Archive for the ‘Propaganda’ Category

WikiLeaks releases secret video of journalists, civilians killed in Baghdad

Monday, July 26th, 2010

(WARNING: This video may not be suitable for minors)  - Whistleblower website WikiLeaks.org has released a classified US military video of what it calls ‘the Pentagon murder cover-up’. The 39-minute clip shows more than a dozen civilians shot dead including two Reuters journalists, Namir Nood-Eldeen and Saeed Chmagh, in Baghdad in 2007. Two young children were also seriously wounded in the incident. Following an investigation demanded by Reuters, the US military said the soldiers acted in accordance with the law of armed conflict and the ‘Rules of Engagement’. In the run up to the release of this video, WikiLeaks said it had come under aggressive surveillance by the Pentagon. The video was first made public on the website http://www.collateralmurder.com. You can watch the full video here - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=is9sxR…

Ethan McCord, an Iraq war veteran and whistleblower on war crimes committed by US forces, talks about his experience as part of the first platoon to arrive on the scene of fresh carnage, as seen by millions in the classified video leaked by the website Wikileaks in April 2010.

Recorded live at the United National Peace Conference in Albany, New York, July 24, 2010. The 17-minute video McCord refers to, shown at the conference just before he made these remarks, can be found at http://youtu.be/5rXPrfnU3G0

Produced by the United National Peace Conference Media Project, an initiative powered by the Sanctuary for Independent Media and Hudson Mohawk Indymedia Center.

Gulf of Mexico “Oil Spill Pictures” | BP Oil Spill Pictures

Saturday, May 8th, 2010

Below are pictures of the oil spill that will “Kill” the Gulf of Mexico.

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Pictures

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Pictures

Boats trying to put out fire from oil rig.

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Pictures

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Pictures
Oil rig collapsing into the Gulf of Mexico.

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Pictures

Controlled Fire can be seen caused by the oil spill.

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Pictures

Rust colored oil filling the Gulf of Mexico.

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Pictures

Wilson Ruiz, a crew member of the Joe Griffin, looks at the oil slick

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill

Containment vessel enters the Gulf of Mexico.

Gulf of  Mexico Oil Spill Pictures

Inside of oil container.

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill

Oil breaks up in the currents

Gulf of  Mexico Oil Spill

Vessels surround drilling rig.

Gulf of  Mexico Oil Spill

Underwater shot of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill. You can clearly see the oil which is separating from the water.

Gulf of  Mexico Oil Spill

Gulf of Mexico Oil Slick reaching Louisiana coastline.

Gulf of  Mexico Oil Spill Pictures

Gulf of Mexico oil spill picture from the air.

Gulf of  Mexico Oil Spill Pictures
Oil comes ashore onto New Harbor Island, Louisiana.

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spil Pictures
Booms drenched in oil hang on a shrimp boat, the Mariah Jade, in Breton Sound, Louisiana

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Pictures

Picture of the oil slick swishing around in Gulf of Mexico.

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Pictures

National Guards prepare for oil slick of the coast of Alabama.

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Pictures

Fishermen Rob Lewis unloads crab traps after having to dump his catch in Shell Beach, Louisiana.

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Pictures

Oil Slick in Gulf of Mexico.

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Pictures

Shrimp boat trying to clean up oil spill.

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Pictures

Picture of shrimp boats trying to clean up oil spill.

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Pictures
Oil booms wrap around the shore near the South Pass of the Mississippi River

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill PicturesOrange
Slick covers the Gulf of Mexico.

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill PicturesOil
Slick seen in the Gulf from the BP oil spill.

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Pictures

BP America Chairman Lamar McKay leaves the U.S. Department of the Interior on May
3. McKay and other BP executives were meeting with Interior Secretary Ken
Salazar and Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano to discuss the impacts
of the oil spill.

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Pictures

Birds seen flying over BP Oil Spill slick.

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Pictures

BP Sucks sign seen in southern Louisiana.

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Pictures

Hard hat pulled from Gulf of Mexico which is filled with oil sludge.

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Pictures

Workers cleaning beach in Pass Christian Mississippi.

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Pictures

Dead bird that has washed ashore from oil spil.

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Pictures

Dead animals are washing ashore on May 8th 2010 from oil spill.

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Pictures

A turtle that has been killed by the oil spill.

BP Horizon Oil Spill holding Gulf of Mexico & US Coast Hostage

Thursday, May 6th, 2010

BP: Billionaire Polluter

Less than a week after British Petroleum’s Deepwater Horizon drilling platform exploded in the Gulf of Mexico, killing 11 workers and unleashing what could be the worst industrial environmental disaster in U.S. history, the company announced more than $6 billion in profits for the first quarter of 2010, more than doubling profits from the same period the year before. Oil industry analyst Antonia Juhasz notes: “BP is one of the most powerful corporations operating in the United States. Its 2009 revenues of $327 billion are enough to rank BP as the third-largest corporation in the country. It spends aggressively to influence U.S. policy and regulatory oversight.” The power and wealth that BP and other oil giants wield are almost without parallel in the world, and pose a threat to the lives of workers, to the environment and to our prospects for democracy.

Sixty years ago, BP was called the Anglo-Iranian Oil Co. (AIOC). A popular, progressive, elected Iranian government had asked the AIOC, a largely British-owned monopoly, to share more of its profits from Iranian oil with the people of Iran. The AIOC refused, so Iran nationalized its oil industry. That didn’t sit well with the U.S., so the CIA organized a coup d’é tat against Prime Minister Mohammed Mossadegh. After he was deposed, the AIOC, renamed British Petroleum, got a large part of its monopoly back, and the Iranians got the brutal Shah of Iran imposed upon them, planting the seeds of the 1979 Iranian revolution, the subsequent hostage crisis and the political turmoil that besets Iran to this day.

In 2000, British Petroleum rebranded itself as BP, adopting a flowery green-and-yellow logo, and began besieging the U.S. public with an advertising campaign claiming it was moving “beyond petroleum.” BP’s aggressive growth, outrageous profit and track record of petroleum-related disasters paint a much different picture, however. In 2005, BP’s Texas City refinery exploded, killing 15 people and injuring 170. In 2006, a BP pipeline in Alaska leaked 200,000 gallons of crude oil, causing what the Environmental Protection Agency calls “the largest spill that ever occurred on the [Alaskan] North Slope.” BP was fined $60 million for the two disasters. Then, in 2009, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) fined BP an additional $87 million for the refinery blast. Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis said: “BP has allowed hundreds of potential hazards to continue unabated. … Workplace safety is more than a slogan. It’s the law.” BP responded by formally contesting all of OSHA’s charges.

President Barack Obama said of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, “Let me be clear: BP is responsible for this leak; BP will be paying the bill.” Riki Ott is not so sure. She is a marine toxicologist and former “fisherma’am” from Alaska, and was one of the first people to respond to the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil disaster. Exxon deployed an army of lawyers to delay and defeat the legal claims of the people who were physically and/or financially harmed by the Valdez spill. “What we know is that the industry does everything it can to limit its liability,” she told me.

The (Mobile, Ala.) Press-Register reported that Alabama Attorney General Troy King told BP to “stop circulating settlement agreements among coastal Alabamians.” Apparently, BP was requiring owners of fishing boats seeking work mitigating the spill to waive any and all rights to sue BP in the future. Despite a BP spokesperson’s pledge that the waivers would not be enforced, the news report stated, “King said late Sunday that he was still concerned that people would lose their right to sue by accepting settlements from BP of up to $5,000.”

Even if BP doesn’t trick victims into signing away the right to sue, the 1990 Oil Pollution Act, while requiring polluters to pay the actual hard costs of the cleanup, caps the additional financial liability of a spill at just $75 million. Given that millions of people will be impacted by the spill, by the loss of fisheries and tourism, and by the cascade of impacts on related industries, $75 million is small change.

That is why Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J., introduced a bill to raise the economic-damages liability cap to $10 billion, calling the bill the Big Oil Bailout Prevention Act. Riki Ott is touring New Orleans and the Gulf Coast, educating people about the toxic effects of the spill, and helping them prepare for the long fight ahead to hold BP accountable.

BP will surely continue its dirty practices, fighting accountability in the courts, in the press and on the oil-drenched beaches.

BP: be prepared.

Denis Moynihan contributed research to this column.

Source: Amy Goodman

Amy Goodman is the host of “Democracy Now!,” a daily international TV/radio news hour airing on more than 800 stations in North America. She is the author of “Breaking the Sound Barrier,” recently released in paperback and now a New York Times best-seller.

© 2010 Amy Goodman

Is al-Qaeda winning?

Sunday, January 17th, 2010

What does it say about Washington’s ”war on terror” that dozen and a half people with paper cutters forced hundreds of thousands of Western troops into the battlefields of the “greater Middle East” region;

That 100,000 foreign soldiers are bogged down in occupied Afghanistan wondering how many dozens of al-Qaeda operatives have remained, if any;

That the most liberal democracy enacted new controversial illiberal laws and unpatriotic practices under its “Patriot Act”;

That one shoe-bomber has forced millions of people to take off their shoes every time they take a flight;

That one underpants-bomber will expose every other traveler in most humiliating of ways;

That after US loss of deterrence and prestige as well as trillions of dollars of military and other expenditures, al-Qaeda’s top leadership remains at large; its bases/cells proliferate globally; that volunteers continue to flock into its ranks and young supporters to its websites… !!! And above all that it continues to terrorize America and Americans.

So much that one gets the impression that America is fighting a world superpower despite the incredible disparities in capacity, numbers and support.

Is al-Qaeda winning? Has the United States lost?

Hitting the Jackpot
A dozen years ago, a demoralized group with nowhere to go but the hills of Afghanistan, al-Qaeda began targeting America instead of the region’s authoritarian regimes hoping to destabilize the region, bloody America’s nose and gain popularity.

Its strategy was simple: Draw the US into direct confrontation against and within the Muslim world. Like sheep to the slaughter house, America walked right into its trap.

Al-Qaeda was lucky. With a ‘cowboy’ and so-called “chicken-hawks” (militarists who ever served in the military) dominating the White House and the Pentagon… military escalation was only a question of time and intensity.
The Bush administration decided to “take the war to the enemy so as not to fight it at home”. This is exactly what al-Qaeda hoped for considering it wasn’t applying for Green cards for its members.

It all went as smooth as a scripted movie. After the 9/11 attacks at the pillars of its world status, the Pentagon and Wall Street, the wounded superpower went on a rampage. Like a bull in a china shop, it responded with little or no thinking of the consequences of its military actions.

Warmongers took advantage of the threat to US national security to advance their military agenda in foreign policy and the radical American Right exploited what they termed as the threat to “our way of life” to transform America’s way of life towards the Right.

Washington called for a “crusade”, then changed it into a “war” on terror and under its guise, went on to occupy Afghanistan and Iraq and support Israel’s bloody wars in Lebanon andPalestine.  It also intervened in Somalia, Yemen and Pakistan and put direct pressure on its allies to confront their Islamist movements.

In no time, the US was preoccupied by its draining occupation and costly military operations. And as expected, the terrible human cost only added petrol to the flames of hatred.

Paradoxically, anti-Americanism has been more rampant under “friendly regimes” like in Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Turkey etc. than others.

America’s unfortunate and disproportionate use of military force to defeat a segmented, mobile and polycentric movement of several hundred core groups of fighters didn’t make it any more secure or dissuasive.

As the Obama administration asks for $33 bn extra budget above the already approved $660 bn for 2010, I remember what Richard Meyers, the former head of the US joint chiefs of staff, told me several weeks ago how a decade later, the US still doesn’t have a strategy to deal with “the global insurgency” facing America.

Beyond military
Popular opposition and world denunciations of US military campaign has fallen on deaf ears in Washington. Instead of seriously reversing its military expansion, the Obama administration has accelerated it in the Afghan-Pakistan area and it seems adamant to repeat more of the same in Yemen.

Needless to say, no serious strategic analyst would advise abandoning military power all together. However, Washington’s dependency on, even addiction to, firepower has neutralized or nullified all other efforts towards defusing support for al-Qaeda and truly winning hearts.

Good-will gestures provided by President Obama and his attempts to reconnect to the Arab and Islamic world on the basis of “mutual interest and mutual respect” can hardly be heard considering the echoes of drone fired missiles, speeding F-15 jets and rolling tanks.

The more Washington used its military force, the less it won the minds of those it needs most to defeat al-Qaeda: Americans, Arabs and Muslims.

Likewise, US military actions are harming its intelligence and law enforcement work that over the last decade have dealt the greatest blow to al-Qaeda’s leadership and organisation.

Zero Sum strategy
As military adventures kill, maim and destroy lives, they create, nurture and build animosities and “alliances” among most unlikely allies, such as a young rich Nigerian that studies in London, a Jordanian doctor that studies in Turkey and an Arab-American soldier trained by the Pentagon, all whom were ready to die to hurt America.

And likewise, counter terror tactics and intelligence work has made it ever more difficult for public diplomacy to “win hearts and minds”. Instead of listening to people of the region, it has been spying on them and instead of reading them their rights, it has tortured them in far-away prisons.

And instead of hearing out their concerns and fears, Washington has underlined its own above all others.

In that limited and limiting spirit, for example, mostly impoverished Yemenis that suffer from war in the north, intensive conflict in the south and three decade autocratic regime, must now worry about US fears, and cater to US interests above their own.

Which brings us back to our initial question: al- Qaeda is winning only as far as Washington is running a self-defeating war.

However, one needs to remember that in the self-defeating war on terror, winner and loser is one and the same.

As long as America puts its security preoccupations and political interests about those under its military and strategic domination, the Pentagon and al-Qaeda will  feed into one another and the Americans, Arabs and Muslims will continue to be the ultimate losers.

By Marwan Bishara in on January 14th, 2010

Conspiracy Theory Jesse Ventura Big Brother

Friday, December 25th, 2009

Conspiracy Theory Jesse Ventura Big Brother
Big Brother is watching and it’s not who you think. Jesse Ventura’s investigation of government surveillance on its citizens tears the lid off a nationwide program that is thought to turn local businessmen and office workers into spies, snooping on their neighbors and ratting on their friends in exchange for information and special privileges from the FBI- including, some charge, a “license to kill.”