Bill Weinberg

WHY WE FIGHT

Lest we forget. From the NY Daily News, Dec. 29:

Kiss before dying

As his father lay dying, crushed by a car that smashed into his Long Island house, Brian Calhoun gave him a final kiss.

US troops killed in Iraq top 9-11 toll

A little more than a year ago, when the media noted a lesser milestone—2,000 US troops killed in Iraq—we pointed out that the media's habit of only counting the deaths of US troops as opposed to all US-led forces actually paints far too rosy a scenario. This September, when the media noted that combined US troop deaths in Iraq and Afghanistan had exceeded the 9-11 toll, we pointed out that Afghans killed in the US bombing campaign—overhwlemingly civilians—had surpassed the 9-11 vicitms in December 2001. Also note that a year ago, Congressional liberals were talking about reducing the US troop presence in Iraq to a still-hefty 100,000 by year's end. Today there are 130,000, with more apparently on the way. From AP, Dec. 26:

Goode-Ellison affair reveals Jewish myopia

Predictable but depressing. Given the current popularity of "dual loyalty" insinuations against American Jews (even in supposedly progressive cricles), you'd think there'd be a little Jewish outrage over essentially identical arguments being used against American Muslims. This Dec. 28 column by Jonathan Tobin from Pennsylvania's Jewish Exponent (barely) pays lip service to such concerns, but ultimately (and idiotically) cannot contain its glee that the loyalty of a Muslim congressman is being questioned:

Muslims appeal for prayers in Spain's Cordoba Cathedral

A potential opening for the kind of universalism that could go a long way towards chilling the planet out—and taking the wind out of al-Qaeda's Iberian franchise. But the local Catholic hierarchy isn't going for it. Maybe the Pope will exercise better judgement? From the Italian news agency AKI, Dec. 28:

The Bishop of the southern city of Cordoba, Juan Jose Asenjo, has turned down a request from its Muslim community to be allowed to pray with Christians in its cathedral - a former mosque. Asenjo was quoted as saying the joint use of consecrated places of worship would "generate confusion" and lead to "religious indifference".

Nigeria: 2,000 dead in ten years of pipeline blasts

A pretty astounding figure. But as we noted the last time it happened, in May: when resource hyper-exploitation co-exists with dire poverty, such incidents are absolutely inevitable. From IRIN, Dec. 28:

LAGOS - The Nigerian Red Cross has taken the lead in responding to the latest pipeline blast in Lagos on Tuesday that killed at least 269 people and left scores of others severely burned.

Somalia: Ethiopia takes Mogadishu; martial law imposed; Yemen fires on refugees

Ali Mohamad Gedi, prime minister of Somalia's Federal Transition Government (FTG) announced his parliament will declare a period of martial law to maintain control of the country after Ethiopian and FTG troops wrested the capital from Islamists Dec. 28. "This country has experienced anarchy and in order to restore security we need a strong hand, especially with freelance militias," he said, speaking from Mundul Sharey, a village some 40 km southwest of Mogadishu. FTG spokesman Abdirahman Dinari said the Islamists had fled to the southern port city of Kismayu and that the administration now controlled 95% of Somalia. (Reuters, Dec. 29)

Somalia: US backing Ethiopian offensive?

Ethiopian troops seized towns throughout southern and central Somalia Dec. 25 and bombed the international airport at Mogadishu, in a dramatic escalation of a new offensive against Islamic militants who have taken power in much of Somalia. Ethiopian forces seized Baladweyne, a strategic town on the main road from the border into central Somalia, and Aadado. Ethiopian troops and allied Somali militiamen are reportedly advancing toward Jowhar, an Islamist stronghold 50 miles north of Mogadishu.

Chiapas: Acteal massacre commemorated

The bishops of San Cristobal de las Casas, Felipe Arizmendi Esquivel (titular), Enrique Diaz Diaz (auxiliary) and Samuel Ruiz Garcia (emeritus) officiated at a mass in the Chiapas Highland village of Chenalho Dec. 22 in memory of the victims of the Dec. 22, 1997 massacre at Chenalho's outlying hamlet of Acteal, in which 45 unarmed Tzotzil Maya were slain. In an emotional ceremony that mixed Catholic and Maya rituals, the gathering prayed at the grave of the victims, who belonged to the civil indigenous organization Las Abejas (the Bees).

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