WikiLeaks publications in American international relations journals. However, scholars in disciplines as varied as law, linguistics, applied statistics, health and economics have not been so shy.
        For instance, in their 2013 paper for the statistics journal Entropy, DeDeo et al.—all US or UK nationals—write that WikiLeaks’ Afghan War Diary “is likely to become a standard set for both the analysis of human conflict and the study of empirical methods for the analysis of complex, multi-modal data.”
        [entropy = (Communications & Information) a measure of the efficiency of a system, such as a code or language, in transmitting information - fm. Gk  - here]
        There is even an extensive use of WikiLeaks materials, particularly cables, in courts, including domestic courts, from the United Kingdom to Pakistan, and in international tribunals from the European Court of Human Rights to the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia.

        Set against the thousands of citations in the courts and in other academic areas, the poverty of coverage in American international relations journals appears not merely odd, but suspicious. These journals, which dominate the study of international relations globally, should be a natural home for the proper analysis of WikiLeaks’ two-billion-word diplomatic corpus.

        The US-based International Studies Quarterly (ISQ), a major international relations journal, adopted a policy against accepting manuscripts based on WikiLeaks materialeven where it consists of quotes or derived analysis. According to a forthcoming paper, “Who’s Afraid of WikiLeaks? Missed Opportunities in Political Science Research,” the editor of ISQ stated that the journal is currently “in an untenable position,” and that this will remain the case until there is a change in policy from the influential International Studies Association (ISA).

        The ISA has over 6,500 members worldwide and is the dominant scholarly association in the field. The ISA also publishes Foreign Policy Analysis, International Political Sociology, International Interactions, International Studies Review, and International Studies Perspectives.

        The ISA’s 2014–15 president is Amitav Acharya, a professor at the School of International Service at the American University in Washington, DC. Nearly half of the fifty-six [56] members on its governing council are professors at similar academic departments across the United States, many of which also operate as feeder schools for the US Department of State and other internationally-oriented areas of government.

        That the ISA has banned the single most significant US foreign policy archive from appearing in its academic papers—something that must otherwise work against its institutional and academic ambitionscalls into question its entire output, an output that has significantly influenced how the world has come to understand the role of the United States in the international order.

        This closing of ranks within the scholar class around the interests of the Pentagon and the State Department is, in itself, worthy of analysis. The censorship of cables from international relations journals is a type of academic fraud. To quietly exclude primary sources for non-academic reasons is to lie by omission.

        But it points to a larger insight: the distortion of the field of international relations and related disciplines by the proximity of its academic structures to the US government. Its structures do not even have the independence of the frequently deferent New York Times, which, while it engaged in various forms of cable censorship, at least managed to publish over a hundred.

        These journals’ distortion of the study of international relations and censorship of WikiLeaks are clear examples of a problem. But its identification also presents a significant opportunity: to present an analysis of international relations that has not been hobbled by the censorship of classified materials.

        The World According to U.S. Empire

        The WikiLeaks Files: The World According to U.S. Empire (Verso, 2015) begins to address the need for scholarly analysis of what the millions of documents published by WikiLeaks say about international geopolitics. The chapters use a constellation approach to these documents to reveal how the United States deals with various regional and international power dynamics.

        It is impossible to cover the wealth of material or relationships in this first volume, but I hope that this work will stimulate long-form journalists and academics to eclipse it.

        Chapter 1 reflects on America’s status as an “empire,” and considers what this means, seeking to characterize US economic, military, administrative and diplomatic power with reference to the long sweep of global history over the last century.

        The chapter establishes the “imperialism of free trade” framework that the rest of Part II then develops—a framework wherein American military might is used not for territorial expansion but to perpetuate American economic preeminence. Both themes are considered in more detail in Chapter 2 and Chapter 3. Chapter 1 also situates WikiLeaks in the context of an unprecedented growth in American official secrecy, and the evolution of US power following the commencement of the “war on terror.

        Chapter 2 examines the WikiLeaks materials on the so-called “war on terror.” Besides providing a keen summary of the war crimes and human rights abuses documented in WikiLeaks publications, along with a detailed historical overview of the US invasion and occupation of Iraq and the consequent unfolding disaster there, the chapter also draws conclusions about the ideological and conceptual substructure of America’s “war on terror,” and investigates how an aspect of the imperial prerogative of the United States is to exercise decisive power to ensure that terms like “just war,” “torture,” “terrorism” and “civilian” are defined in its own favor.

        The argument adduces evidence from the full range of WikiLeaks publications, along with other sources, such as the recent CIA torture report. In the process, the chapter also examines the double standards and problems arising from the misuse of these concepts (including the attempt to delegitimize and marginalize WikiLeaks itself).

        Chapter 3 embarks on a thoroughgoing discussion of the empire of free trade—the relationship of the American form of empire with the worldwide promotion of neoliberal economic reform, providing American corporations with access to “global markets.”

        The chapter draws on State Department cables published by WikiLeaks, as well as WikiLeaks publications dating back to 2007 concerning the “private sector,” including material on banks and global multilateral treaty negotiations. The chapter provides luminous examples of how the drive toward economic integration buttresses the position of the United States as an arms-length empire, and provides the underlying rationale for the patterns of intervention, military or otherwise, pursued in Latin America and beyond.

        Chapter 4 is a do-it-yourself guide on how to use Wiki- Leaks’ Public Library of US Diplomacy (PlusD), written by investigations editor Sarah Harrison. At the time of writing, PlusD contains 2,325,961 cables and other diplomatic records. The State Department uses its own logic to create, transmit and index these records, the totality of which form its primary institutional memory.

        Harrison explains how to get started searching, reading and interpreting cable metadata and content, from the infamous CHEROKEE restriction to the use of State Department euphemisms such as “opposing resource nationalism.”

        The history of US policy regarding the International Criminal Court (ICC) is a rich case study in the use of diplomacy in a concerted effort to undermine an international institution.

        In Chapter 5, Linda Pearson documents what the cables reveal about the efforts of successive US administrations to limit the ICC’s jurisdiction. These include the use of both bribes and threats by the George W. Bush administration to corral states signed up to the ICC into providing immunity from war crimes prosecutions for US persons—and, under the Obama administration, more subtle efforts to shape the ICC into an adjunct of US foreign policy.

        Japan and South Korea have been epicenters of US influence within East Asia for decades. The cables document nearly a decade of US efforts to affect domestic political outcomes within these two countries in line with its own long-term interests.

        In Chapter 14, investigative journalist Tim Shorrock examines the geopolitical triangle created by US relations with both countries, including its attempts to play one off against the other, as part of long-term efforts to undermine left-wing governments and policies within the region.

        Of global GDP growth over the last decade, over 50 percent has been in Southeast Asia. This understanding has led to an explicit reassignment of military, diplomatic and surveillance assets to Southeast Asia, epitomized by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton as a strategy of “forward deployed diplomacy.” In Chapter 15, Richard Heydarian examines the cables on Southeast Asia and situates his findings within a broader historical critique of US influence in the region.

        The critique of Western imperialism is most contentious in regions of the world that have historically been US protectorates, such as western Europe. So indoctrinated are European liberals in modern imperialist ideology that even the idea that the United States might be administering a global empire is routinely dismissed with references to concepts like “right to protect,” demonstrating a willful deafness not only to the structure of US power around the world, but also to how it increasingly talks about itself as an “empire.”

        In Chapter 6, Michael Busch examines the broad patterns of influence and subversion pursued by the global superpower on the political systems of Europe and its member states. Themes include European government collusion with the CIA’s rendition and torture programs, the subversion of European criminal justice and judicial systems to rescue alleged US government torturers from prosecution and the use of US diplomacy to open up European markets to US aerospace companies, or to invasive, monopolistic technologies and patents, such as Monsanto’s genetically modified organisms.

        In Chapter 13, Phyllis Bennis opts for a broad overview of WikiLeaks’ publications on Afghanistan—including not just the State Department cables, but also the Significant Action Reports (SIGACTs) published by WikiLeaks as the Afghan War Diary, and Congressional Research Reports and other documents on Afghanistan published by WikiLeaks prior to 2010.

        What emerges is a stark assessment of the folly of US military involvement in Afghanistan since 2001 and its cost in terms of human life and societal well-being.

        Geopolitics is complicated, and all the more so in relation to a country like Israel. Israel’s military dominance in the Middle East; its diplomatic relations with other regional players such as Egypt, Syria, Iran, Lebanon and Turkey; its role as an avatar for US imperial policy within the area; its wayward exploitation of its protected status in pursuing its own genocidal policies toward the Palestinian people—all of these themes are brought to the fore in Chapter 9, by Peter Certo and Stephen Zunes, which carefully interrogates the relevant State Department cables.

        In Chapter 11, on Iran, Gareth Porter provides an excellent companion to the chapter on Israel, choosing to focus on what the cables reveal about the tripartite geopolitical standoff between the US, Israel and Iran, and the shadow this structure casts on the rest of the Middle East.

        In particular, Porter focuses on the P5+1 talks about Iran’s nuclear enrichment program, on US efforts to misrepresent intelligence in order to tip the international consensus against Iran, and on the role of Israel as both a catalyst for and an agent of US policy in the Middle East.

        The conflict in Iraq is the focus of Chapter 12, by journalist Dahr Jamail, which draws on a wide range of WikiLeaks materials to argue that the United States had a deliberate policy of exacerbating sectarian divisions in Iraq following its invasion and occupation, in the belief that the country would be easier to dominate in such circumstances.

        The consequent devastation is documented in painstaking detail using WikiLeaks materials, including US cables, Congressional Research Reports dating between 2005 and 2008 and the Iraq War Logs from 2010.

        Jamail pays specific attention to the “Sahwa” movement— the US-sponsored program of counter-insurgency that was implemented to respond to the growing influence of al-Qaeda affiliates among Sunni Iraqis disaffected by the Shia-dominated US-client government of Nouri al-Maliki.

        The United States paid large numbers of Iraqis to defect from the Sunni insurgency and instead fight against al-Qaeda, on the promise of receiving regular employment through integration into the Iraqi military. As Jamail argues, the failure of the Maliki government to honor this promise saw huge numbers of US-trained, US-armed and US-financed—but now unemployed—Sunni militants return to the insurgency, eventually swelling the ranks of the former al- Qaeda affiliate in Iraq, which in 2014 became known as ISIS, or the “Islamic State.”

        Across Iraq’s northeastern border, in Syria, the cables also describe how the scene was set for the emergence of ISIS. Since the outbreak of the Syrian civil war in 2011, warmongers in the media have demanded the Western military pounding of Syria to depose Bashar Al-Assad—presented, in typical liberal-interventionist fashion, as a “new Hitler.”

        The emergence of the Islamic State, to which the Assad government is the only viable counterweight within Syria, has thrown this propagandistic consensus into disarray. But US government designs on Syrian regime change, and its devotion to regional instability, long pre-date the Syrian civil war, as is demonstrated in the cables.

        Chapter 10, by Robert Naiman, offers a careful reading of the Damascus cables, pointing out important historical presentiments of the current situation in Syria, and unpicking the benign-sounding human rights constructions of US diplomats to bring into focus the imperialist inflection of US foreign policy and rhetoric toward Syria—including concrete efforts within the country to undermine the government and bring about the chaos of recent months during the entire decade preceding 2011.

        Clichés abound about Turkey being a “bridge between East and West,” but it cannot be denied that this country of some seventy-five million people occupies an important position— both as a regional player within Middle Eastern geopolitics and as a large and economically powerful nominal democracy on the fringes of Europe.

        As Conn Hallinan argues in Chapter 8, State Department cables illustrate US efforts to exploit the rich geopolitical significance of Turkey. Hallinan uses the cables as a pretext to provide a tour of Turkey’s regional alliances, strategic concerns and internal affairs. Among the topics he covers are the complex strategic energy calculations that necessitate Turkey’s delicate relations with Iran and Russia, even as it cultivates the United States, Europe and Israel in its efforts to gain access to Western markets.

        The chapter also examines Turkey’s bargaining power, demonstrated in its use of a veto against the election of former Danish prime minister Anders Rasmussen as the head of NATO, in order to force the United States to pressure the Danish government into suppressing a Denmark-based Kurdish television channel.

        The essay also deals with Turkey’s internal issues, such as government policy toward Kurdish separatist groups, and the extraordinary underground political conflict and intrigue between Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and the expatriate political figure Fethullah Gülen.

        Since the end of the Cold War, and especially during the so-called “war on terror,” US diplomacy has leaned toward South, Central and East Asia. Except in the case of one or two flare-ups, US-Russian relations receded from the popular consciousness as the main geopolitical dynamic.

        This of course has changed as a result of the conflict in the Ukraine. But popular consciousness is not reality. As Russ Wellen shows in Chapter 7, in the decade following the century’s turn the US has pursued a policy of aggressive NATO expansion, challenging Russia’s regional hegemony within Eastern Europe and the former Soviet area and seeking to subvert nuclear treaties to maintain its strategic advantage.

        As the cables show, these efforts have not gone unnoticed by Russia, and are recurring points of conflict in US-Russian diplomatic relations, even during the most cordial of periods. The chapter provides the necessary context for recent East-West tensions centering around Syria, Ukraine and the granting of asylum to Edward Snowden, and yields critical insight into a geopolitical relationship that, if mishandled, threatens the survival of our civilization and even of our species.

        Perhaps no region of the world demonstrates the full spectrum of US imperial interference as vividly as Latin America. Since the 1950s, US policy in Central and South America has popularized the concept of the CIA coup d’état, deposing democratically elected left-wing governments and installing US-friendly right-wing dictatorships; inaugurating legacies of brutal civil war, death squads, torture and disappearances; and immiserating [impoverishing] millions to the benefit of the American ruling class.

        As Alexander Main, Jake Johnston, and Dan Beeton note in the first of their chapters on Latin America, Chapter 17, the English-speaking press saw no evil in the State Department cables, concluding that they did not fit “the stereotype of America plotting coups and caring only about business interests and consorting with only the right wing.”

        The exact opposite is true: the cables demonstrate a smooth continuity between the brutal US policy in Latin America during the Cold War and the more sophisticated plays at toppling governments that have taken place in recent years.

        Chapter 17 offers a broad overview of the use of USAID and “civil society” astroturfing, as well as other, more direct methods of pursuing “regime change” in El Salvador, Nicaragua, Bolivia, Ecuador and Haiti.

        Chapter 18, by the same authors, focuses on Venezuela, the socialist enemy of the day, and specifically on US efforts to undermine the country as a regional left-wing bulwark in the wake of the failed US-backed coup against the Chávez government in 2002.

        The response of the United States to the release of the WikiLeaks materials betrays a belief that its power resides in a disparity of information: ever more knowledge for the empire, ever less for its subjects.

        In 1969, Daniel Ellsberg—later famous for leaking the Pentagon Papers—had a top-secret security clearance. Henry Kissinger had applied for his own top-secret clearance. Ellsberg warned him of its dangers:
        [I]t will ... become very hard for you to learn from anybody who doesn’t have these clearances. Because you’ll be thinking as you listen to them: “What would this man be telling me if he knew what I know? Would he be giving me the same advice, or would it totally change his predictions and recommendations?” You will deal with a person who doesn’t have those clearances only from the point of view of what you want him to believe and what impression you want him to go away with, since you’ll have to lie carefully to him about what you know. In effect, you will have to manipulate him. You’ll give up trying to assess what he has to say. The danger is, you’ll become something like a moron. You’ll become incapable of learning from most people in the world, no matter how much experience they may have in their particular areas that may be much greater than yours.
        Freed from their classified seals, the WikiLeaks materials bridge the gulf between the “morons” with security clearances and nothing to learn, and us, their readers.

        Julian Assange is the editor-in-chief of Wikileaks. This is extracted from The WikiLeaks Files: The World According to U.S. Empire (Verso, 2015)
        SOURCE
        http://www.newsweek.com/emb-midnight-827-assange-what-wikileaks-teaches-us-about-how-us-operates-366364
        Summaries 
        Assange |
        What Wikileaks Teaches Us About How the US Operates
        | Book: The WikiLeaks Files | Article Extracts-Summary
        Part I  | here

        Assange |
        What Wikileaks Teaches Us About How the US Operates
        | Book: The WikiLeaks Files | Article Extracts-Summary 
        Part II  |  here
        ---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------

        COMMENT

        Might have to read this again, because I was listening to music while highlighting the parts that seem key (to me).

        Book sounds really good.