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Showing posts with label anti-war movement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label anti-war movement. Show all posts

Sunday, September 21, 2014

Trauma that cannot be “un-remembered”—a mother mourns her veteran son

Our own also suffer endlessly in endless U. S. wars
Editing, beginning and ending comments
by Carolyn Bennett

T
ogether with unspeakable horrors perpetrated on hundreds of thousands of peoples whom U.S. plutocracy have invaded, displaced, slaughtered, terrorized across the world – are the lies told and lies believed, and the unspeakable horrors perpetrated upon America’s young.


The U.S. Model: Use, Abuse, Discard

Multiple re-deployments into war zones exact “incalculable mental and emotional costs on America's men and women in uniform and on their families.” The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs reportedly has logged an estimate of a military veteran suicide every 65 minutes. In 2012, the number of veteran suicides was greater than U.S. soldiers killed in combat.

“One in 5 veterans of U.S. wars in Iraq and Afghanistan has been diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.…” Three-quarters of young male troops saw someone seriously injured or killed. More than half were attacked or ambushed. Eighty-eight percent received incoming fire. In the minds of these soldiers, the traumatic memories play and replay over and over [referenced: U.S. Army Surgeon General Report, 2008]

Twenty-year-old Levi Derby, born May 13, 1981, in Cissna Park, Illinois, joined the U.S. Army in 2001, and after six months was dropped into the U.S. war on Afghanistan. As a veteran, the United States provided him no health care coverage. After multiple deployments, the horrors of war, and untreated trauma, Levi Derby ended his life.

“Inpatient mental health hospitalization” in the United States reportedly averages around “$2,000” a day. A two to four-week stay costs “$14,000” to “$30,000” – costs which most U.S. families cannot afford without government coverage.  

Levi Derby in his mother’s words

On his return to the United States, U.S. veteran Derby had become increasingly isolated. He was reportedly “not taking care of himself or working and was having recurring nightmares about his experience at war.” One day he and his family realized that he needed inpatient health treatment and decided to take him to a hospital; but en route to the hospital, he reflected on the high cost of treatment and his lack of health care coverage and asked his grandmother who was taking him to return home.

H
is mother was speaking in the Press TV documentary “The Battle Within.”

We send them back over and over and over. No person can handle that. You see things in war that you can’t un-live. You can’t un-remember. It’s there with you forever; and to make them go back multiple times is way too much. No human can handle that.

He came home and all he had was a dead stare … like the walking dead. You could see anger in him and a coldness; the happy son I had known, who had loved life so much, loved children and animals now seemed like this shell of a person.

He was not home long the first time before he was told he would be shipping off to Iraq. He could not bear to go into war again. He had told me when he came home that he had killed and he would never ever kill again.

When he came home they had him on pills to sleep, pills to deal with the nightmares, pills for the anxiety attacks. 

He always had a prescription for Lorazepam for the anxiety attacks. 

Then the doctor that was treating him … said that his PTSD was so severe that he couldn’t tell for certain that he also didn’t suffer from bipolar disorder; and they started trying to treat him with medication for that; so many medications they tried [and] he ended up having allergic reactions to them. 

My son also possibly had a traumatic brain injury that was never diagnosed. From the time that he had come back until the time he died – sometimes blood would trickle out of his ear and down his neck. After his death, when I took the sheets off his bed, there were blood stains on the bed from his ears having bled while he was sleeping.

This veteran’s mother said her son “had felt betrayed by our government and his family and his friends” but “had he been given the proper treatment, he could still be here today.” Instead this young man hanged himself using “the same chain hoist that [his grandfather] had swung him on in a car tire when he was a little boy.”  The soldier’s departing words: 

‘I’m sorry I could not take it anymore so it is time for me to go, to go to where the sun is always sunny and the grass is always green and the flowers smell like honey.’

Twenty-two veterans end their lives every day, the documentary reported, and this is not even the full count. Considered in epidemic proportions, U.S. veterans are killing themselves at rates that “more than double” those of the civilian population. Between 2005 and 2011, an estimated “49,000” U.S. veterans took their lives.

I
 t is not enough to mourn our own or even to mourn the epidemic in soldier suicide. 

It is time for a new model to replace the U.S. model of use-abuse-discard. Time to try nonviolence in domestic and international relations. Time to find other means of meeting challenges and solving problems. Time to evolve from the barbarity of war and war making. Time to stop the killing.


Sources and notes

“The Battle Within,” Press TV documentary Synopsis: “Apart from memories, a heartfelt suicide note is now the only keepsake a mother has of her son, the son whom she lost to constant recurring nightmares of the atrocities he witnessed in Afghanistan. His is by no means an isolated case. According to the US Department of Veteran Affairs, every 65 minutes a military veteran commits suicide. In 2012 more US soldiers killed themselves than died in combat. Treatment for Iraq and Afghanistan vets suffering from PTSD has cost more than 2 billion dollars so far. Multiple redeployments into war zones have not only had unprecedented financial costs for the US government but incalculable mental and emotional costs on America’s men and women in uniform and their families, a clear indication that the greatest casualties of war are seldom on the battlefield.” September 21, 2014,
http://www.presstvdoc.com/Default/Detail/12891
http://www.presstvdoc.com/Default/Detail/12891

Wikipedia on Lorazepam

After its introduction in 1977, Lorazepam’s principal use was in treating anxiety. Among benzodiazepines, Lorazepam has a relatively high physical addiction potential and is recommended for short-term use, up to two to four weeks, only. Long-term effects of benzodiazepines include tolerance, dependence, a benzodiazepine withdrawal syndrome, and cognitive impairments which may not completely reverse after cessation of treatment….Withdrawal symptoms can range from anxiety and insomnia to seizures and psychosis.


Lorazepam is used for the short-term treatment of anxiety, insomnia, acute seizures including status epilepticus [a life-threatening condition in which the brain is in a state of persistent seizure], and sedation of hospitalized patients, as well as sedation of aggressive patients.  Adverse effects that may occur include anterograde amnesia [loss of the ability to create new memories after the event that caused the amnesia], depression, and paradoxical effects [the same ailments the drug is supposed to cure] such as excitement or worsening of seizures. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lorazepam

__________________________________________________

A lifelong American writer and writer/activist (former academic and staffer with the U.S. government in Washington), Dr. Carolyn LaDelle Bennett is credentialed in education and print journalism and public affairs (PhD, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan; MA, The American University, Washington, DC). Her work concerns itself with news and current affairs, historical contexts, and ideas particularly related to acts and consequences of U.S. foreign relations, geopolitics, human rights, war and peace, and violence and nonviolence. Dr. Bennett is an internationalist and nonpartisan progressive personally concerned with society and the common good. An educator at heart, her career began with the U.S. Peace Corps, teaching in Sierra Leone, West Africa. Since then, she has authored several books and numerous current-affairs articles; her latest book: UNCONSCIONABLE: How The World Sees Us: World News, Alternative Views, Commentary on U.S. Foreign Relations; most thoughts, articles, edited work are posted at Bennett’s Study: http://todaysinsightnews.blogspot.com/ and on her Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/carolynladelle.bennett. http://www.prweb.com/releases/2014/08UNCONSCIONABLE/prweb12131656.htm http://bookstore.xlibris.com/Products/SKU-000757788/UNCONSCIONABLE.aspx Her books are also available at independent books in New York State: Lift Bridge in Brockport; Sundance in Geneseo; Dog Ears Bookstore and Literary Arts Center in Buffalo; Burlingham Books in Perry; The Bookworm in East Aurora

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Monday, June 16, 2014

Deepening U.S. violence against Iraq impels anti-war push-back

Occupation, Militarization
Must End
Editing and excerpting 
Carolyn Bennett

Associated Press Recap

U.S. Occupying Personnel

“The U.S. Embassy in Baghdad is the largest in the world,” roughly 5,000 occupying U.S. personnel. Additional U.S. personnel deployed by the U.S. State Department occupy three U.S. consulates: in Basra (southeastern Iraq, the country’s principal port); in Irbil (Arbil, an ancient town in northern Iraq, 48 miles east of Mosul in the foothills of the mountains that rise to the east, also links by roads to Turkey, Syria, and Iran); and in Kirkuk (northeastern Iraq, 145 miles north of Baghdad).

Today “more than 100 U.S. military personnel” are deployed in Iraq “in a section of the U.S. Embassy that coordinates U.S. foreign military sales to Iraq.” Scores of U.S. Marines, “more than 100 …provide security at the embassy.”

Sending further U.S. military for training Iraqis was officially curtailed when “Baghdad rejected Washington’s insistence that [U.S.] troops be granted immunity from prosecution [impunity] while in the country.” However, a fairly large training mission was based at the air base in Balad, about an hour northwest of Baghdad, from which “three planeloads of Americans were evacuated” this past week.

U.S. Mercenaries

Also in Iraq are former “Pentagon contractors” [Americans] turned “Iraqi government” contractors who “have been providing a range of military sales support and training” related to “weapons and other military equipment purchased [by Iraq] from the United States.”

U.S.-armed against Iraq’s own people

Iraq is reportedly scheduled to purchase 36 Lockheed Martin F-16 fighter planes priced tagged at “$3 billion.” Together with these, the United States “has recently sold a variety of high-end equipment, including hundreds of Hellfire air-to-ground missiles, tank ammunition, grenades, rifles and other weaponry [ and] the Pentagon recently notified Congress of plans to sell an additional $1 billion in military equipment to Iraq.”
 
U.S. death toll (estimate)

The United States (its people, government, military) fought an eight-year war [actually more than eight years of U.S. presidencies extending to the George H.W. Bush administration] against the Iraqi people and ousted their president, Saddam Hussein. Monetary Cost estimate in the 8-year period: “hundreds of billions of dollars.” U.S. deaths estimate: exceeding “4,400.” 


U
.S. in Iraq 2003-2009-2012 (estimates, incomplete toll)
Wikipedia notes, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casualties_of_the_Iraq_War

U.S.-led multinational coalition death toll: 4,486 U.S. service members killed in Iraq between 2003 and 2012; information on Iraqi military and civilian casualties less precise, less consistent.

Lancet Study figures based on household survey data:

654,965 excess deaths through the end of June 2006. Estimate is for all excess violent and nonviolent deaths including deaths due to increased lawlessness, degraded infrastructure, poorer healthcare, etc.; 601,027 deaths (range of 426,369 to 793,663 using a 95 percent confidence interval) were estimated to be due to violence: 31 percent of those were attributed to the Coalition, 24 percent to others, 46 percent unknown. The causes of violent deaths were gunshot (56 percent), car bomb (13 percent), other explosion/ordnance (14 percent), airstrike (13 percent), accident (2 percent), unknown (2 percent). A copy of a death certificate was available for a high proportion of the reported deaths (92 percent of those households asked to produce one). 
Body counts: 
Associated Press
110,600 violent deaths
March 2003-April 2009  
Iraq Body Count project
112,667–123,284 civilian deaths from violence; 174,000 civilian and combatant deaths
March 2003-March 2013 
Classified Iraq War Logs 
109,032 deaths, including 66,081 civilian deaths
January 2004-December 2009 
Classified U.S. military documents released by WikiLeaks in October 2010 
Iraqi and Coalition military deaths ● January 2004 - December 2009
109,032 deaths: “Civilian” 66,081 deaths; “Host Nation” 15,196 deaths; “Enemy” 23,984 deaths; “Friendly” 3,771 deaths

With all the pain and suffering U.S. officials have brought to the land and people of Iraq, they and their  “partners,” who comprise a lethal cabal in America's relations with the world, still haven't had enough blood. They are resuming their belligerent threats and lectures with a view toward compounding the residual harm of post-war, expanding a hostile occupation, and deepening Iraq’s pain with even more violent aggression. 

Some Americans want this cruelty to stop. I'm one of them.  


Anti-war Push-back

T
he A.N.S.W.E.R. Coalition calls the nation to attend NO NEW U.S. WAR ON IRAQ
Nationwide demonstrations Friday and Saturday June 20 and 21 ── Included in this call to action, in addition to ANSWER, are Code Pink, World Can't Wait, and others.

T
he anti-war movement must mobilize “to tell the Obama administration that the people of the United States absolutely oppose any new war on Iraq. We cannot sit by idly when the Pentagon may be about to open a new chapter in its history of death and destruction.”

No New U.S. War on Iraq! Initial posts
http://www.answercoalition.org/national/news/emergency-actions-no-new.html

Washington, D.C.
Monday, June 16, 5 p.m.
White House, 1600 Pennsylvania Ave
Initiated by Code Pink and other organizations
Sat., June 21, 1 p.m.
White House, 1600 Pennsylvania Ave

Los Angeles, CA
Sat., June 21, 1 p.m.
Pershing Square
(Corner of 5th & Hill)
Downtown LA

San Francisco, CA
Sat., June 21, Noon
Corner of Powell and Market Sts

Sacramento, CA
Sat., June 21, 1 p.m.
16th & J Sts

Eureka, CA
Sat. June 21, Noon
County Courthouse, 5th & I Sts

Fresno, CA
Saturday, June 21st, 10 a.m. – 1 p.m.
Peace Corner - Blackstone & Shaw

Tallahassee, FL
Sat., June 21, 12:30 p.m.
Florida State Capitol
400 South Monroe Street

Chicago, IL
Sat., June 21, Noon
Federal Plaza
(Adams and Dearborn)

Twin Cities, MN
Wednesday, June 18, 5 p.m.
Lake Street/Marshall Ave., bridge between Minneapolis & St. Paul
More information at 612-522-1861 or 612-827-5364

Albuquerque, NM
Fri., June 20, 6 p.m.
UNM Bookstore
(Intersection of Central & Cornell)

New York, NY
Tuesday, June 17, 5:30 p.m.
Outside Democratic Party where Obama is speaking
Gotham Hall, 1356 Broadway, between 36th and 37th Sts
Initiated by World Can't Wait
Friday, June 20, 6 p.m.
Harlem Armed Forces Recruitment Center
76 W. 125th St (2/3 trains)

Philadelphia, PA
Thursday, June 19, 4:30 p.m.
15th and Market Sts



Sources and notes

“A look at the U.S. presence in Iraq,” Robert Burns, Associated Press, June 14, 2014
Associated Press writers Lolita C. Baldor and Matthew Lee contributed to this report.
http://news.yahoo.com/look-us-presence-iraq-075331501.html;_ylt=AwrBJR7WKp9TOzsAO.zQtDMD

“NO NEW U.S. WAR ON IRAQ: Actions at the White House in D.C., in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, Albuquerque, Sacramento and many more cities on June 20 and 21!,”
http://www.answercoalition.org/

Emergency Actions Nationwide: NO NEW U.S. WAR ON IRAQ, June 13, 2014, post

http://www.answercoalition.org/national/news/emergency-actions-no-new.html

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Bennett's books are available in New York State independent bookstores: Lift Bridge Bookshop: www.liftbridgebooks.com [Brockport, NY]; Sundance Books: http://www.sundancebooks.com/main.html [Geneseo, NY]; Mood Makers Books: www.moodmakersbooks.com [City of Rochester, NY]; Dog Ears Bookstore and Literary Arts Center: www.enlightenthedog.org/ [Buffalo, NY]; Burlingham Books – ‘Your Local Chapter’: http://burlinghambooks.com/ [Perry, NY 14530]; The Bookworm: http://www.eabookworm.com/ [East Aurora, NY] • See also: World Pulse: Global Issues through the eyes of Women: http://www.worldpulse.com/ http://www.worldpulse.com/pulsewire http://www.facebook.com/#!/bennetts2ndstudy

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Saturday, October 27, 2012

Drones destroy life, terrorize survivors, are unethical, unlawful; should be banned ─ Medact report

U.S. drone launch

UAVs must be unambiguously written into international treaties; their makers, agents, governments and their leaders must adhere, without exception, to international arms and related treaties, international conventions, humanitarian and human rights laws
Excerpt from Medact report
Editing, minor comment by Carolyn Bennett

“Drones invade personal space and physically and chronically restrict people’s normal life,” says this latest medical professionals’ report on unmanned aerial vehicles. Evidence has shown that the presence of drones contributes to the disruption of vital public health programs. A Taliban leader in Waziristan reported that “polio vaccinations of children in that region will be prevented as long as the as the United States continues to use drones to kill targets there.”
Children and kin suffer

The United States regularly bombs the tribal region where the borders of Afghanistan and Pakistan join.


Civilians suffer most

T
he deaths and injuries suffered by innocent civilians who happen to be in the vicinity of a drone’s target go largely unreported. These men, women and children remain statistics: anonymous and nameless.

The psychological impact on civilians – including many children – who live under the constant threat of drones, is unacceptable, and is not taken into account by those who use them.

Women protest
Evidence is also emerging of damage to the mental health of those who operate UAVs. Watching a target on a computer screen for days, tracking the target’s every move, then pressing a button that will kill [people] and possibly [their] family or friends, can create ‘physical exhaustion,’ ‘high operational stress’ and ‘clinical distress.’

W
omen are disproportionately affected by drones. What little control they have over their lives is further eroded by a weapon they know could strike at any time. Under constant threat, women try to protect their lives and those of the children. “While men can sublimate their grief and anger to some degree by becoming fighters – one of the terrible consequences of drone warfare – women have no such outlet,” the report says. “And if their [male partners] are killed in a drone strike, women may have to endure the continuing presence of the drone just overhead.”

The degree to which drones contribute to the loss of human dignity is made clear by a description of life in the Gaza Strip (Israel together with the U.S. and UK are leading users of UAVs):

‘The constant surveillance from the sky, collective punishment through blockade and isolation, the intrusion into homes and communications, and restrictions on those trying to travel, or marry, or work make it difficult to live a dignified life in Gaza.’
Somalis under drone attack


“D
RONES: the physical and psychological implications of a global theatre of war” is a report by Medact that describes the journey that led to the proliferation of these weapons and the physical and psychological damage they cause to civilians and to the military personnel who operate them. The report also explores the moral and legal issues raised by the use of drones in ‘legalized’ assassinations or ‘targeted killings.’”

Formed in 1992 by a merger of two older organizations (the 1951 Medical Association for the Prevention of War and the 1980 Medical Campaign Against Nuclear Weapons), Medact is a global health charity that takes on issues at the center of international policy debates.

Led by its health professional membership, Medact undertakes education, research and advocacy on the health implications of conflict, development and environmental change. It focuses on war and weapons … complemented by action on the health impacts of poverty and environmental change. http://www.medact.org/medact_information.php


Drone destruction
Civilian trauma
These are some of the critical issues discussed in Medact’s October 13, 2012, report on drones.

The health professionals who author this report say the reasons for their concern about the increasing use of drones ─ in addition to the number of deaths and injuries of innocent civilians ─ have to do with “the psychological damage to people living under the constant threat of drone attack and to service personnel who carry out the assassinations”; and growing evidence that medical personnel and others who arrive at the scene of drone attacks to assist the injured are also being targeted. “This is a war crime.”

The numbers of civilians killed by drones are only estimates, the report says, the most accurate for Pakistan where estimates range from “light casualties to estimates from the Bureau of Investigative Journalism (BIJ) of large numbers of civilian deaths, including children, family members attending funerals, people on rescue missions and medical personnel.” The number of deaths resulting from drone strikes in Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia as reported by BIJ is between 201 and 213 children killed since 2001; and the total estimated deaths between 2,985 and 4,533.


Drone destruction
Questions of judgment, ethics and morality

“The use of unmanned weaponry necessarily has a corrupting effect on those directing it because it implies that war is being waged only against a few sinister individuals,” the authors write. Viewed in the context of human behaviors that cultivate and regulate complex interactions within social groups, the use of this weaponry violates any principle of morality defined as a construct of interrelated other comprising the ability to understand or empathize with your opponent.  “All aerial warfare raises moral and ethical issues,” they write, and the bombing of civilians raises moral issues for those who direct the operations as well as for those who execute the attacks [the authors do not include but should, in my view: the moral and ethical breach of those who decide and who order these operations and executions].

“Drones,” they conclude, “could lead to a world of globalised warfare, in which people may find themselves within a theatre of war literally anywhere on the planet.”

Surely this can be characterized as enslavement, endless torture: the ultimate inhumanity of human beings to other human beings.


United Nations
Questions of law

Claims of legality and accuracy of these weapons are simply untrue, this report suggests. In situations of actual armed conflict, the Geneva Conventions and other rules of International Humanitarian Law (IHL) apply. The Geneva Conventions developed in 1949 as a result of the Second World War codified “general principles with clear implications for aerial bombardment ─ in particular the need for attacks to be proportional to their anticipated military advantage, and to discriminate between combatants and civilians.”

The Obama government’s claim “that killing, using military force outside of armed conflict zones, is lawful under international law,” the authors report, is a “baseless” claim. “Indeed while theatre specific conventions relating to war on land and at sea exist in international law, no such conventions apply to aerial warfare.”

The claim that armed drones can be more accurate than other weapons of aerial warfare at discriminating between combatants and civilians, and are thus more likely to conform to IHL is also untrue. The report states:
 
Evidence of accuracy is not always borne out in reality, and identifying ‘suspicious behavior’ from aerial observation can lead to mistakes.

Moreover, the fact that the U.S. drones program classifies as possible militants all military aged men within the area of a drone strike greatly increases the risk of civilian deaths, and the likelihood that attacks will be indiscriminate under International Humanitarian Law.

International Human Rights Law (IHRL) also applies in a country experiencing conflict but where conflict had not been officially declared. A government can suspend some (but not all) of these rights if there is a national emergency that could be caused by an ‘unofficial’ conflict. 

A right “that cannot be suspended is the ‘right not arbitrarily to be deprived of one’s life.’

“If attacks by armed drones were shown to be arbitrary, they would then be considered illegal depending on the definition of ‘arbitrary.’ The International Court of Justice has ruled in one case that this should be decided by the law applicable in situations of declared armed conflict (‘lex specialis’),” thus returning to the argument of International Humanitarian Law and its core principles of proportionality and discrimination.


C
laims that the military benefit justifies the risk of civilian death and injury, that accuracy of drones increases their ability to be more ‘proportional’ (civilians in proportion to “militants” or vice versa) is a flawed argument as is the “imminent” attack argument.

Peoples of the Middle East and Africa who suffer the brunt of U. S. aggression (from the ground, air or sea) never have been and never will be an imminent threat or danger to the people or possessions of the United States of America.

The authors use an example of moral justification claimed in a decision to kill ten innocent civilians who happen to be in the same building as the “target” because it is believed the “target” may be planning to kill 100 people in the future, which serves to encourage the use of assassination drones.  “Given that the majority of these attacks are pre-emptive, that intelligence may be inaccurate, and observation misleading” makes clear “the slippery slope [that] leads to the death of civilians.

facade
International Criminal Court 
One purpose of law,” they point out, “is to determine accountability:

Who is to blame when a mistake is made and civilians are killed due to incorrect intelligence, possibly obtained under duress or provided with alternative motives?

Who is to judge the likelihood – and therefore proportionality – of that action when an attack is carried out in anticipation of an action?

“These issues muddy the waters not only of the legal, but also the moral and ethical situation.”


Background of an accelerating depravity, breakdown

I
n the past decade, proliferation of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) commonly known as ‘drones’ has skyrocketed.

Before the World Trade Center events of September 11, 2001, the United States Air force began experimenting with armed drones. In 2001, a Hellfire missile was successfully fired from a Predator drone at a stationary target in the Nevada Desert and the same year a CIA-operated Predator drone was used in combat for the first time to assassinate an alleged al-Qaeda leader, Mohammed Atef, in Afghanistan.

In succeeding years, the United States has used drones in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia, Libya and Iraq. Israel has reportedly used armed drones in Gaza. The United Kingdom has used them in Afghanistan. Now, more than seventy-five countries are thought to possess some type of drone.

Children suffer most
as does the future
Three countries (the United States, Britain, and Israel) are known to have used armed drones in combat, the report says; but Singapore, India, China and Russia have developed or purchased drones; and, in the coming decade, the annual drone market (U.S. leading next eight years’ spending $32 billion, Asia Pacific nations following) is expected to rise from $5.9 billion to $11.3 billion.

Plans are on the drawing board “for drones to become increasingly automated, with the ability to fly pre-programmed missions and eventually select their own targets,” the report says.

The future may see solar-powered drones and drones that can take off vertically from ships.

Blueprints for the production of nuclear-powered drones, capable of staying airborne for months at a time, were drawn up [but then] shelved in anticipation of negative public opinion] by the U.S. government’s main R and D agency Sandia National Laboratories.


The report’s list of countries involved in the export and development of drones (taken from Drone Wars UK) include:  

ISRAEL (Directly exported: Australia, Canada, Ecuador, Germany, India, Mexico, Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Spain, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Turkey; Helped to develop: Finland, France, Switzerland, UK)

U.S. drone
UNITED STATES (Directly exported: Belgium, Egypt, Italy, Morocco, Turkey, UK;
Helped to develop: Germany)

FRANCE (Directly exported: Greece, Netherlands, Sweden)

SOUTH AFRICA (Directly exported: Sri Lanka)


“C
onsidering drones from a public health perspective reveals: the human cost of their use, the moral and ethical issues raised by ‘targeted killings’ and their dubious legal status,” the authors conclude their report with recommendations.

“Drone strikes are frequently based on an ‘imminent threat’ and potentially inaccurate intelligence, in situations of highly asymmetric conflict (violent conflict between a formal military and an informal, poorly-equipped, but resilient opponent).

“Far from defeating terrorism, drone attacks appear to act as a recruiting agent ─ including for suicide missions.”

The Medact report recommends greater parliamentary and public scrutiny of the use of drones, the inclusion of these UAVs in arms reduction treaties, and the end to further automation in their operations. As Medact is a UK organization, the report calls on their government in particular to stop purchasing, developing and deploying armed drones. Others in the United States, including 2012 U.S. presidential candidate and physician Jill Stein (Green Party), have made a similar call as well for a binding international treaty.

 “We believe,” the report concludes, “that it is in the public interest and in the interest of our armed forces that there should be more transparency, parliamentary scrutiny, and public debate on ─

How drone strikes are planned
How targets are chosen
Who is targeted and why








Sources and notes

“Drones: the physical and psychological implications of a global theatre of war,” October 13, 2012, http://www.medact.org/content/wmd_and_conflict/medact_drones_WEB.pdf

HOW DID WE GET HERE [Medact]

1910 U.S. air force experimental bombing
Sandbags over the sides of planes

1911 Ain Zara Libya
Hand dropped bomb

1914-18 World War 1
The aeroplane is the new battlefield weapon

1937 Spanish Civil War
Air raid on Guernica kills over 200 civilians

1944-45 World War II
‘Doddlebugs’ or V1s – a prototype UAV

Mid 1950 United States
V1 developed into surface to surface cruise missile – a ‘pilotless bomber’

1955-75 Vietnam War
Remotely Piloted Vehicles developed

1973 Yom Kippur War
Drones used to draw fire

1990-91 Gulf War
Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) or drones used for surveillance

1999 War in Kosovo
UAVs used for surveillance

2001 Conflict in Afghanistan
February: first test of an armed UAV.
November: first assassination using an armed UAV

2007 Conflict in Afghanistan
British forces start to use UAVs

2002-2012 Armed UAVs used for assassinations in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Pakistan, Somalia, and Yemen

2012 An estimated 76 countries have some sort of UAV
First British UAV base being set up at RAF Waddington
President Obama supervises a ‘kill list’ to decide which individuals are targeted.

Beyond 2020 Prospect of rapid proliferation
Development of more autonomous UAVs including possible self selection of targets


PRESS RELEASE: On October 13th Medact launched its report “Drones: the physical and psychological implications of a global theatre of war,” http://www.medact.org/article_health.php?articleID=990

Drone report authors: Marion Birch – Director Medact; Gay Lee – Nurse and Medact Board member; Tomasz Pierscionek – Academic Clinical Fellow in Psychiatry and Medact Board member

Advisors: Chris Cole – Coordinator of Drone Wars UK and Convenor, Drone Campaign Network; Professor Mary Ellen O’Connell – Robert and Marion Short Chair in Law and  Research Professor of International Dispute Resolution, Kroc Institute, University of Notre Dame; Dominick Jenkins – Independent Consultant; Miri Weingarten– Physicians for Human Rights-Israel

Editor: Alison Whyte – Medact; Design: Sue MacDonald – SMD Design

Published by Medact 2012 : The Grayston Centre, 28 Charles Squre, London N1 6HT, United Kingdom; E info@medact.org; www.medact.org; Registered charity 1081097 Company reg no 2267125; Medact is the UK affiliate of the International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (IPPNW); © Medact 2012, Medact: http://www.medact.org/medact_information.php


Dr. Jill Stein, 2012 Green Party candidate for U.S. presidency, has called for an international treaty on drones
Jill Stein and Gary Johnson Debate Transcript (by Alex Gauthier) on 10/19/2012, IVN Online Debate, http://ivn.us/editors-blog/2012/10/19/jill-stein-and-gary-johnson-debate-transcript/?replytocom=1572

See also on drones: RootsAction, “an independent online initiative dedicated to galvanizing Americans who are committed to economic fairness, equal rights, civil liberties, environmental protection ─ and defunding endless wars,” http://www.rootsaction.org/about-rootsaction

Asymmetric warfare

Asymmetric warfare describes what is also called ‘guerrilla warfare,’ ‘insurgency,’ ‘terrorism,’ ‘counterinsurgency,’ and ‘counterterrorism,’ essentially violent conflict between a formal military and an informal, poorly-equipped, but resilient opponent:  “war between belligerents whose relative military power differs significantly, or whose strategy or tactics differ significantly”; struggles involving strategies and tactics of unconventional warfare, the weaker combatants attempting to use strategy to offset deficiencies in quantity or quality. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asymmetric_warfare



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Bennett's books are available in New York State independent bookstores: Lift Bridge Bookshop: www.liftbridgebooks.com [Brockport, NY]; Sundance Books: http://www.sundancebooks.com/main.html [Geneseo, NY]; Mood Makers Books: www.moodmakersbooks.com [City of Rochester, NY]; Dog Ears Bookstore and Literary Arts Center: www.enlightenthedog.org/ [Buffalo, NY]; Burlingham Books – ‘Your Local Chapter’: http://burlinghambooks.com/ [Perry, NY 14530]; The Bookworm: http://www.eabookworm.com/ [East Aurora, NY] • See also: World Pulse: Global Issues through the eyes of Women: http://www.worldpulse.com/ http://www.worldpulse.com/pulsewire http://www.facebook.com/#!/bennetts2ndstudy

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Monday, October 22, 2012

In undemocratic, highly manipulated contest between right-wing reps of financial oligarchy, pseudo-left protects their DP privileges ─ Joseph Kishore

Jerry White, Phyllis Scherrer
SEP U.S.
2012 Presidential
Vice presidential candidates

Nation Magazine’s lesser-of-two-evils choice furthering suppression of mass socialist movement of working class
Excerpting, editing by 
Carolyn Bennett

In September of this year, writer and Socialist Equality Party National Secretary Joseph Kishore introduced to his party a resolution emphasizing the international class struggle. The resolution states in part ─

The intensification of global economic crisis is leading inexorably to the resurgence of class struggle within the United States and throughout the world.…

It is not enough to predict the inevitability of revolutionary struggles and then await their unfolding…

The Socialist Equality Party must do everything it can to develop, prior to the outbreak of mass struggles, a significant political presence within the working class ─ above all, among its most advanced elements.

The resolution notes that the ruling class, in seeking to maintain its political and ideological domination, relies on the services of innumerable ‘left’ organizations. Referring to the sections of the resolution dealing with the role of these organizations, Kishore said ─
 
The past year and a half have provided the working class with many crucial lessons on the importance of leadership, and, related to this, the role of the middle class pseudo-left.

 
Today the World Socialist Web Site published Joseph Kishore’s latest article: “The Nation magazine and the campaign to reelect Obama.” This is some of what Kishore had to say.

 Socialist Equality Party
National Secretary
Joseph Kishore 
Four years ago the Nation Magazine and Democrats argued that the election of Barack Obama to the U.S. presidency would bring “a sea change in American politics”; and though this illusion has been shattered and “genuine popular support” for the Obama government policies “has largely dissipated,” the magazine’s latest issue gives space to numerous articles by “Nation writers and ‘left’ activists …” arguing for reelection of the Obama government.

Unconscionable leadership, Nation supports U.S. Middle East/Persian war expansion

The Nation is hustling votes for a president who asserts the presidential “‘right’ to [kill] anyone, including U.S. citizens, without any judicial process, … a man who holds weekly meetings at which he personally signs off on drone assassinations ─ knowing that those killed will include innocent men, women and children.”

Kishore continues, “Notably absent from any of these articles in the Nation is any serious analysis of U.S. military policy, outside of a reference to the administration’s supposed ‘ending’ of the war [in fact, hostile U.S. presence still exists on the ground] in Iraq.
This is because the Nation [magazine] and the social forces that it represents fully support the administration’s expansion of war, including the assault on Libya and the current stoking up of a civil war in Syria.

“None of the writers refers to plans underway for launching military action against Iran in the aftermath of the elections, regardless of who is elected.

“Such a war could quickly escalate into a confrontation with China and Russia, which the Nation Magazine would find a way to support.” 

Nation pandering to upper crust

The Nation Magazine, Kishore says, speaks for “a layer of the upper-middle class,” which is concerned not about “Romney’s viciously anti-working class agenda” but about “their own positions and privileges linked to the fortunes of the Democratic Party; and who have done quite well under Obama —

Sections of the trade union bureaucracy,
Tenured professors at elite universities,
Well-paid journalists in the orbit of the political establishment and employed by Democratic Party think tanks,
Better-off sections of minority populations

[The Obama government] has offered them ‘space,’ soliciting their services in policing the working class and maintaining the political order.

The Nation Magazine and its constituency, Kishore says, “are far more concerned about the danger of an independent movement of the working class” than they are about “the anti-working class and militarist policies of the Obama administration” or the “wage cutting, unemployment and attacks on education and health care.”

What concerns the Nation Magazine’s constituency, Kishore says, is upper-middle class layers’ sensitive to ─

[t]he potential for a movement from below, outside of the Democratic Party, which would threaten their own social and political position.

“Their social grievances and their opposition to the Republicans,” he says, “reflect [their] dissatisfaction with the distribution of wealth within the top 10 percent ─ not [concerns about] the lowering of living standards of the bottom 60 percent.

“They exclude any genuinely popular and democratic alternative, a socialist alternative to the two-party system [This rings true for me as I observe the pseudo-left Democracy Now program’s exclusion of and discrimination against certain political parties such as the Socialist Equality Party and others from their “expanded” editions paralleling the exclusive Commission on Presidential Debates-controlled U.S. 2012 presidential debates].

Beyond “evils” to real choice

“The elections—an undemocratic and highly manipulated contest between two right-wing representatives of the American financial oligarchy—do present workers and young people with a real choice,” Kishore says. “It is not, as the Nation Magazine would have it, [a choice] between the ‘lesser of two evils.’


I
t is instead the choice of taking up the struggle to build a mass socialist movement of the working class ─ in opposition to a capitalist system incapable of meeting the basic needs of the people and the political establishment [including the Nation Magazine and its constituency] that defends that system.”




Sources and notes

Joseph Kishore is National Secretary of the Socialist Equality Party and writer (regular contributor) for the World Socialist Web Site, wsws.org, Michigan, USA http://www.socialequality.com

September 2012: The incoming National Committee of the Socialist Equality Party reelected Joseph Kishore as national secretary, Lawrence Porter as assistant national secretary, and Barry Grey as World Socialist Web Site national editor.

“The Nation magazine and the campaign to reelect Obama” (by Joseph Kishore), World Socialist Web Site wsws.org, October 22, 2012, Copyright © 1998-2012 World Socialist Web Site - All rights reserved, http://www.wsws.org/articles/2012/oct2012/nati-o22.shtml

SOCIALIST EQUALITY PARTY

Chairman: David North, Joe Kishore
Founded: 1966 (as Workers League)
Headquarters Socialist Equality Party: PO Box 48377, Oak Park, MI 48237
Ideology: Trotskyism, socialism
Political position: Fiscal: Socialist economics
Social: Anti-war, pro-choice, against identity politics
International affiliation: International Committee of the Fourth International Website
http://www.socialequality.com

STRUGGLES
Auto workers
Teachers
Students and Young People
The Fight against Utility Shutoffs

ISSUES
The Social Rights of the Working Class
Expropriate the Banks and Corporations
For Social Equality
Oppose Militarism and War
Defend Democratic Rights


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Bennett's books are available in New York State independent bookstores: Lift Bridge Bookshop: www.liftbridgebooks.com [Brockport, NY]; Sundance Books: http://www.sundancebooks.com/main.html [Geneseo, NY]; Mood Makers Books: www.moodmakersbooks.com [City of Rochester, NY]; Dog Ears Bookstore and Literary Arts Center: www.enlightenthedog.org/ [Buffalo, NY]; Burlingham Books – ‘Your Local Chapter’: http://burlinghambooks.com/ [Perry, NY 14530]; The Bookworm: http://www.eabookworm.com/ [East Aurora, NY] • See also: World Pulse: Global Issues through the eyes of Women: http://www.worldpulse.com/ http://www.worldpulse.com/pulsewire http://www.facebook.com/#!/bennetts2ndstudy

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