Following up on my last post regarding the mainstream media’s spin on Iraq and troop withdrawal, I came across this article from the Financial Times. While it does not mention time horizons it purports to describe how Iraqis are “divided” over the idea of a US military withdrawal from their country. Writing from Baghdad – likely not far from the Green Zone if even outside – the author claims “[m]ost Iraqis appear wary of setting any specific timetables for the withdrawal of US troops,” fearing doing so would destabilize the country and lead to civil war.

Yet the article offers but one quote from an Iraqi that is clearly against withdrawal. Of the remaining four quotes, only two are concerned with the issue of a troop pullout, one wants a drawdown in the number of US personnel, the other argues for a gradual withdrawal, no timetables mentioned. The remaining two Iraqis quoted are statements of support for Barack Obama, who has stated his intention of setting a timetable (what form that will actually take if he becomes president we have to wait and see).

This kind of anecdotal evidence abounds in media reports, while actual polling data is rarely mentioned. One such poll taken in early 2006 when the security situation was far more dire than today showed that 67% of Iraqis felt a six month withdrawal from that time would increase security, 70% wanted a timeline of either six months or two years, and 80% approved the Iraqi government calling for such a timeline.

A more recent poll [PDF] shows opinions have changed little since, demonstrating that as of March 2008 61% of Iraqis felt the US presence was making the security situation there worse and 69% claimed a complete withdrawal would either improve security or not change things at all. The numbers supporting the occupation are even worse, yet we are constantly led to believe through media reports such as this one in the Financial Times that Iraqis are torn between wanting to keep American troops in their country and having them leave.

If more news outlets would report the clear position of the people of Iraq – ironically from polling data often commissioned by the very news agencies that rarely use it – rather than confusing things with anectodal evidence, maybe taking a position demanding a full and timely withdrawal wouldn’t seem such a radical idea.

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The corporate media is now abuzz with talk of the Bush administration’s agreement to a “general time horizon” for the withdrawal of US troops from Iraq. This is a “dramatic shift” from the previous strategy according to the AP’s Terence Hunt. Yet Hunt attributes this supposed reversal to the White House attempting “to salvage negotiations for a long-term agreement covering U.S. military operations there.” So this agreement to withdrawal troops at some nebulous time in the future is predicated on negotiating a long-term (read permanent) military presence in Iraq. Orwell would be proud indeed.

So what exactly is a “time horizon” you might ask? It can’t be a deadline or timetable because Bush has repeatedly opposed such things when it comes to Iraq. Apparently, according to White House spokesman Gordon Johndroe, “The agreement will look at goal dates for transition of responsibilities and missions. The focus is on the Iraqi assumption of missions, not on what troop levels will be.” Therefore when we reach the time horizon we will simply reevaluate the situation of whether the uncivilized Iraqis can run things to our liking, no guarantees of reductions necessary.

According to Wikipedia a time horizon is a term used in economics describing “a fixed point of time in the future at which point certain processes will be evaluated or assumed to end.” Well as Johndroe makes clear we can’t assume that the US military presence or even current troop levels will end when we reach the time horizon. No, that would obviously be a fiction. Or even better, a science fiction because doesn’t it all sound like some bad sci-fi novel or film? Just think about it: The Time Horizon, where language itself breaks the laws of physics, forming out of nothing from the mouths of PR saavy politicians and repeated unquestioningly by their media robots to have any meaning intended. Wow! That would be scary.

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An upcoming book by investigative journalist Jane Mayer details how the Bush administration ignored a 2002 CIA report on Guantanamo Bay which stated that up to one third of all prisoners held there were innocent of any wrongdoing. The book, The Dark Side: The Inside Story of How the War on Terror Turned Into a War on American Ideals, also shows that a secret Red Cross report finished in 2007 deemed techniques used by CIA operatives against suspected Al Qaeda members as “categorically” torture.

Mayer writes, according to the New York Times who along with the Washington Post obtained an advance copy of the book, that the Red Cross “warned that the abuse constituted war crimes, placing the highest officials in the U.S. government in jeopardy of being prosecuted.” Perhaps in a truly just world this would happen. But I wouldn’t count on it, at least not in the United States, where lawlessness like this when committed by the powerful is merely seen to be a political difference at best and rewarded or justified at worst.

The Washington Post goes into further detail about the CIA report on Guantanamo:

The classified CIA report described by Mayer was prepared in the summer of 2002 by a senior CIA analyst who was invited to the prison camp in Cuba to help Defense Department officials grapple with a major problem: They were gleaning very little useful information from the roughly 600 detainees in custody at the time. After a study involving dozens of detainees, the analyst came up with an answer: A large fraction of them “had no connection with terrorism whatsoever,” Mayer writes, citing officials familiar with the report. Many were essentially bystanders who had been swept up in dragnets or turned over to the U.S. military by bounty hunters. Previous published reports have described the CIA analyst’s visit but have not provided details of its findings.

According to Mayer, the analyst estimated that a full third of the camp’s detainees were there by mistake. When told of those findings, the top military commander at Guantanamo at the time, Major Gen. Michael Dunlavey, not only agreed with the assessment but suggested that an even higher percentage of detentions — up to half – were in error. Later, an academic study by Seton Hall University Law School concluded that 55 percent of detainees had never engaged in hostile acts against the United States, and only 8 percent had any association with al-Qaeda.

What was the administration’s response to these assessments? Apparently Vice President Cheney’s staff director David Addington simply stated “The president has determined that they are ALL enemy combatants. We are not going to revisit it.” And that was that. What the dear leader says is true is all that matters. Damn the facts. If our imperial president calls torture simply a humane form of interrogation, then that’s what it is. And if innocent people illegally held – and possibly subject to these interrogation techniques – are deemed “enemy combatants,” that’s what they are. Case closed.

None of this is really a surprise. As Glenn Greenwald points out:

This is what a country becomes when it decides that it will not live under the rule of law, when it communicates to its political leaders that they are free to do whatever they want — including breaking our laws — and there will be no consequences. There are two choices and only two choices for every country — live under the rule of law or live under the rule of men. We’ve collectively decided that our most powerful political leaders are not bound by our laws — that when they break the law, there will be no consequences.

Truer words couldn’t have been spoken. As we see now impeachment is “off the table” according to the Democrats. The President’s illegal surveillance program has been sanctioned by the so-called opposition who at one time was outraged by it and pledged to hold those resposible to account. But no. All attempts at standing by principle and the rule of law are bound to fail in such a climate. In a futile effort, Rep. Dennis Kucinich from Ohio is trying to force a vote on impeachment. His original 35 articles now slimmed down to one: the well known fact that Bush knowingly “deceived” Congress and the American people “into believing Iraq had weapons of mass destruction in order to get lawmakers to back a U.S.-led invasion of the country.”

You’ve got to hand it to Kucinich, he won’t quit or backdown. Unfortunately for us there are far too few people of principle like him in Washington, and any realistic chance of this administration being held to account is dwindling fast.

As many of you have probably heard, a group calling themselves the Presidential Memorial Commission of San Francisco is working to change the name of the San Francisco Oceanside Water Pollution Control Plant to the George W. Bush Sewage Plant. They are lobbying to have the initiative placed on the ballot this coming election. As this article from the International Herald Tribune notes: “Republicans in a city that voted 83 percent Democratic in 2004 are not thrilled with the idea.” No doubt. I’m sure they’ll pass the measure. And the best part of it all:

The renaming would take effect on Jan. 20, when a new president is sworn in. And regardless of the measure’s outcome, supporters plan to commemorate the inaugural with a “synchronized flush” of hundreds of thousands of toilets that would send a flood of water toward the plant.