>Even the New York Times, no friend of the Palestinians,
>noted this determined response. "As this long period of
>violence produces a mounting toll of death, injury and
>property damage," the Times wrote Dec. 10, "the Palestinian
>population grows steadily angrier and the voices of
>moderation get even quieter...A fresh wave of rage is
>breaking on the shores of accumulated humiliation and
>resentment."
>
>"Three years of progress [in the Palestinian economy] have
>been wiped out in two months of conflict," said Terje Rod
>Larsen, the UN special coordinator for the Middle East, who
>presented the UN report in Gaza on Dec. 4.
>
>PALESTINIANS LOSE $500 MILLION IN WAGES
>
>Israeli restrictions on Palestinian goods and workers have
>cost the Palestinians more than $500 million in lost wages
>and sales since the new uprising, the Al-Aqsa Intifada,
>began Sept. 28. Unemployment has tripled.
>
>About 190,000 Palestinians have lost their jobs, and 760,500
>dependents no longer have regular household incomes. Close
>to half of the population live on $2 a day or less,
>according to the UN.
>
>Palestinian economic activity has been cut in half, with an
>estimated $388 million drop in local economic output.
>
>Israel is barely transferring tax payments to the
>Palestinians from custom duties and other taxes on goods
>bought and sold in Palestinian territories. These payments,
>which usually average more than $50 million a month, meet
>the entire Palestinian government payroll, including
>doctors, teachers and police. In the past seven weeks the
>transfers came to no more than $8 million.
>
>Excluded from the UN's estimate of financial damage to the
>Palestinian economy is the tens of millions of dollars in
>damage to Palestinian "buildings, infrastructure and
>vehicles, due mainly to the Israeli Army's use of heavy
>weapons, including rockets, tank shells and high-caliber
>automatic weapons," according to the report.
>
>In the first six weeks of the Palestinian uprising Israeli
>attacks resulted in the partial or total destruction of 431
>private homes, 13 public buildings, 10 factories and 14
>religious buildings, the UN said.
>
>DESTROYING OFFICES AND TREES
>
>On Nov. 20, for example, Israeli missiles fired from
>helicopters wrecked Gaza police stations, TV studios and
>office suites. The Israeli Army bulldozed fields of
>eucalyptus trees and fruit orchards. Barak called this "a
>broad operation against Palestinian Authority infrastructure
>in Gaza." (New York Times, Nov. 22) He visited Gaza the next
>day to personally assess its results.
>
>According to the Palestinian Center for Human Rights,
>Israeli bulldozers destroyed about 600 acres of agricultural
>land in the Gaza Strip alone. But this Israeli "bomb and
>destroy" campaign reaches beyond Gaza. When the West Bank
>town of Beit Jala was bombed and strafed from U.S.-supplied
>Cobra helicopters in mid-November, a factory was hardest
>hit.
>
>Israeli rockets have also targeted greenhouses, under the
>guise that these plastic-covered wooden frames provide
>shelter for Palestinian snipers. Olive groves have been
>destroyed with the same excuse.
>
>And Israeli settlers, acting as an unofficial arm of the
>military, have been firing on Palestinians in the West Bank
>trying to harvest their olive crops. (Wall Street Journal,
>Nov. 7)
>
>This year saw a bumper crop of olives after two years of
>drought. Many Palestinians who survived by selling their
>olives were in serious debt and dependent on this crop to
>remain solvent. For other Palestinians, olives are a
>subsistence crop, one of the few things to be relied upon in
>lean times.
>
>On Nov. 1, Israeli tanks fired more than a dozen rockets at
>the Oasis Casino complex in Jericho, also hitting the new
>Intercontinental Hotel there. Jericho, the crossroads
>between Israel, Jordan and the Palestinian territories, was
>being developed as a tourist center. Two months ago, it had
>2,500 visitors daily and its casino was thriving. Now this
>has stopped.
>
>Additionally, the Palestinian Health Ministry reports that
>out of the 10,000 Palestinians injured by Israeli soldiers,
>more than 900 sustained serious physical or neurological
>injuries requiring long-term health care. Many Palestinians
>feel that this maiming is deliberate, and meant to place
>lifetime burdens on the families of those who will care for
>the seriously wounded.
>
>U.S. SUPPLIES ISRAELI WEAPONS
>
>The Israeli Army uses the U.S.-made M-16 rifle, which has a
>range of more than a mile. According to Palestinian doctors,
>a major source of the maiming injuries is using these high-
>velocity bullets at close range.
>
>Washington not only supplies the weapons used to kill and
>maim, U.S. aid of $10 million a day actually keeps the
>Israeli state afloat. The U.S. views Israel as a battering
>ram against the Arab revolution, securing Wall Street's grip
>on Middle Eastern oil.
>
>Even now, while sponsoring a new commission to "establish
>peace" in the Middle East, Washington is far from an "honest
>broker" in the region. While providing the weapons used to
>pummel the Palestinians, the U.S. government is seeking to
>ease the burden that the two-month Palestinian uprising has
>placed in the Israeli government.
>
>According to the UN report, Israeli "economists have lopped
>a full percentage point off their growth estimates for the
>country for the year, a billion-dollar correction. Tourism
>vanished. Farmers and contractors who depend on Palestinian
>workers are demanding bailout aid," and the high-tech sector
>is scaling back spending.
>
>While no additional U.S. aid is planned for the
>Palestinians, the Clinton administration is seeking to
>cushion the effect of the Intifada on the Israeli economy
>with an additional $450 million this year.
>
>In every way, this is a U.S.-Israeli war against the
>Palestinian people. The working class and other concerned
>people in the U.S. are in a unique position to give
>solidarity to the Palestinian struggle by demanding that the
>U.S. stop all aid to Israel.
>
>DAY OF RAGE
>
>Meanwhile, the Palestinian people remain defiant and
>determined. Thousands participated in demonstrations in a
>Dec. 8 "Day of Rage" marking the beginning of the first
>Intifada 13 years ago.
>
>The killing of four Palestinian policeman, shelled by an
>Israeli tank operator who saw them only as "Palestinians
>with guns," set off a protest of thousands in Jenin. And
>enraged youths responded to the murder of a 16-year old in
>East Jerusalem by burning down an Israeli police station.
>Funerals the next day erupted into angry mass demonstrations
>in many locations.
>
>Far from defeating the people, the daily humiliations and
>hardships are bringing new layers into the struggle. Take
>Omar Dhuheir and Donya Dhuheir. Together they worked a two-
>acre parcel of Gaza land and raised their nine children.
>Their orchards, and especially their greenhouses of tomatoes
>and cucumbers required 24-hour care.
>
>They were not involved in the Intifada. Their children did
>not throw stones. They just wanted to be left alone. This
>month, the Dhuheir family's property was razed to expand a
>road for Israeli settlers.
>
>There was no warning. Israeli tractors, bulldozed the
>fields, demolished the greenhouse, and tore into the seven-
>room house as the Dhuheir family ran out the back door. All
>the Dhuheirs have now is a tent in the sand.
>
>"Enough with the Intifada," said Donya Dhuheir. "I hope
>there will be a war now."
>
>- END -
>
>(Copyleft Workers World Service: Everyone is permitted to
>copy and distribute verbatim copies of this document, but
>changing it is not allowed. For more information contact
>Workers World, 55 W. 17 St., NY, NY 10011; via e-mail:
>[EMAIL PROTECTED] For subscription info send message to:
>[EMAIL PROTECTED] Web: http://www.workers.org)
>
>
>
>
>
>Message-ID: <06b701c06785$42eccb60$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>From: "WW" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Subject: [WW]  Taking credit for Yugoslav coup
>Date: Sat, 16 Dec 2000 12:26:00 -0500
>Content-Type: text/plain;
>        charset="Windows-1252"
>Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
>
>-------------------------
>Via Workers World News Service
>Reprinted from the Dec. 21, 2000
>issue of Workers World newspaper
>-------------------------
>
>EDITORIAL: TAKING CREDIT FOR YUGOSLAV COUP
>
>Just before the Oct. 5 assault on the Yugoslav Parliament,
>Workers World wrote that it would be a serious mistake "to
>believe that an authentic, national popular movement
>independent of the U.S. and NATO is rising up against the
>Yugoslav government."
>
>That's because "Washington and its European allies have
>subsidized this movement's leadership with huge sums of
>money, bolstered them with enormous political support,
>exhausted the Yugoslav population with war threats and
>sanctions, demonized [former Yugoslav President Slobodan]
>Milosevic by spreading lies and false charges, and goaded
>the opposition to Milosevic to risk civil war."
>
>Only two months later, on Dec. 11, the Washington Post ran a
>story confirming our analysis. It details just how U.S.
>agencies carried out the electoral coup in Yugoslavia.
>
>The article has the look of a "leak" from the agencies
>themselves--the Washington-based, Democratic Party-allied
>National Democratic Institute and its Republican
>counterpart, the International Republican Institute.
>Displaying a cocky arrogance, the agents wanted to make sure
>they got "credit" for the overthrow.
>
>The NDI held a strategy meeting in Budapest, Hungary, with
>20 disloyal Yugoslav opposition parties a year before the
>elections. It applied U.S. polling and advertising
>techniques to the Yugoslav election, including twisting lots
>of opposition leaders' arms to get them all behind Voyislav
>Kostunica. Here's what the Post said:
>
>"In the 12 months following the strategy session, U.S.-
>funded consultants played a crucial role behind the scenes
>in virtually every facet of the anti-Milosevic drive,
>running tracking polls, training thousands of opposition
>activists and helping to organize a vitally important
>parallel vote count. U.S. taxpayers paid for 5,000 cans of
>spray paint used by student activists to scrawl anti-
>Milosevic graffiti on walls across Serbia, and 2.5 million
>stickers with the slogan 'He's Finished,' which became the
>revolution's catchphrase."
>
>And: "While NDI worked closely with Serbian opposition
>parties, IRI focused its attention on Otpor, which served as
>the revolution's ideological and organizational backbone."
>Otpor, or "Resist," is the counter-revolutionary student
>organization that tried to mislead people with its leftist-
>sounding name and clenched-fist symbol.
>
>"In March," the Post reported, "IRI paid for two dozen Otpor
>leaders to attend a seminar on nonviolent resistance at the
>Hilton Hotel in Budapest, a few hundreds yards along the
>Danube from the NDI-favored Marriott."
>
>While the article referred to "nonviolence," it omitted
>mention of U.S./NATO war maneuvers on election weekend.
>
>In this self-serving article, the agencies minimized the
>CIA's role, describing it as ineffective. Don't be surprised
>if another article--leaked by the CIA--credits the CIA with
>organizing the attack on parliament and the television
>station.
>
>Those around the world in solidarity with the Yugoslavs have
>to believe this show of arrogance is "counting your puppets
>before they're stabilized." May it pave the way to rapidly
>discrediting the forces behind Kostunica and help those who
>want to keep Yugoslavia independent throw the U.S.-backed
>forces out.
>
>- END -
>
>(Copyleft Workers World Service: Everyone is permitted to
>copy and distribute verbatim copies of this document, but
>changing it is not allowed. For more information contact
>Workers World, 55 W. 17 St., NY, NY 10011; via e-mail:
>[EMAIL PROTECTED] For subscription info send message to:
>[EMAIL PROTECTED] Web: http://www.workers.org)
>
>
>
>
>
>Message-ID: <06bf01c06785$5a229120$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>From: "WW" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Subject: [WW]  Cuba set to cut phone service to U.S.
>Date: Sat, 16 Dec 2000 12:26:40 -0500
>Content-Type: text/plain;
>        charset="Windows-1252"
>Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
>
>-------------------------
>Via Workers World News Service
>Reprinted from the Dec. 21, 2000
>issue of Workers World newspaper
>-------------------------
>
>AFTER PROVOCATIONS: CUBA SET TO CUT PHONE SERVICE TO U.S.
>
>By Gloria La Riva
>
>Cuba carried through on its promise. After warning
>Washington for two months that plundering millions of
>dollars in Cuban assets would have consequences, the Cuban
>government will cut off direct telephone calls between the
>U.S. and Cuba effective Dec. 15.
>
>For the time being, phone calls will still be possible
>through third countries.
>
>Cuba will cut direct service until Washington allows U.S.
>telephone companies to pay a 10-percent tax Cuba imposed in
>late October on all future calls. The tax was aimed at
>recovering up to $162 million in Cuban assets that
>Washington has illegally confiscated over the years, and
>that U.S. courts suddenly handed over to right-wing Cuban
>exile forces in late October.
>
>On Oct. 16, U.S. Federal Judge James Lawrence King of
>Florida awarded an initial $58 million from Cuba's assets to
>the families of right-wingers who were shot down by a Cuban
>plane in 1996. A law signed by President Clinton,
>shamelessly called "Justice for Victims of Terrorism," made
>this ruling possible.
>
>It was a scandalous decision since it rewards the Miami
>group "Brothers to the Rescue" for its invasive flights into
>Cuban territory in the 1990s. It also shows the ongoing
>support by the U.S. government for the fascist forces
>against Cuba.
>
>After warning "Brothers" that no more incursions would be
>tolerated, on Feb. 24, 1996, a Cuban jet shot down two
>planes that had twice deliberately invaded Cuban air space.
>Four right-wing Cuban exiles were killed when the plane went
>down.
>
>An editorial in Granma Dec. 11 described the judge's
>financial reward to the terrorists: "In the height of
>shamelessness, they [the Cuban right wing and U.S.] seek to
>make Cuba pay for the terrorism that originates from that
>country and of which our island is the victim." Granma is
>the official organ of the Communist Party of Cuba and the
>country's main newspaper.
>
>And more millions of dollars are earmarked for the CIA-
>backed groups in Miami. Judge King granted $172.7 million in
>punitive and other damages, also to come from Cuba's frozen
>funds. This figure would exceed the $162 million frozen in
>U.S. banks. Of that figure, $120 million comes from phone
>calls, the rest from other Cuban properties.
>
>Responding to Cuba's cutting of phone service, a U.S. State
>department official gave a statement that reeked of
>hypocrisy. "It is unfortunate that while the world continues
>to open up to the people of Cuba, the Cuban government is
>threatening to deny Cuban citizens the ability to talk to
>family members."
>
>It is the U.S., not Cuba that has brought suffering on the
>Cuban people by imposing a devastating blockade for 40
>years. It is the U.S. that systematically withheld Cuba's
>phone revenues from 1966 to 1994.
>
>Yet even while denied all its phone revenues, Cuba still
>provided full phone service with the U.S. In all those
>years, Cuba maintained telephone communications despite the
>loss of millions of dollars per year, while AT&T reaped
>major profits.
>
>Washington isn't crying about the cutting of phone service.
>It's crying because Cuba held firm.
>
>According to Cuban Decree Law 213, the telephone tax will
>continue until all confiscated monies are recovered. One
>hundred percent of the funds will go towards medical
>expenses for the Cuban people.
>
>Cuba says further steps may be taken to collect the taxes.
>Granma's Dec. 11 declaration concluded, "We feel duty bound
>to remind them that, beyond what is established in the
>decree-law, we are able to adopt additional measures until
>those funds are recovered.
>
>"What the Cuban-American Mafia needs to do is not to squeal
>ridiculously, but assume full responsibility for the effects
>that their cynical and repugnant actions have had on
>communications between Cuba and the United States. They were
>deluding themselves if they believed that there would not be
>a response."
>
>- END -
>
>(Copyleft Workers World Service: Everyone is permitted to
>copy and distribute verbatim copies of this document, but
>changing it is not allowed. For more information contact
>Workers World, 55 W. 17 St., NY, NY 10011; via e-mail:
>[EMAIL PROTECTED] For subscription info send message to:
>[EMAIL PROTECTED] Web: http://www.workers.org)
>
>
>
>
>
>


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