http://www.climatecrisis.net/
      Free Screening of
      An Inconvenient Truth
      Al Gore will be present ~

When: Saturday, June 24th at 8:00 PM
Where: California Plaza,  350 S. Grand Avenue Los Angeles, CA
(you can take escalator at 4th and Olive right up to event)

CLCV invites you to a free screening of An Inconvenient Truth, this summer's
inspirational movie about Al Gore's crusade to stop global warming.
Presented by Grand Performances in association with the Downtown Center
Business Improvement District, Los Angeles Film Festival and Paramount
Classics.
---

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/21/opinion/21Wed2.html?th&emc=th

Iraq, Unfiltered
NY Times Editorial: June 21, 2006

Bush administration supporters regularly accuse the news media of reporting
only bad news from Iraq and filtering out more positive stories. But just
hours before American television screens began to be filled with upbeat
clips of President Bush's surprise trip to Baghdad last week, the United
States Embassy there cabled back a far grimmer picture of the mounting
difficulties faced by its Iraqi employees.

The cable, reprinted by The Washington Post, told of embassy employees
running a daily gantlet of religious dress-code enforcers and harassment by
militia-style security guards - even at checkpoints surrounding the
fortified Green Zone, where the embassy is located. When the Iraqi employees
return to their homes, they face sweltering neighborhoods without regular
electric power, daylong gasoline lines, and families torn by religious and
ethnic tensions and mounting fears for the future.

The cable relays a report from an Arab editor that "ethnic cleansing" is
going on "in almost every Iraqi" province. The embassy itself suspects that
Shiite governmental authorities in Baghdad may be deliberately evicting
Kurdish households in response to Kurdish evictions of Arabs in other parts
of the country. A Sunni woman employee reports that "most of her family
believes that the U.S. - which is widely perceived as fully controlling the
country and tolerating the malaise - is punishing populations as Saddam
did."

The cable is only a raw snapshot of the daily experiences of embassy
employees, not a systematic nationwide survey. Yet embassy employees are in
many ways better off than most Iraqis. At least they have jobs and someone
to turn to for help. We can only guess what daily life must be like in
besieged Sunni cities like Ramadi or the militia-ruled Shiite towns of the
Basra area, some now too dangerous for reporters to venture into regularly.

Mr. Bush's six-hour visit to Baghdad was mostly spent inside the Green Zone,
where he made much of what he had been able to learn from looking Prime
Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki "in the eyes." Now that he's home, Mr. Bush
needs to take a hard, unfiltered look at the more disturbing picture relayed
by America's embassy.

***

Dispatches From the Edge

Gaza shrapnel; Timor haste; Turin trouncing
By Conn Hallinan

submitted by the author to portside June 20, 2006

While the Israeli military is denying it had anything
to do with the deaths of eight Palestinian civilians at
Beit Lahia beach in the Gaza Strip, June 10, a former
Pentagon battle damage expert says 'all the evidence
points' to an artillery shell fired by Israel.

According to Defense Minister Amir Peretz, 'The
accumulating evidence proves that this incident was not
due to Israeli forces.' The Israeli Defense Force (IDF)
claim the deaths and injuries were caused by an
explosive device buried in the sand.

But Marc Garlasco, a former U.S. Defense Department
damage expert who worked in Kosovo and Iraq, says that
the shrapnel he collected, as well as the nature of the
wounds, points to a land-based 155mm howitzer shell,
the basic artillery round for the U.S. and Israeli
militaries.

Garlasco found one shell fragment with '55mm' on it,
and he dismissed the IDF's theory that the explosion
was caused by a 155 MM shell buried by Hamas militants.
He said most of the injuries were to the head and
torsos of the victims, wounds inconsistent with a
buried device. 'If this had been a landmine,' Garlasco
told Donald MacIntyre of the London Independent, 'I
would have expected to see serious leg injuries.' He
called the IDF theory 'ridiculous.'

Human Rights Watch is calling for an independent
investigation, which, so far, the government of Prime
Minster Ehud Olmert is stonewalling.

While the incident has vanished from the American
media, it has sparked widespread discussion in the
Israeli press. Writing in Haaretz, columnist Danny
Rubinstein challenged the idea that the bloodshed was
'the result of a tragic error. It was clear to everyone
that in the exchanges of fire in the narrow Gaza Strip,
where the population density is among the highest in
the world, it was just a matter of time before an
entire family was hit.'

Rubinstein says there is not only no military solution
to the overall conflict, it is 'increasingly clear that
there is no military solution for putting an end to the
Qassam rocket attacks.'

In the past year, the IDF has fired over 6,000 shells
into Gaza, demolishing houses, fields, roads, bridges
and launching sites, and killing more than 80
Palestinians (in the past two years eight Israelis have
died from Qassam rockets). 'None of this helped. On the
contrary: there are many more rockets and missiles in
Gaza today than in the past,' writes Rubinstein.

But, according to the columnist, the shelling and the
refusal to talk with the Palestinians has a purpose:
'It is best that the Palestinians remain extremists
because then no one will ask the government of Israel
to negotiate with them. How do we insure that the
Palestinians remain radical? We simply strike at them,
over and over, via assassinations and incessant
bombings, until they drive any thought of supporting a
peace policy out of their minds.'

Israeli peace activists marched on IDF Chief of Staff
Dan Halutz's house in Tel Aviv to protest the Gaza
killings. Among the protestors was Dana Olmert,
daughter of the Prime Minister. And five human rights
organizations sent a letter to Olmert and Peretz
calling on them to end the killing of Palestinian
civilians in the territories, and to 'uproot the
elements that contribute to this killing.'

                    ***

There is lots of blame to spread around for the recent
riots in East Timor that killed over 30 people and
paralyzed the capital, Dili. For starters, the World
Bank, International Monetary Fund, Australia, and the
U.S.

The trigger for the unrest was a decision by Prime
Minister Mari Alkatiri to dismiss 600 of the new
nation's soldiers. Alkatiri was responding to pressure
from the World Bank and the IMF to curb government
spending and impose austerity on the debt-laden island.

The dismissed soldiers were mostly easterners, and
westerners largely dominate the present East Timor
government. The media has played up this 'ethnic
tension' angle, although there are no ethnic
differences between the two populations. What has
caused tension is that the current government is mostly
composed of exiles that fled during Indonesia's 25-year
reign of terror.

When the soldiers claimed that they were being
discriminated against by Dili-dominated government,
Alkatiri cavalierly dismissed them.

The real source of the problem is that East Timor was
first ravaged by the Indonesians, and then quickly
abandoned by the United Nations, in large part because
the UN is under severe budget pressure from U.S. and
Great Britain. The U.S. is opposing efforts to send UN
troops back in.

East Timor is the poorest country in Asia. It lost
200,000 residents during the 1974-99 Indonesian
occupation, a kill ratio higher than Pol Pot achieved
in Cambodia. When the country voted for freedom in
1999, Indonesian militias destroyed 70 percent of East
Timor's infrastructure, and herded 250,000 people into
concentration camps in Indonesian-dominated West Timor.
According to a study in The Lancet, Britain's leading
medical journal, one third of East Timor's people met
the criteria for post-traumatic stress disorder
following the 1999 rampaged.

Timor's underdevelopment is due not only to Indonesia's
rapacious exploitation, but also to Australia's refusal
to turn over billions of dollars in oil revenues from
the Timor Sea. Under current international law those
fields belong to East Timor, but Australia claims they
are 'disputed.'

Indonesia could not have invaded East Timor without the
explicit permission of President Gerald Ford's
administration (then Secretary of State Henry Kissinger
personally gave the green light to Indonesian President
Suharto) and without the passive acceptance of the
illegal occupation by Australia and Great Britain.

Instead of pressuring Indonesia to turn over 400 people
accused of war crimes during the long occupation and
1999 rampage, the U.S. and Australia have remain
largely silent on the issue The Bush Administration
recently announced it would begin selling arms again to
the Indonesian military. Indeed, the U.S. Justice
Department is actively aiding Indonesia's illegal
occupation of West Papua by charging that the Free
Papua Movement is a 'terrorist' organization, thus
giving the Indonesian army the cover it needs to try
and crush the separatist movement.

The great colonial powers-in East Timor's case, the
Dutch-plundered the less powerful, throttling their
economies and strangling their political evolution.
Then they shake their heads and tsk-tsk about 'failed
states' when things go badly, as if they bear no
responsibility.

                     ***

Former Italian Prime Minster Silvio Berlusconi's line
on the April 9-10 razor close Italian elections was
that they were a 'fluke,' and that Romano Prodi's
center-left government was not long for the world. Well
the 'fluke' turned into an old fashioned trouncing in
local elections May 28-29, when the center right was
lucky to hang onto Berlusconi's hometown, Milan. The
center-left's candidate for mayor of the big industrial
city of Turin crushed the center right candidate,
burying the myth that the wealthy north is right wing,
while the scruffy south is left.

Center left candidates swept 14 major cities, including
Rome and Naples. The center right did hang on to the
governorship of Sicily, but then again the victor,
Salvatore Cuffaro, is on trial for aiding the Mafia.

Not that Prodi will have smooth sledding. According to
the Financial Times, Berlusconi's mania for tax cutting
left public finances in dreadful shape. 2006-07 will be
a year of living dangerously for Prodi's government, as
it tries to fulfill promises with depleted coffers.

[Conn Hallinan is a foreign policy analyst for Foreign
Policy In Focus (online at www.fpif.org)  and a
lecturer in journalism at the University of California,
Santa Cruz.]
_______________________________________________________

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