War By Other Means

It’s a tragic and criminal fact that where there’re modern armies there’s prostitution, child sex and human traffickingHalliburton and Dyncorp in the Balkans war being a case in point – but prosttution was never historically organised openly by the Army command structure – was it? Shadow of The Hegemon has an outraged post at what’s emerged about the US’ postwar occupation of Japan: :

The Americans Kept Comfort Women

There are times when I feel that there’s no real point to keeping one of these things up… when I look at the readership stats and think “is it really necessary”?

Then I read something like this, and remember what it really is… a place to be able to speak out, at least in some small way, and say that THIS IS INTOLERABLE.

Japan’s abhorrent practice of enslaving women to provide sex for its troops in World War II has a little-known sequel: After its surrender — with tacit approval from the U.S. occupation authorities — Japan set up a similar “comfort women” system for American GIs.

An Associated Press review of historical documents and records shows American authorities permitted the official brothel system to operate despite internal reports that women were being coerced into prostitution. The Americans also had full knowledge by then of Japan’s atrocious treatment of women in countries across Asia that it conquered during the war.

Tens of thousands of women were employed to provide cheap sex to U.S. troops until the spring of 1946, when Gen. Douglas MacArthur shut the brothels down.

The documents show the brothels were rushed into operation as American forces poured into Japan beginning in August 1945.

“Sadly, we police had to set up sexual comfort stations for the occupation troops,” recounts the official history of the Ibaraki Prefectural Police Department, whose jurisdiction is just northeast of Tokyo. “The strategy was, through the special work of experienced women, to create a breakwater to protect regular women and girls.”…

And now we’re finding out that the single most egregious crime of the Imperial Japan, sexual coercion (if not out and out slavery), was enthusiastically embraced by the American occupation? That the “heroes” of the Pacific War, the lions of history, the grandfathers and great-grandfathers that all Americans look up to and venerate were lining up en masse to pay to violate some poor Japanese girl over, and over, and over again?

With the official sanction of the American occupational government?

INTOLERABLE.

Read more.

We hear so little about other places in the world under historic American or allied occupation protection that it’s easy to forget that US and allied troops have been stationed for many years in large numbers elsewhere than Iraq or Afghanistan. Japan, for instance. It’s easy to take no notice of what they’ve been up to there when there’s much more exciting, photogenic stuff happening elsewhere. So when what really happened comes out, no wonder people are shocked.

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We Can Send A Message, But Will It Be Heard?

The UK’s last election in 2005 was so dodgy it was described by EU monitors as as befitting a banana republic: in the city of Bradford alone, 252 allegations of fraud were made.

Well, it’s election day again in the UK for the Scots and Welsh assemblies and English local authorities and such is the general pissed-offness of the electorate it’s anybody’s guess just how big the New Labour bloodbath will be. Having been one of those deluded people who helped New Labour to victory in 1997, there’s nothing I want to see more now than them totally wiped off the electoral landscape and the ground where they stood sown with salt. That may well be what the rest of the electorate want too – but how will we know, with so many doubts about the trustworthiness of the results? Birmingham 2005:

[…]

Vote-riggers exploited weaknesses in the postal voting system to steal thousands of ballot papers and mark them for Labour, helping the party to take first place in elections to Birmingham City Council.

They believed that their cheating would be hidden for ever in the secrecy of the strong boxes where counted votes are stored, never suspecting that a judge would take the rare step of smashing the seals and tracing the ballots back to the voters. Election corruption has been so rare in the past 100 years that lawyers have struggled to find examples since the late 19th century, when Britain was adjusting to the novelty of universal male suffrage.

The elections last June were the dirtiest since the general election of 1895, when Sir Tankerville Chamberlayne, the Conservative candidate for Southampton, notoriously travelled by cart from pub to pub, waving and throwing sovereigns at the crowds. His election was later ruled invalid.

The Birmingham vote- riggers were more cunning than the flamboyant Sir Tankerville. They coldly exploited communities where many cannot speak English or write their names. They forced what the judge called “dishonest or frightened” postmen into handing over sacks of postal ballots. They seem to have infiltrated the mail service: several voters gave evidence that their ballot papers were altered to support Labour after they put them in the post.

Proof that votes were stolen came when Richard Mawrey, QC, the election commissioner, ordered ballot boxes to be unsealed. Unknown to most voters, ballot papers can be traced back to individuals through serial numbers. The judge was struck by how many had been amended, sometimes using correction fluid.

Voters were traced and asked if they really had voted Labour. It emerged that some had handed completed postal ballots to Labour supporters calling at their homes offering to post them. The envelopes had been opened and the papers altered, then delivered to the election office for counting.

Birmingham is only one of the places where postal vote fraud happened and they were only caught because they were so blatant. More than 20,000 postal voters have since dropped off the register in the Birmingham wards investigated over fraud; in Aston and Bordesley Green wards – which were the focus of the investigation – the number of postal voters this year is down by 80%. It’s estimated, the BBC reports, that at least 5% of all nationwide postal votes this time round will have to be discarded becuse of suspicion of fraud.

But the government is adamant that their wonderful new electronic checking system for postal voting will eliminate any problems. Uh-huh.

When their activists were caught red-handed all over the country trying to subvert the election after the government had deliberately ignored the Electoral Commission’s advice not to go ahead with increased postal voting because of the potential for fraud, New Labour hurriedly put foward their usual knee-jerk response: a brace of new regulations. These were cleverly designed to be face-saving for them and incorporate “look over there, oooh-shiny technology!” which would of course need to be bought in, so that their pals did well too.

This is what we got:

The 2007 election marks another significant test for e-voting technologies since the UK began a voting modernisation programme in 2000. The programmes, however, have raised the same concerns over privacy, security and the ability to perform recounts as other e-voting systems deployed worldwide.

A variety of systems will be tested, including electronic scanning of votes and internet and telephone voting. The Department for Constitutional Affairs (DCA) has published details of the 12 pilot plans for 13 administrative areas.

[…]

Under close watch this election season will be software used to verify ballots from postal voting across England and Wales. Once voters are registered, they can cast their votes and send the ballot through the mail. Postal voting is seen as a way to make it easier for people to participate in elections but has been criticised as susceptible to fraud.

This year, special equipment, called postal vote identifiers, will be used to compare a voter’s signature on the voter registration form and the signature on the ballot as well as the voter’s birth date. The DCA has allotted up to £12.2 million for the equipment. One of the vendors is Northgate Information Solutions, which is providing equipment for 75 local authorities.

Northgate’s majority shareholder is General Atlantic LLC, a global private equity firm. New Labour is very fond of private equity firms; not only do they drool in the presence of obscene personal wealth, they’re drawn to private equity’s opacity to scrutiny. But that’s by the by.

In common with any given UK.gov IT project, it has issues:

However, concerns have been raised over the accuracy and speed of the equipment. A DCA spokesman said if a postal vote identifier detects anomalies between signatures, the ballot will be reviewed by an election official.

And if those anomalies are multiple, in their hundreds? What then?

Many areas have yet to test their new software and returning officers, though putting a brave face on it, are reportedly not happy. Scotland’s count will be a particular problem.

This year for the first time Scotland will replace manual counting with electronic counting, which it says will produce results by the next afternoon after the election. The e-counting services will be provided by DRS Data Service, the UK’s only e-counting software vendor.

(An interesting data point: guess who’s a non-executive director of DRS Data Services plc? Former labour leader Neil Kinnock.)

Already a proportionnof the Scots electorate has lost their vote but no-one in charge seems particularly bothered:

BBC May 1: Voting concerns as papers delayed

Postal voters at home and abroad fear they may have lost the chance to vote in the Scottish elections because of a delay in delivering ballot papers. Production and distribution problems have been blamed, with forms failing to arrive at homes ahead of Thursday. The problem has been highlighted in areas including Aberdeenshire and the Borders ahead of Thursday’s elections. The Electoral Commission’s Andy O’Neill admitted that some people could miss out but the vast majority would not.

Only some? Oh well, that’s all right then.

The SNP has been showing signs of hammering Labour candidates, a disaster for wannabe PM Gordon Brown and his Scottish Labour Party power base.. But if the result is close, if the SNP narrowly beat Labour(or vice versa) expect calls for an enquiry into the validity of the count. I wouldn’t be at all surprised to see a large number of results contested nationwide, such is the damage done to the credibility of the voting system by New Labour.

It’s started already in some places:

Birmingham Post: Lib Dems accuse opponents of ‘dirty tricks’

May 2 2007 By Neil Connor, Chief Reporter

Liberal Democrats in Birmingham last night accused their political opponents of dirty tricks after a councillor and a local election candidate were arrested in a postal votes fraud inquiry.

Coun Zaker Choudhry, who was elected to the Bordesley Green ward last year, and Mohammed Saeed, who is standing in the ward in tomorrow’s elections, were released last night on police bail.

The arrests again raise the spectre of corruption claims marring the local election polls.

[…]

Senior Liberal Democrats last night voiced anger at the timing of the arrests and at what they described as a “set up”.

There’s a cult of the strong leader and a mentality of entitlement to power that’s been cultivated in the Labour party: so much so that many actvists think that if you can’t win a seat, steal it. It’s all about undermining the sovereignty of the people. If the voting system can’t be trusted and the electorate can’t be trusted with the vote, ergo democracy itself can’t be trusted either. A strong, centralising authoritarian leader or party’s what’s best for the country.

It’s fascinating isn’t it, how Blair and Brown’s New Labour palely reflects Bush & Cheney’s GOP, in their very own peculiarly flabby and incompetent British way.

Morals On Sunday: It’s The Hypocrisy, Stupid

The fact that politicians frequent prostitutes wouldn’t even be a scandal if their own hypocrisy didn’t make it so. Personally I don’t give a damn about politicians’ (non-illegal) personal proclivities except in the mildly prurient, nosy way that we all, despite our protestations, secretly do, but this sex scandal’s not about sex so much as the public exposure of the moral hypocrisy of the Bush administration and of Washington culture.

The demise of a call-girl ring and pending trial of an alleged madam claiming thousands of clients has the US capital riveted by the chance powerful men may now be caught with their trousers down, with a senior state department official apparently first to fall.

Deborah Jeane Palfrey, 50, dubbed the DC Madam in local media, has been arraigned in federal court on charges of operating a Washington prostitution service for 13 years until her retirement in 2006.

This is going to run and run and I shall quite openly enjoy every moment. Part of that enjoyment will be watching the religious right twist themselves into theological and rhetorical knots trying to excuse exposed Republicans. Hmm. I wonder how long it’ll be before lots of loyal Bushies mysteriously start pre-emptively checking into rehab and finding Jesus?

There’s 10,000 prominent DC men’s names to come, all said to have been clients of the escort service and Condi’s deputy Randall Tobias – “she loves him, the president loves him” – resigned on Friday.

Expect to see lots more stories like this from Think Progress :

Official Caught Using Escort Service Demanded Anti-Prostitution ‘Loyalty Oaths’

Former U.S. AID director Randall Tobias, who resigned yesterday upon admitting that he frequented a Washington escort service, oversaw a controversial policy advocated by the religious right that required any US-based group receiving anti-AIDS funds to take an anti-prostitution “loyalty oath.”

Aid groups bitterly opposed the policy, charging that it “was so broad — and applied even to their private funds — that it would obstruct their outreach to sex workers who are at high risk of transmitting the AIDS virus.” But President Bush wouldn’t budge. He signed a 2003 National Security Presidential Directive saying prostitution “and related activities” were “inherently harmful and dehumanizing.”

Several groups and countries had their funding cut due to the policy. Brazil lost $40 million for “one of its most successful anti-AIDS strategies, persuading sex workers to use condoms or other measures to stop spreading the disease.”

During an “Ask the White House” online chat in 2004, Tobias defended the policy, saying the U.S. was “partnering with communities” to begin “fighting sex trafficking and prostitution, while still serving victims of these activities.” Tobias added that he was overseeing several “highly successful” relationship programs “aimed at men and boys to help them develop healthy relationships with women.”

A truly inspired idea, having someone who pays for “gals come over to the condo to give me a massage” run programs on developing “healthy relationships with women.”

And this is just one of the many hypocritical wingnuts in high positions about to be exposed. The Heritage Foundation and the Hudson Insitute had better start taking on admin staff to deal with the massive influx of wingnut welfare applications they’ll be getting….

Palpatine’s Progress

A while back there was a lot of fuss in Australia about Dick Cheney’s entourage of imperial stormtroopers and the military clampdown that they imposed on Sydney citizen’ during his visit:

For three days and nights before Cheney arrived, army Black Hawk helicopters buzzed the Sydney CBD, ostensibly for counter-terrorism training. Several residents contacted newspapers to complain of unbearable noise. One reader told the Sydney Morning Herald: “We are … being buzzed by huge noisy helicopters flying probably only about 20 storeys up. [Five] times in an hour—we can’t hear TV, we can’t talk on the phone.”

Last night, the airspace over Sydney was closed for US Air Force Two to land, and sections of the airport were virtually “locked down”. No members of the public were permitted to enter the vicinity. Dozens of police, security officers and snipers were on the tarmac, as well as inside and outside the airport. A grey Air Force plane arrived first, carrying Cheney’s cavalcade of bulletproof black limousines and an armoured van, while at least three state police helicopters hovered above.

Cheney even pressured the .au government into changing the law so his henchmen could carry guns openly in public, which is bad enough – but a story from Sifu Tweety at The Poor Man makes it horribly clear just how obscene the VP’s arrogance is getting. Apparently Cheney is so completely paranoid that he travels in a plane inside another plane.

Airstream’s appeal seems to have few limits, and indeed a powerful world traveler recently provided proof of its persistent appeal. On a trip to Asia in February, Vice President Dick Cheney traveled in an Airstream — inside an airplane.

Mark Silva, chief of the Washington bureau of The Chicago Tribune, accompanied the vice president as the press corps’ pool print reporter. The group flew on a huge gray C-17 cargo plane that the Air Force calls the Spirit of Strom Thurmond,in honor of the late senator.

!?! Strom Thurmond?. That says so damned much…

Mr. Silva said that when he boarded he noted the familiar outline of the Airstream roof inside the vast fuselage.

What? That’s how he travels? Seriously, is Cheney trying to make himself into a cartoon supervillian? He’s like a white trash Dr. No; would it be surprising at this point if his team of doctors turned out to be sexy martial artists or dwarfs?

Pelosi gets shit for following the common sense recommendations of security professionals, and meanwhile Cheney’s rocking the turducken of air travel. When does this crappy-ass Bruckheimer movie of imperial sunset end, again? Because it’s really stupid.

By the way, I’m sure he uses the C-17 for security purposes. But seriously, the fact that he needs to travel with a small army anywhere he goes in the world doesn’t make it any easier not to see him as, well, what he is.

“The turducken of aviation”. Heh. There’s only one thing missing to make that comparison absolutely perfect.

Asked And Answered

More about supermanlover Wolfie: one of the things I’ve been wondering is, if this situation’s been known about for so long, why the fuss now? Avedon has a clue, in reference to other scandals taking up airtime:

But Karl Rove must be loving it, because it’s taking people’s attention off of the things that are making him squirm.

Yup. That about sums it up.