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Tag Archives: Syria

Syria’s Chemical Weapons Problem and the Call to Conscience

09 Monday Sep 2013

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Islamic Small Wars, Middle East, Philology, Politics, Psychology, Regions, Syria

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Tags

chemical weapons, conflict, conscience, Syria

With Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD) in play, no one really cares about the details: with Syria, the threshold ventured in March would seem to have been crossed in August, scaling up a dollop of death in one context to a brazen full-scale assault — 1,400 dead, 400 of them children, according to the Obama Administration — on innocents.

Must something be done?

______

MOSCOW — Syria on Monday quickly welcomed a call from Russia, its close ally, to place Syrian chemical arsenals under international control, then destroy them to avert a U.S. strike, but did not offer a time frame or any other specifics.

Russia To Push Syria To Put Chemical Weapons Under International Control Huffington Post 9/9/2013

Whether a disingenuous gesture to buy time or a sincere one to wage its war with the will of men and conventional machinery and materiel rather than with invisible, odorless clouds of poison, the gesture would seem to acknowledge culpability and guilt, and that with Russian encouragement to assemble, surrender (to international control), and destroy chemical weapons stores while also joining the signatories to the Chemical Weapons Convention.

It appears that a kind of monster born in German laboratories, manufactured in U.S. subsidiaries, and shipped out to several middle east states under cover of the “dual use” use label — all along the conception, development, and delivery line knew it would come to this, even though Syria worked out the details itself — must now be contained and destroyed in an active, “existential”, zero-sum kind of battleground.

Rick Ungar writing for Forbes today notes well the motivation: “Putin understands very well that he stands to gain far more by being the man responsible for taking Assad’s chemical stockpile out of the game than he stood to gain by being responsible for any future use of the same.”

It’s hard remaining evil when one wants most to look good and to be perceived as just and heroic.

Still, one recognizes that one recognizes a correct and right course and side, and that is the consequence of the presence of conscience.

And if Putin has a conscience . . .

😉

It’s not all public relations.

The world will not care whether Obama or Putin or other forces remove from battlefields — and if for all time, then good — the chemical weapons option.  It is the other side of the equation — the one that would forestall the wanting to use such weapons — that would seem troublesome, i.e., the cultivation of conscience sufficient to turn a destructive capacity and drive, also the license afforded grandiose ambitions and delusions, toward courses more empathetic, kind, liberating, noble, and productive.

______

Aside: a world that wants for basic resources, starting with energy and possibly ending with oxygen, must tame war itself, even if starting with the most barbaric of its rough edges, for the contemporary mix of exceedingly dangerous nuclear technologies and equally fragile alternative wonders (like solar-electric farms) demands that the exceptionally egotistical and reckless among leaders — those who too readily sacrifice others, including their own constituents and their children — be no more.

Such have become everyone’s monsters.  

Fast Reference

By dragging Truthout URLs to this section, I have not joined the left, but I have as broad a spectrum of civil and gracious friends as I believe it possible to have in the online social networks, and so, as may we all, I get a good walk around the dimension of subjects of interest.

Chemical Weapons Convention (Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons)

Obama’s Case for Syria Didn’t Reflect Intel Consensus Truthout 9/9/2013

Putin Offers Surprise Plan For International Control Of Syrian Chemical Weapons-Moves To Steal Obama’s Thunder? – Forbes 9/9/2013

Syria – Ambassador Rice’s Comments | BackChannels 9/9/2013

Syria: Six Alternatives to Military Strikes Truthout 9/6/2013

The Jewish Press » » Meet the Monster Behind Syria’s Chemical Weapons 8/29/2013

# # #

Syria – Ambassador Rice’s Comments

09 Monday Sep 2013

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Fast News Share, Islamic Small Wars, Middle East, Politics, Syria

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

chemical weapons, intervention, Obama Administration, Susan E. Rice, Syria

Speaking for an audience gathered by the New America Foundation, U.S. Ambassador and National Security Adviser Susan E. Rice laid out the Administration’s case for intervention in Syria on the basis of the regime’s chemical weapons use.

Hitting the keys:

  • Chemical weapons are different from conventional in scope and scale;
  • Syrian stockpiles among the largest in the world;
  • Only Assad has chemical weapons stocks, “the opposition does not”;
  • Senior officers planned the August 21 attack and covered the evidence with subsequent shelling;
  • The Assad regime has used chemical weapons since March, and with fewer casualties, but the regime appears to be lowering the threshold for use;
  • Failure to respond means that more will die from similar attacks, that the same will bring us closer to the day when chemical weapons are used against Americans abroad and at home, and that the door will be opened to the use of other weapons of mass destruction and the madmen that would use them.

That leaves out a lot (I just couldn’t scribble fast enough), but Rice went on to discuss the meaning of a limited, defined, proportional response to the Assad regime’s use of chemical weapons, noting that such an effort would take away any battlefield advantage to the regime relative to their cost to use.

Cited by Rice: Reagan, Libya, 1986; Clinton, Iraq, 1998.

Said Rice: “The United States will not take sides in sectarian struggles . . . but can and will stand up for certain principles in the region.”

Update – 9/9/2013/1337ET

” . . . this atrocity has been most gut wrenching . . . children lined up in shrouds, their voices forever silenced, devastated mothers and fathers kissing their children goodbye, pulling the white sheet up around their faces as if tucking them in.  There are no words  . . . for capturing such infinite cruelty.  Where words fail us, actions must not.”

Fast Reference

Syria | The White House

Obama adviser Susan Rice pushes president’s case for strike against Syria – The Washington Post 9/9/2013

# # #

Syria – Ain’t No Iraq

09 Monday Sep 2013

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Islamic Small Wars, Middle East, Politics, Psychology, Syria, United States of America

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

chemical weapons, civil war, conflict, CW, debate, political, politics, Syria, war

Kerry also said he had no doubt that Assad was responsible for the chemical weapons attack in east Damascus on 21 August, saying that only three people are responsible for the chemical weapons inside Syria – Assad, one of his brothers and a senior general. He said the entire US intelligence community was united in believing Assad was responsible.

John Kerry gives Syria week to hand over chemical weapons or face attack | World news | theguardian.com 9/9/2013

John Kerry calls Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad “a man without credibility”

______

Syria: Syrian President Bashar al Assad Charlie Rose Interview September 9, 2013

______

In state-level affairs, the sovereign or government-in-power may be held accountable for what takes place within its purview.  So right off the bat this week, the nit of The Guardian headline, “Assad did not order Syria chemical weapons attack, says German press” has a disingenuous cant to it.

If not Bashar, what about Maher?

If not Maher, what about an officer in charge under his command?

Note Simon Tisdall and Josie Le Blond in Berlin in writing for The Guardian:

The German intelligence findings concerning Assad’s personal role may complicate US-led efforts to persuade the international community that punitive military action is justified. They could also strengthen suspicions that Assad no longer fully controls the country’s security apparatus.

______

I’m not making the call, but the single case for pointing to a rebel false flags seems to stand on an accident involving the mishandling of chemical weapons stocks.

Or a recording — edited, underscored, produced, disseminated — showing a successful launch of a “blue bonnet” style rocket (using what looks like a launch vehicle matched to the purpose).

One case: two stories . . . .

That leaves the public with a spy story in a world waiting for the journalists to get into what I’m going to call “Political Spychology” — the massive, multinational industry devoted to capturing, listening, sniffing, stealing, interpreting signal for military as well as industrial purposes.

By vicinity x chatter x who x impact:

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/aug/28/israeli-intelligence-intercepted-syria-chemical-talk

______

I am of the mind that the Syrian Civil War has degraded the central power of the Assad regime but neither installed nor shifted the same toward any coherent and responsible party: instead, it has drawn the state toward gross political anarchy and with a look in many places not dissimilar to Mogadishu’s: hard destruction around and through which shifting tides of suffering humanity amid armed gangs, loosely aligned at best, state or rebel, make their way.

Their situation will worsen as the lack of honesty and integrity across the field and the presence of grandiose ambitions in some ensures greater anarchy, brutality, and political dissolution.

To get the chemical weapons off the field is not to solve the war: it’s to make it a little more discerning (at least between combatant and noncombatant targets), humane, and secure because while other weapons projectiles explode or hit something with finite effect, poisonous gasses drift and are indiscriminate even on the gentlest of their lethal breezes.

To solve the war is to address the poetry of the mind of the warrior romantics involved in imagining themselves “God’s darlings” — Haider Mobarak’s phrase related to the narcissism involved — and striving to prove as much so through the intimidation, murder, and subjugation of all presumably less admirable and beloved-by-God others.

Fast Reference

Assad did not order Syria chemical weapons attack, says German press | World news | The Guardian 9/9/2013

Obama, his team sharpen Syria pitch as Congress prepares to vote | Fox News 9/9/2013

Obama’s Syrian chemical attack “proof” relies solely on Israeli intelligence | Intrepid Report.com 9/3/2013

Syria chemical attack analysis — CNN 9/7/2013

Syria | The White House (viewed: 9/9/2013)

Live today at 12:30 PM ET, White House National Security Adviser Susan E. Rice. Ambassador Rice will discuss the Assad regime’s use of chemical weapons against Syrian civilians, the longstanding international norm against the use of chemical weapons, and the need for action to deter the Assad regime from future use of chemical weapons.

Time isn’t on the White House’s side on Syria resolution 9/9/2013

What if Syria’s Assad didn’t personally order the chemical weapons attack? – The Week 9/9/2013

White House Intensifies Efforts to Make the Case for Syria Military Strikes – ABC News 9/8/2013

# # #

Syria – Maaloula! “Syria’s Oldest Christian Community” — Overrun – Plus Brutality in Uniform

08 Sunday Sep 2013

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Islamic Small Wars, Politics, Regions, Syria

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

civil war, conflict, Islamist, Jihad, Maaloula, Syria

Russia? We are living in an alternative universe. This is what America should be doing. Instead, our President is going to Congress to intervene militarily on behalf of the jihadists attacking the Christians. Shameful.

Russia Calls for Protection of Christian Holy Places in Maaloula, Syria – Atlas Shrugs 9/8/2013.

Perhaps in “enemy of my enemy” fashion, American anti-Jihad conservatives may seem to be aligning with anti-Jihad Assads.

The Janus-faced brutality would more seem everyone’s enemy.

With Syria, the only good side is either outside of it or, perhaps, hunkered down quietly within the storm and praying to God for it to end with neither a dictator nor a Jihadi left standing.

______

The Other Side, Possibly, of Anti-Obama, Pro-Assad Endorsement

Who would be wearing the boots and uniforms, holding helmets and assault weapons?

The YouTube counter says “7 views” as I watch it.

Published today by “Ryan Hughes” there are questions about it I can’t answer: who is being beaten?  Where?  On what day?  Why?

Still, it looks authentic.

I bet it is.

Fast Reference

Activists: Syrian Rebels Take Christian Village | TIME.com

Al Qaeda-linked rebels gain control of Christian village, Syrian activists say | Fox 9/8/2013.

Al-Qaeda Vows to Slaughter Christians After U.S. ‘Liberates’ Syria | FrontPage Magazine 9/5/2013:

Thus al-Qaeda terrorists eagerly await U.S. assistance against the Syrian government, so they can subjugate if not slaughter Syria’s Christians, secularists, and non-Muslims — even as the Obama administration tries to justify war on Syria by absurdly evoking the “human rights” of Syrians on the one hand, and lying about al-Qaeda’s presence in Syria on the other.

Maaloula, Christian Village Outside Damascus, Captured By Syrian Rebels, Activists Say

NewsSyria Islamist rebels take control of Christian town of Maaloula – CNN.com 9/8/2013.

# # #

Syria – Opinions on Intervention – Moral and Strategic Obligation

08 Sunday Sep 2013

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Fast News Share, Islamic Small Wars, Middle East, Politics, Regions, Syria

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

conflict, moral obligations, political laboratory, state-based boundaries, Syria, war

To this day, many Jews continue to decry an evident lack of interest in saving Jewish lives either at the start of Hitler’s genocidal campaign or toward the end when rail lines may have been bombed to slow the feed to the ovens.

Well, here we are again, but it’s not the Jews who are suffering.

In fact, many in the path of Assad’s brutality would seem to hate America and Jews and “the west” at the very least out of language habit, although with the large and loose assembly of Muslim Brotherhood and Al Qaeda-type forces displaying their own brutality in the field, more than and other than talk must be shaping defense and political policy between the White House and the Pentagon.

This business of discerning who to save continues to have a “no good dog in the fight” feel to it, this despite assurances from Qatar and the rallying presence of General Salim Idris, who may be the commander in the western suit but not the supreme disciplining force across his own battle space.

* * *

Syria may also remind how for all the philosophical and political talk, the business of war remains intensely geographical (spatial) and physical in nature.

For one thing, Syria has become the most isolated and transparent hot conflict and political laboratory on the planet.  Not only do the primary antagonists rate among the least sympathetic of human figures — again: the forces of a brutal dictatorship would seem to share the field, in part, with those of the most absurd religious extremism — but they’re doing “their thang” across a landscape broad and remote enough (and, damaged and emptying enough) to afford, from the talk to the walk, their own display.

Approach it with a toolkit — a few ships, say — or roll it into the operatory known as the UN, but give it a good look because, at the moment, the Syrian Civil War is its own machine with the broken and working parts fairly well lit up for viewing.

* * *

No one really wants to bring peace to that sandbox of a nation, no more than the local constabulary wants to knock on the door behind which a vicious domestic has broken out with flying furnishings, which one hears through the walls, and perhaps broken bottles, knives, and guns, which, alas, one must open the door to see.

At least on a “domestic” the scale is small and the police a force larger than it.

A civil war across a landscape awash in criminal and gambler’s money, arms, blood, death, and suffering and steeped in obsessive cruel and vengeful thinking — that’s a whole other threshold for crossing, one for which the confirmed use of chemical weapons takes the absurdity and inhumanity of it beyond the capacity of conscience for either bearing or controlling.

* * *

In another way, more abstract, one now has a kind of “rogues on display” in Syria with Putin’s implicit cooperation with the Assad regime even though perhaps he has done some things to adjust the flames in the oven (e.g., Russia Delays Arms Supplies to Syria over Money – Paper | World | RIA Novosti 8/30/2013) and the rate at which it burns.  Add on the other side the appearance and influx of Islamists in the battle space (e.g., and three hours old at the moment, Syria Islamist rebels take control of Christian town of Maaloula – CNN.com).

Truly, a whole world is watching Syria, and I should think that it must be thinking about what it is actually seeing and doing so in ways apart from immediate self-interest, for in the theater we may now call “Syria On Display” what would seem to be on display would seem to comprise also the worst of the worst behavior in humanity.

* * *

Just a moment for fiction here:

“I kill you and cut out your heart and eat it!”

______

“I make you and your people — infants, children, mothers, old men — die in agony without warning.  And I do it with impunity!”

* * *

Which world do you want to live in: the one that intervenes — or the one that let’s it go on?

Syria has serious problems, but it appears no one has yet figured out to whom those problems belong.

Then too while the world believes it watches such a spectacle from the outside, that would seem true only until it discovers itself inside of it after all.

Indeed, in the First Age of the Internet (or is it “Internet 2.0” or “3.0”) and an era filled with agressive Islamism and related violence, we all may have to ask whether state boundaries serve to isolate cultural and political systems in necessary ways while also guiding and defining a practical global politics in ways that may have been more helpful as little as 15 years ago.

Fast Reference

Moran: America Has Moral Obligation in Syria | ARLnow.com 9/4/2013:

The congressman, who opposed the 2003 invasion of Iraq and the military surge in Afghanistan, strongly supports a “surgical strike” against Syria’s chemical weapons capabilities.

On Syria, Words Have Consequences | TIME.com 9/4/2013:

From the start of the Syrian ­conflict, President Obama has wanted to take two very different approaches to it. On the one hand, he has been disciplined about the definition of American interests and the use of force. On the other hand, he has sought a way to respond to Bashar Assad’s ­human-­rights atrocities.

Should the US involve itself in the Syrian conflict? | Daily Trojan 9/5/2013:

The United States must intervene in Syria for humanitarian reasons.In 1994, the world watched as Hutu soldiers, armed with machetes, hacked apart the Rwandan countryside. Despite clear evidence of genocide from the United Nations observers and human rights watch groups, the U.S. decided it had no permanent interests in the region and sending a small deployment of soldiers would have been too risky. By the time the civil war ended three months later, 900,000 Rwandans had been slaughtered.

U.S. military planners don’t support war with Syria – The Washington Post 9/5/2013:

They are embarrassed to be associated with the amateurism of the Obama administration’s attempts to craft a plan that makes strategic sense. None of the White House staff has any experience in war or understands it. So far, at least, this path to war violates every principle of war, including the element of surprise, achieving mass and having a clearly defined and obtainable objective.

# # #

Obama, Putin, Satire, and Signals

07 Saturday Sep 2013

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Philology, Politics, Russia

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

barbarism, G20, politics, Putin, Syria

“Look, I’m not just talking about Snowden and Syria,” Mr. Obama said. “What about Pussy Riot? What about your anti-gay laws? Total jackass moves, my friend.”

G20 Ends Abruptly as Obama Calls Putin a Jackass : The New Yorker

That there above: satire gone viral!

* * *

Who else in St Petersburg publicly declared, as he did, that Syria’s “so-called chemical weapons attack” was in fact “a provocation staged by rebels, in hope of winning extra backing from their foreign backers”?

In making that categorical claim, the Russian leader left little room for compromise and ended up looking, perhaps, somewhat isolated.

BBC News – Syria crisis: No clear winner in Russia-US G20 duel

* * *

For real, Bridget Kendall writing for the BBC reports that eleven countries endorsed a statement agreeing that evidence associated with Syria’s most recent chemical weapons attack “pointed to Syrian government culpability.”

As suggested here, also recently, the world is witness to a war about integrity and power.

Indeed, it is one thing for Putin to go about the business of restoring Russian grandeur and might and adjusting his state in a Russian way to the new day — and let Russians respond to that as they may: it is another thing to abet the state-driven barbarism on display daily in both Iran and Syria and to become identified with it.

# # #

Iran’s Chemical Weapons Double-Bind and the Effects of American Poor Judgment

06 Friday Sep 2013

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Iran, Islamic Small Wars, Middle East, Regions, Syria

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

chemical weapons, Iran, Iraq, Syria

It seems as though the Iranian government is certain about the damning evidence that confirms the Syrian regime’s use of chemical weapons. This causes an ethical dilemma for the Islamic Republic, including in how it presents the case to its citizens. Turning a blind eye to this information would also undermine the decades-long attempts by the Iranian government to punish those responsible for targeting citizens with a similar campaign during the Iran-Iraq war, using internationally banned chemical weapons. Iranian records indicate that the Iranian government is seeking to prosecute 400 international companies accused of providing assistance in the field of chemical weapons to Iraqi President Saddam Hussein’s regime (Al Jazeera Net, 2007).

Alsmadi, Fatima.  “On Syria: Has Iran Begun to Back Down?”  World Affairs, September 4, 2013.

His breath was loud and hard, his mouth open wide as he struggled to force air into his lungs. ”I am,” said Muhammad Moussavi, a ”living martyr.”

Almost 15 years after Iran’s war with Iraq ended, Mr. Moussavi and thousands of others like him are painful reminders of the long-lasting effect of Iraq’s use of chemical weapons in that eight-year conflict.

Sciolino, Elaine.  “Threats and Responses: The Iranians; Iraq Chemical Arms Condemned, but West Once Looked the Other Way.”  The New York Times, February 13, 2003.

Reagan was wrong!

Bush was too.

In part.

And the reason why is in the reaping today: “By any means necessary,” is not only never necessary — for whatever it may be, there are plenty of means limited only by imagination, perhaps, and a little money: on this, in fact, on might at last take a lesson from the Mujaheddin — but the lapse of ethical and moral investment in choice, even in war, perhaps especially in war, provides The Enemy opportunity for smug one-upmanship the next historic day.

In this way, the pot rightly calls the kettle black.

In the course of Iran’s brutal eight-year war with Iraq, it turns out President Reagan knowingly shipped dual use “poisonous chemicals and deadly biological viruses” — including anthrax and bubonic plague — to Saddam Hussein.

When in 1988, Hussein gassed Kurdish forces, the White House, by comparison with the same today, seemed . . . complacent.

This line of rant gets a bump with George W. Bush’s poker-faced claim about Saddam Hussein’s nuclear WMD capability, a claim helped along, actually, by Saddam’s own belligerent deflections of UN inspections.

Nonetheless, Iraq didn’t have those goods, and Bush, the CIA, Colin Powell, and the United States of America not only lost some integrity in the matter but took on the mantle its idiot enemies — far worse, as such tykes go — would give it: i.e., a big, clumsy, lumbering imperial power.

Of course, he who points that finger  — or those who point it most often — should point it back at himself (themselves).

Moreover, such American misdeeds in still recent history may be mightily overshadowed by presence and depth of evil involved.  Truly, Saddam Hussein was not such a nice guy.

* * *

In the headlines as I type:

BBC News – Tony Blair: Iraq War made UK ‘hesitant’ over Syria intervention

The Iraq Hangover: Lawmakers Who Backed War Now Skittish On Syria

Evidently, while flinging spittle at the Zionist Entity for the cause of entertaining its ignorant masses, Iran has a serious (gasp!) ethical dilemma going with Syria’s use of chemical weapons.

Chain murders?

Evin Prison?

No problem.

Then noted by Fatima Alsmadi in the above cited World Affairs piece: “The Martyr Foundation claims that 100,000 people in Iran were injured as a result of exposure to chemical gases during that war.”

If there’s a real basis for justice in the world, it may not be in what some (or one) may think God told them.

It may reside in this one fragment of thought indicating a glimmer of appreciation and consideration for others as well as one’s self: “Because it could happen to you.”

Updates

9/8/2013

At the German Bundestag Parliament in Bonn, then- German opposition leader Rudolf Dessler told CNN radio that German firms circumvented the ban on Germany exporting such lethal substances through a loophole allowed German firms to establish subsidiaries in the US, in an arrangement that operated with the full consent of the German government.

These firms worked on contractual arrangements with clearance and confidentiality agreements signed with the US Department of Defense.

Sanction Germany: Supplier of WMD Technology to Syria | David Bedein | Ops & Blogs | The Times of Israel

The truth always comes out, always makes sense or, technically, proves robust, fitting ever more tightly with other pieces of knowledge.

Kenneth R. Timmerman – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

From 1987 to 1993, Timmerman published the Middle East Defense News and was international correspondent for Defense Electronics. He also wrote monographs for the Simon Wiesenthal Center on efforts by Iraq , Syria and Libya to acquire weapons of mass destruction.

Iran, Syria and Libya Amassing Huge Arsenals, New Report Says | Jewish Telegraphic Agency 8/2/1992:

Named in the current report are 300 firms in 36 countries, which have supplied Iran, Syria and Libya with “dual-use” technology — materiel and equipment ostensibly for civilian uses but easily diverted to military purposes.

Germany led the list with 100 companies, followed by the United States, France and Britain. Timmerman noted, however, that Germany has recently enacted tough new laws to “prevent German companies from creating another Iraq.”

Additional Reference

Dobbs, Michael.  “U.S. Had Key Role in Iraq Buildup: Trade in Chemical Arms Allowed Despite Their Use on Iranians, Kurds.”  The Washington Post, December 30, 2002; republished on Common Dreams.

Kessler, Glenn.  “History lesson: When the United States looked the other way on chemical weapons.”  The Washington Post, September 4, 2013.

Ohlheiser, Abby.  “New Docs Detail U.S. Involvement in Saddam’s Nerve Gas Attacks.”  The Atlantic Wire, August 25, 2013.

Other Fast Reference

Keep Us in the Loop – By Jeffrey Lewis | Foreign Policy:

What the United States has not done is provide the evidence itself — the satellite images, communications intercepts, and other data that would allow a fair-minded observer to reach the same conclusion on more than blind faith in the competence and integrity of our political leaders and intelligence services.

Behind the walls of Iran’s Evin Prison | World | DW.DE | 27.05.2013

Iran–Iraq War – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Anne Applebaum: Syria and Obama’s mixed messages – The Washington Post 9/4/2013

Obituary: Saddam Hussein | World news | theguardian.com

# # #

Syria – Owned by Old Relationships, Old Ideas, Old Menace

06 Friday Sep 2013

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Fast News Share, Islamic Small Wars, Middle East, Politics, Regions, Syria

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Obama, political, politics, psychology, Putin, Syria

One says, “Lean forward.”

The other may be saying, “Push back.”

* * *

Perhaps the two boys are playing an old game with old cards and broken chips.

“I see you lost some states there,” says one.

“The cause lost some states, but, you know, people don’t change much.  They’re still ours, and I see there’s more like them on the table.”

* * *

It’s an evil old game cooked by one party with crude assumptions: the other cannot walk away; the other cannot win; the other is there for beating and controlling; the stakes will be useful, pleasing, but of themselves are not important.

* * *

For one player, Syria may seem to afford payback for Afghanistan, February 15, 1989 and for an evening at the Kremlin, December 25, 1991.

It’s personal.

And why not?

Others fight old battles over and over, and the origins or their legends and myths are even farther back in time.

Banners, causes, flags: shields.

Methods, outlooks, visions: those are more to the point.

* * *

Winning empathetically, ethically, rightly: satisfying.

Winning by force of will alone: delicious!

———-

Iran: U.S. will ‘definitely suffer’ if it leads strike on Syria – CNN.com (9/6/2013):

Iran’s Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said Thursday the United States — which, in addition to being one of his country’s chief adversaries, has led the push to punish Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s government over chemical weapons — has no right to make “humanitarian claims (given) their track record” in Iraq, Afghanistan and at the military prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

Obama, Putin in battle over purported Syria chemical weapons evidence at G-20 summit in Russia – CBS News (9/6/2013):

Putin said this week that any one-sided action would be rash. But he said he doesn’t exclude supporting U.N. action if it’s proven that the Syrian government used poison gas on its own people.

Putin Fights War of Images and Propaganda with Russia Today Channel – SPIEGEL ONLINE (8/13/2013):

Russia releases key findings on chemical attack near Aleppo indicating similarity with rebel-made weapons — RT News (9/4/2013)

Rumsfeld’s War – Newsweek and The Daily Beast (9/15/2002):

“Leaning forward” is one of Donald Rumsfeld’s favorite expressions. An old cold-war term, familiar to soldiers and spies, it means the willingness to be aggressive, to take risks. “I want every one of you to know how forward-leaning we are,” the secretary of Defense told a room full of Marine generals and Navy admirals at the North Island Naval Air Station, near San Diego, last month.

Syria crisis: War of words between Russia, U.S. heats up – CNN.com (9/6/2013):

The Cold War is over, though given the increasingly heated exchanges of late, it’s hard to tell.

What’s the evidence of Syrian chemical weapons attack? – CNN.com (9/4/2013)

# # #

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Epigram

Hillel the Elder

"That which is distasteful to thee do not do to another. That is the whole of Torah. The rest is commentary. Now go and study."

"If I am not for myself, who will be for me? If I am not for others, what am I? If not now, when?"

"Whosoever destroys a soul, it is considered as if he destroyed an entire world. And whosoever that saves a life, it is considered as if he saved an entire world."

Oriana Fallaci
"Whether it comes from a despotic sovereign or an elected president, from a murderous general or a beloved leader, I see power as an inhuman and hateful phenomenon...I have always looked on disobedience toward the oppressive as the only way to use the miracle of having been born."

Talmud 7:16 as Quoted by Rishon Rishon in 2004
Qohelet Raba, 7:16

אכזרי סוף שנעשה אכזרי במקום רחמן

Kol mi shena`asa rahaman bimqom akhzari Sof shena`asa akhzari bimqom rahaman

All who are made to be compassionate in the place of the cruel In the end are made to be cruel in the place of the compassionate.

More colloquially translated: "Those who are kind to the cruel, in the end will be cruel to the kind."

Online Source: http://www.rishon-rishon.com/archives/044412.php

Abraham Isaac Kook

"The purely righteous do not complain about evil, rather they add justice.They do not complain about heresy, rather they add faith.They do not complain about ignorance, rather they add wisdom." From the pages of Arpilei Tohar.

Heinrich Heine
"Where books are burned, in the end people will be burned." -- From Almansor: A Tragedy (1823).

Simon Wiesenthal
Remark Made in the Ballroom of the Imperial Hotel, Vienna, Austria on the occasion of His 90th Birthday: "The Nazis are no more, but we are still here, singing and dancing."

Maimonides
"Truth does not become more true if the whole world were to accept it; nor does it become less true if the whole world were to reject it."

"The risk of a wrong decision is preferable to the terror of indecision."

Douglas Adams
"Isn't it enough to see that a garden is beautiful without having to believe that there are fairies at the bottom of it too?" Epigram appearing in the dedication of Richard Dawkins' The GOD Delusion.

Thucydides
"The Nation that makes a great distinction between its scholars and its warriors will have its thinking done by cowards and its fighting done by fools."

Milan Kundera
"The struggle of man against power is the struggle of memory against forgetting."

Malala Yousafzai
“The terrorists thought that they would change our aims and stop our ambitions but nothing changed in my life except this: weakness, fear and hopelessness died. Strength, power and courage was born.”

Tanit Nima Tinat
"Who could die of love?"

What I Have Said About the Jews

My people, not that I speak for them, I nonetheless describe as a "global ethnic commune with its heart in Jerusalem and soul in the Land of Israel."

We have never given up on God, nor have we ever given up on one another.

Many things we have given up, but no one misses, say, animal sacrifice, and as many things we have kept, so we have still to welcome our Sabbath on Friday at sunset and to rest all of Saturday until three stars appear in the sky.

Most of all, through 5,773 years, wherever life has taken us, through the greatest triumphs and the most awful tragedies, we have preserved our tribal identity and soul, and so shall we continue eternally.

Anti-Semitism / Anti-Zionism = Signal of Fascism

I may suggest that anti-Zionism / anti-Semitism are signal (a little bit) of fascist urges, and the Left -- I'm an old liberal: I know my heart -- has been vulnerable to manipulation by what appears to me as a "Red Brown Green Alliance" driven by a handful of powerful autocrats intent on sustaining a medieval worldview in service to their own glorification. (And there I will stop).
One hopes for knowledge to allay fear; one hopes for love to overmatch hate.

Too often, the security found in the parroting of a loyal lie outweighs the integrity to be earned in confronting and voicing an uncomfortable truth.

Those who make their followers believe absurdities may also make them commit atrocities.

Positively Orwellian: Comment Responding to Claim that the Arab Assault on Israel in 1948 Had Not Intended Annihilation

“Revisionism” is the most contemptible path that power takes to abet theft and hide shame by attempting to alter public perception of past events.

On Press Freedom, Commentary, and Journalism

In the free world, talent -- editors, graphic artists, researchers, writers -- gravitate toward the organizations that suit their interests and values. The result: high integrity and highly reliable reportage and both responsible and thoughtful reasoning.

This is not to suggest that partisan presses don't exist or that propaganda doesn't exist in the west, but any reader possessed of critical thinking ability and genuine independence -- not bought, not programmed -- is certainly free to evaluate the works of earnest reporters and scholars.

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