It was five years ago today

Remember? Fifteen million people or more marched against war:

In New York,

image from the New York rally

at the South Pole,

scientists protesting at South Pole

in Amsterdam,

an arial overview of the Dam Square

And of course, London.

London antiwar protesters. From Wikipedia

But not just there. Rome had three million people turning up in what was the biggest anti-war demo ever and there were smaller events all over the world, from Cape Town to Vancouver, from Paris to Glasgow. If ever there was a war opposed from the start and pursued against the wishes of the voter, it was this one. And yet all the demonstrations, all the anger didn’t stop it. Five years later Iraq is still occupied, over a million Iraqis have died as a result and those responsible for it have never ever had to suffer the consequences.

It’s no wonder many people have become desillusioned, bitter and cynical; I’ve had bouts of it myself. It’s therefore good to see, over at Comment is Free, Andrew Murray celebrating the very real achievements of the anti-war movement that put 2 million people on the streets of London:

The demonstration was the apex of a broader movement which touched almost every part of society in 2003. This included the greatest-ever engagement of British Muslims in active politics, thousands of school student walkouts, peaceful civil disruption in towns across the country, local authorities coming out against the war, and train drivers declining to move munitions for the invasion.

It was a movement entirely outside the established structures which normally mediate the relationship between people and power. It was organised by the Stop the War Coalition (with CND and the Muslim Association of Britain as our partners), a campaign not 18 months old and run on a shoestring.

Hundreds of thousands of trade unionists joined the demonstration, while the TUC – its eyes on its ministerial connections, not its members – maintained a frigid indifference. Labour and Tory party members protested against their leaders, while Liberal Democrats dragged their hierarchy to the demonstration behind them. Marching at the head of the demonstration, I missed what may have been the most telling sight of the day – Piccadilly blocked by people without a single banner among them. This was the march of the unmobilised.

It was also a march against Murdoch and his mendacious press, exploding the myth of his political omnipotence. Rupert said war, the people said no. All Alastair Campbell’s strategy of controlling opinion through appeasing the Sun in vain!

The demonstration, and the movement around it, exploded the notion that society is slumped in a consumer-sodden apathy, and incapable of political engagement. The country’s biggest mass movement followed a general election with the lowest turnout in modern times, and preceded one in which participation was scarcely improved. The problem is the system, not the people.

Score another one for Bush: the surge works

The surge in homeless veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan, that is:

Experts who work with veterans say it often takes several years after leaving military service for veterans’ accumulating problems to push them into the streets. But some aid workers say the Iraq and Afghanistan veterans appear to be turning up sooner than the Vietnam veterans did.

“We’re beginning to see, across the country, the first trickle of this generation of warriors in homeless shelters,” said Phil Landis, chairman of Veterans Village of San Diego, a residence and counseling center. “But we anticipate that it’s going to be a tsunami.”

With more women serving in combat zones, the current wars are already resulting in a higher share of homeless women as well. They have an added risk factor: roughly 40 percent of the hundreds of homeless female veterans of recent wars have said they were sexually assaulted by American soldiers while in the military, officials said.

“Sexual abuse is a risk factor for homelessness,” Pete Dougherty, the V.A.’s director of homeless programs, said.

Special traits of the current wars may contribute to homelessness, including high rates of post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, and traumatic brain injury, which can cause unstable behavior and substance abuse, and the long and repeated tours of duty, which can make the reintegration into families and work all the harder.

Once more proof that soldiers, though most are stupid enough to vote Republican everytime and believe in these stupid wars, do not matter to the GOP and its cronies once the photo-op is over. If anybody in the US military is reading this and is scheduled to go to Iraq or Afghanistan save yourself from a future of homelessness.

Condi, Congress, Contempt and Resignation

U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice testifies before the House Foreign Affairs Committee on Middle East policy on Capitol Hill in Washington DC USA on 24 October 2007. Rice said on Wednesday the United States would cut off Iran's 'malignant' activities in Iraq and stop its destabilizing behavior across the region. EPA/MATTHEW CAVANAUGH

Could it possibly be that even Condi Rice is shocked at the depth of the incompetence and greed that are being publicly revealed by the Iraq corruption hearings?

Head of State Dep’t Anti-Corruption Office in Baghdad Is A Paralegal
By Spencer Ackerman – October 25, 2007, 11:35AM

How well are the State Department’s anti-corruption efforts in Iraq managed? Don’t ask Condoleezza Rice.

Rep. John Tierney (D-MA) laid it all out. Not only are there duplicative U.S. offices in Baghdad to oversee anti-corruption efforts — the Anti-corruption Working Group and the Office of Accountability and Transparency, to name two — but coordination is so bad that the OAT for months boycotted the meetings of the AWG. Rice said she was “not aware” of that.

What, officially ‘not aware’ or actually not aware? Or could it be both? Could it really be that she did not know and the depths of her ignorance are only now becoming clear to her? She’s certainly looking as though something’s knocked what little stuffing she had out of her recently. It could be from that… or maybe they didn’t have the patent Ferragamo boots in her size. Who knows.

Another point she wasn’t aware of: OAT has had, according to Rep. Tierney, four acting or permanent directors in the past ten months alone. The most recent one isn’t a diplomat or a trained anti-corruption official at all, but rather a “paralegal” who works at the U.S. embassy. “I should get back to you with a sense of how we manage these programs,” she replied.

Perhaps Rice actually didn’t know; not that that gives me have any sympathy towards her. Why didn’t she know? It’s her frickin’ job.

It could be she’s just been brought down to earth with a great big thud on learning that she isn’t the noble liberator of the barbarians and the heroine of her loyal underlings, but rather the aider and abettor of a gang of common thieves and murderers, but even so her ignorance was deliberate policy not inadvertence.

Plausible deniability they call it – with former attorney general Samuel “I don’t recall” Alito, it’s foremost proponent. It got so ridiculous that he had to resign, but he never actually admitted anything much.

Alito made sure he didn’t know anything that could condemn him – even if he actually did know, he made sure he officially ‘didn’t know’.

It’s a useful and convenent bit of sophistry, that – it covers up much administration wrongdoing and plasters over all sorts of festering sores. When you don’t know something you can’t be blamed and if everybody stonewalls, no-one gets caught. But the one thing you can’t escape from is the fact that an officer of state should know what’s going on their department.

That’s why Alito had to go, that and the ridiculousness of the country’s senior law officer being seen to deliberately obstruct a judicially-powered committee.

Whether Rice knew details about the fuckups and corruption in her department officially or otherwise is kind of irrelevant anyway, complicit as she is in the larger crime of the illegal invasion of Iraq, the unlawful killing of much of its population and the wanton destruction of its infrastructure. Everything else flows from that original offence and to even begin to list Rice’s resulting crimes is to pile Pelion upon Ossa.

But it’s looking increasingly less likely that she’s got the stamina for the long- planned attack on Iran, even though she is currently managing to hold the line in public:

During a hearing bristling with partisan snipes between Democrats and Republicans, the overall state of affairs in Iraq was never far from the surface. Pressed by committee members to acknowledge any regrets, Rice said that the war in Iraq had been difficult and expensive.

“Yes, frankly, it has been harder than I thought it would be,” she said.

But she defended administration policy and praised patriotic Iraqis who had risked their lives.

“I cannot by any means make up for the terrible sacrifice,” she said. “But I can say that I think nothing of value is ever won without sacrifice. And yes, I do believe that it’s been worth it.”

I expect it’ll be the same with Rice as it was with Alito: she’ll continue to deny she knew anything, say “I don’t recall” a lot and eventually resign, leaving Bush to make another dreadful recess appointment, perhaps the odious John Bolton (or someone equally rabid) who will push for nuclear strikes on Iran.

Rice has to be got rid of now , even if she is George’s best friend. She may be talking up Iraq success but anyone watching the hearings can see she’s at the end of her tether. If is the case that even she has been shocked at the depth and breadth of the corruption revealed in Iraq it could be that there may be some dark moral places that even Condi won’t go, unlikely as that might seem.

But that would mean she disagreed with Bush: that means disloyalty and if you ain’t for the Chimperor, you’re against him. You have to go, office wife or not.

Life During Wartime

Silly headline of the day:

Iraq Security Contractors to Get Sensitivity Training

A bit late for that, surely? Nevertheless TPM Muckraker has some suggestions on what that training might include:

[…]

We’ve got an advance look at the cultural-awareness lesson plan for Blackwater, Triple Canopy and DynCorp.

Lesson One: Don’t drunkenly murder bodyguards of Iraqi dignitaries.

Lesson Two: Should Lesson One fail, don’t hire those who drunkenly murder bodyguards of Iraqi dignitaries.

Lesson Three: Don’t shoot people as they flee in terror from your orgy of destruction.

Lesson Four: Don’t force terrified civilians off the road with your reckless convoys.

Lesson Five: Don’t fire your weapons at members of the U.S. military.

Lesson Six: Don’t broadcast your orgy of destruction on YouTube while set to music meant to show what a bad ass you are.

Well yes, that would be a start.