Bill Weinberg
HRW: "judicial independence" trampled in Saddam trial
How many times a day do we have to say "A plague on both your houses"? First Saddam vows to "crush the heads" of Kurds testifying about his genocidal 1988 "Anfal" campaign. Then the judge in the case, Adullah al-Almiri, responds by re-assuring him that he was "not a dictator," which makes about as much sense as saying he didn't have a moustache. Not to be outdone in cynicism, Prime Minister al-Maliki promptly responds by having Justice al-Almiri summarily removed in dictatorial manner—thereby further compromising the case against the ex-dictator. And one of the charges against Saddam concerns lack of judicial independence under his regime! It seems Iraq's new bosses are starting to emulate their own much-demonized ousted tyrant.
Chavez calls Bush "Devil", proposes "Bank of the South"
A textbook case in how Venezuela's Hugo Chavez is viewed differently by the Imperium and the global south. First this, from the Voice of America, Sept. 20, on day two of the annual UN General Assembly debate:
Chavez brought his anti-U.S. campaign to the world body Wednesday. He called on like-minded world leaders to stand up to what he called "American imperialism," which he said is a "threat to the survival of the human race".
Hezbollah training Venezuela's Wayuu Indians?
We sure hope this is Jewish paranoia! From the Jerusalem Post, Sept. 19 (emphasis added):
Venezuelan Jews fear Chavez-Iran ties
On the day that Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad arrived for a 30-hour visit, it seemed appropriate that Venezuela's Jewish community should organize a conference on the Middle East conflict and its local repercussions.
Chavez to Ahmadinejad: Islam is "revolutionary"
From Newsday, Sept. 19 (emphasis added):
BLOCK 7, AYACUCHO PETROLEUM FIELD, Venezuela -- The Islamic world may be roiling over remarks by the pope, but in this remote patch of eastern Venezuela, President Hugo Chávez suggested yesterday that a little revolutionary fervor -- and perhaps a lot of oil -- is all it takes to unite Christians and Muslims.
New Yorkers protest Bush
Sarah Ferguson writes for the Village Voice, Sept. 19:
Anti-War Crowd Dogs Bush at the U.N.
Protesters swamped Dag Hammarskjold Plaza opposite the United Nations Tuesday as President Bush was inside pledging to deliver "democracy" to the Middle East.
Thailand: new GWOT flashpoint?
We'll have a clearer idea of what is going on here when the dust settles, but two things are worth noting about the Sept. 19 coup d'etat in Thailand. First, the coup leader Gen. Sonthi Boonyaratglin is the first Muslim to head the nation's armed forces, and was apparently appointed in an effort to win hearts and minds in the Islamist insurgency in the country's south. Secondly, the coup comes days after Thailand was implicated as possible host of one of the now-acknowledged secret CIA prisons established after 9-11 for the Global War on Terrorism.
Afghanistan: "Mullah Dadullah" pledges more terror
More evidence that Pakistan, the USA's closest ally in the region, is ironically serving as a staging ground for the destabilization of US-occupied Afghanistan. First this, from The Guardian, Sept. 19:
A chain of suicide bombings killed 19 people, including four Canadian soldiers, across Afghanistan yesterday, in guerrilla violence bearing an increasing resemblance to the conflict in Iraq. The blasts came a day after Nato claimed it had scored a victory after killing more than 500 insurgents in two weeks of fighting in the Taliban's southern heartland.
Iraq: ethnic struggle behind Kirkuk terror
We warned even before the US invasion that the northern city of Kirkuk—contested by Kurds, Arabs and Turkmen—was Iraq's most likely flashpoint for civil war. Up until now, it has (comparatively speaking) been spared embroilment in the sectarian warfare tearing the country apart. That changed Sept. 17, when seven coordinated suicide car bombs and explosions left over 25 dead and nearly 100 wounded around the city. The bombs mostly targeted police partols and headquarters, although one exploded outside the home of Sheik Wassfy al-Assy, described as a "tribal leader" who had vocally opposed the Saddam dictatorship. (WP, Sept. 18) Days before the attacks, Al-Jazeera had warned that tensions in Kirkuk were reaching an explosive point—especially given an approaching referendum to decide the city's future. Via KurdishMedia, Sept. 15:

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