Coming
Soon!
From Common Courage Press
Recent
Stories
July
25, 2003
Francis
A. Boyle
Impeaching Bush
David
Krieger
15 Questions
Harvey
Wasserman
Pat Robertson's Supreme Fatwah
Steve Dunifer
Seize the Airwaves!
Dan
Bacher
Federal Judge Throws Out Bush Salmon Plan for Klamath River
Kurt Nimmo
Bread, Circuses, Uday and Qusay
Steve
Perry
Bush's Wars Weblog
Website
of the Day
Stop the Wall!
July
24, 2003
Elaine
Cassel
Ashcroft Loses...Again
Robert
Fisk
The Ugly Story of Camp Cropper: The
US Torture Camp in Iraq
David
Lindorff
Dumb and Dumber in Iraq
Christopher
Brauchli
Ashcroft Demands Death Penalty in
Puerto Rico
David
Vest
Dylan in Bend
Tom Turnipseed
Killing Saddam & His Family Won't Stop Killing of US Troops
Douglas
Valentine
A Nation of Assassins
Stew Albert
Contract Killing
Steve
Perry
Bush's Wars Weblog
Website
of the Day
Report on Palestinian Child Prisoners
July
23, 2003
Uri
Avnery
Caesar's Favor
David
Lindorff
Lynne Stewart's Big Win: Ashcroft
Rebuked
Mano
Singham
Iraq's Missing WMD Scientists
Steve
Perry
Better Late Than Never: the Press, the Dems, and Bush's Lies
John Stanton
Avoiding Plato's Republic in America: Is Anarchy the Only Hope?
Patrick
Bond
Bush and South Africa: a Petro-Military-Commerce Mission
Harry Browne
A Victory for a Disarming Irishwoman
Paul
Beaulieu
When the WTO Comes to Montreal
Robert
Fisk
The Sons are Dead, But the Resistance
Will Grow
William
Witherup
Georgie Porgie
Website
of the Day
Lieberman & Falwell:
True Love at Last
July
22, 2003
Diane
Christian
Bad Guy / Good Guy: War Forces;
Peace Frees
Jeremy
Brecher
Solidarity and Student Protests in Iran
Steve
Kretzmann
and Jim Vallette
Plugging Iraq into Globalization
Sam
Smith
Greening the Golden Triangle
James
Plummer
Smile, You're on Federal Camera
Lucretia
Stewart
This Day Shall Not Define My Life:
January 18, 2003
Website
of the Day
Iraq Coalition Casualties
July
21, 2003
Edward
Said
Imperial Arrogance and the Vile Stereotyping
of Arabs
Ron
Jacobs
Shut Up and Shoot
Allan J.
Lichtman
Why is George Bush President?
Elaine
Cassel
How's the Occupation Going? Ask the People of Iraq
Christopher
Brauchli
History Recapitulates: Guantanamo and the Japanese Internment
Camps
Bruce
Jackson
Third and Arizona, Santa Monica
Website
of the Day
John Dean: Taking Apart Bush's State of the Union Speech, Claim
by Claim
July
19 / 20, 2003
Arthur
Mitzman
Will the Pax Americana be More Sustainable
Than the Dot.com Bubble?
Julian
Bond
We Shall be Heard
Cynthia
McKinney
Bush's Racial Politics at Home and Abroad
Mel
Goodman
What is to be Done with the CIA?
Jason Leopold
Tenet Blames Wolfowitz
Mickey
Z.
History Forgave Churchill
Doug Giebel
Impeachment as the Message
Jon
Brown
Whipping the Post
Mano Singham
Cheney's Oil Maps
Steven
Sherman
Nickle, Dimed and Slimed at UNC
Robin Philpot
Liberia: History Doesn't Repeat Itself, It Stutters
Khaldoun
Khelil
Capturing Friedman
Jeffrey
St. Clair
You Must Leave Home, Again: Gilad Atzmon's A Guide to the Perplexed
Lenni
Brenner
Sitting in with Mingus
Vanessa
Jones
Three Dog Night
Adam
Engel
Video Judas Video
Poets'
Basement
Foley, Smith and Curtis
Website
of the Weekend
Illegal Art
July
18, 2003
David
Vest
Drowning in Deep Doo-Doo
Rahul
Mahajan
Deceit Runs Deep
John Chuckman
Enron-style Management in a Dangerous World
Harold
A. Gould
The Bush-Musharraf Conclave
Alvaro
Angarita
In the Eye of the Storm: Colombia's War on Journalists
David
Grenier
Sovereignty and Solidarity in Indian Country...Rhode Island
Dave Lindorff
Bush and Hitler: a Response to the Wall Street Journal
Website
of the Day
Murder of a Whistleblower? Timeline in David Kelly Affair
July
17, 2003
Ron
Jacobs
Sometimes Even the President of the
United States Has to Stand Naked
Lisa
Walsh Thomas
Bush Country: the Venom and Adulation of Ignorance
Martin
Schwarz
Bush Pre-emptive Strike Doctrine is the Bane of Non-Proliferation
Watchdogs
Heidi
Lypps
Better Justice Through Chemistry? Forced
Drugging and the Supreme Court
Norman
Madarasz
Third Ways and Third Worlds: Lula at the Progressive Governance
Conference
Pankaj
Mehta
Criminalizing the Palestinian Solidarity Movement
Marjorie
Cohn
Bush, War Lies & Impeachment: the
Boy Who Cried Wolf
Hammond
Guthrie
(Dis) Intelligence Revisited
Website
of the Day
No Force, No Fraud: the Soul of Libertarianism
July
16, 2003
Jason
Leopold
Wolfowitz Told White House to Hype
Dubious Uranium Claims
William
Cook
Defining Terrorism from the Top Down
Elaine
Cassel
Judge Brinkema v. Ashcroft: She Whom
Must Not Be Obeyed
Jason
Leopold
How Can They Justify the War If WMDs Are Never Found?
Linda Heard
Bondage or Freedom?
Raymond
Barrett
From Detroit to Basra
Jeffrey
St. Clair
Back to the Future in Guatemala:
The Return of Gen. Ríos Montt
July
15, 2003
Kathleen
and Bill Christison
Why We Resigned from VIPS
Elaine
Cassel
Ashcroft's War on Legal Whistleblowers:
the Ordeal of Jesselyn Radack
Chris
Floyd
Barge Poles: Oil Wars and New Europe's Mercenaries
Jason
Leopold
CIA Warned White House Last October that Niger Docs were Forgeries
Gaius Publius
Considering the Obvious: Fool Us Once, Fool Us Twise...Please
John
Troyer
The Niger Syndrome
Becky Gillette
No Conspiracy at Coffeen Nature Preserve: a Response to David
Orrr
Uri
Avnery
The Bi-National State: The Wolf Shall
Dwell with the Lamb
Website
of the Day
Cost of Iraq War
July
14, 2003
Lisa
Taraki
Hot Days in Ramallah
Walter
Brasch
Bush: the Pretend Captain
SOA
Watch
Training Colombia's Killers in the US
Dan Bacher
Yurok Tribe Denounces Klamath River Salmon Killers
Veteran
Intelligence Professionals for Sanity
Intelligence Unglued
Website
of the Day
Coalition for Democratic Rights and Civil Liberties
July 12 / 13, 2003
Arthur
Mitzman
The Double Wall Before the Future
Standard
Schaefer
The Coming Financial Reality: an
Interview with Michael Hudson
John Feffer
A Fearful Symmetry: Washington and Pyongyang
Ron
Jacobs
Shades of Gray in Iran
Elaine
Cassel
Judicial Terrorism Against the Bill of Rights
Tom
Stephens
Civil Liberties After 9/11
David Lindorff
New White House Slogan: "Case Closed. Just Move On"
Jason
Leopold
The Mini-War Against Iraq Prior to 9/11
Lee Sustar
What's Behind the Crisis in Liberia?
Mickey
Z.
AIDS Dissent and Africa
Sam Hamod
Semitic is a Language Group, Not a Race or Ethnic Group
Ramzy
Baroud
Awaiting Justice on an Old Blanket
Jeffrey
St. Clair
Savage Incongruities: the Photographic Life of Lee Miller
Adam
Engel
Parable of the Lobbyist
Robert
Sanders
A Review of Ralph Lopez's American Dream
Poets'
Basement
Albert, Witherup, Guthrie
July
11, 2003
Conn
Hallinan
The Coin of Empire
Tim
Wise
God Responds to Bush
Mokhiber
/ Weissman
The Two Faces of Bush in Africa
Edward
S. Herman
Whitewashing Sandra Day O'Connor
David Orr
Coffeen-gate: What's Going on at the Sierra Club Foundation?
David
Lindorff
An Iraq War & Occupation Glossary
Website
of the Day
Dead Malls
July
10, 2003
Ron
Jacobs
Dealing with the Devil: the Bloody
Profits of General Dynamics
Sean
Donahue
Bush and the Paramillitaries: Coddling Terrorists in Colombia
Yemi
Toure
Who Outted Bush in Afrika?
Robert
Jensen
Politics and Sustainability: an Interview
with Wes Jackson
Ali
Abunimah
US Leaves Injured Iraqis Untreated
Joanne
Mariner
Federal Courts, Not Military Commissions
Website
of the Day
Electronic Iraq
July
9, 2003
David
Lindorff
Is the Media Finally Turning on
Bush?
David
Krieger and Angela McCracken
10 Myths About Nuclear Weapons
Mickey
Z.
Why Speak Out?
Lee Sustar
The Great Medicare Fraud
John
Chuckman
The Worst Kind of Lie
Gary Leupp
"Pacifist" Japan and the Occupation of Iraq
Website
of the Day
Hail to the Thief:
Songs for the Bush Years
July
8, 2003
Elaine
Cassel
Bully on the Bench: the Pathological
Dissents of Scalia
Alan
Maass
Nights of Fire and Rage in Benton Harbor
Chris
Floyd
Troubled Sleep: Getting Used to the American Gulag
Linda
S. Heard
America's Kangaroo Justice
Brian
Cloughley
They Tell Lies to Nodders
Charles
Sullivan
Bush the Christian?
Saul
Landau
The Intelligence Culture in the National Security Age
Website
of the Day
Occupation Watch
July
7, 2003
William
Blum
The Anti-Empire Report
Harvey
Wasserman
The Nuke with a Hole in Its Head
Ramzy
Baroud
Peace for All the Wrong Reasons
Simon
Jones
What Progressives Should Think About
Iran
Lesley
McCulloch
Fear, Pain and Shame in Aceh
Uri
Avnery
The Draw
Steve
Perry
Bush's Wars Web Log 7/3
July
4 / 6, 2003
Patrick
Cockburn
Dead on the Fourth of July
Frederick
Douglass
What is Freedom to a Slave?
Martha
Honey
Bush and Africa: Racism, Exploitation
and Neglect
Jeffrey
St. Clair
The Rat in the Grain: Amstutz and
the Looting of Iraqi Agriculture
Standard
Schaefer
Rule by Fed: Anyone But Greenspan in 2004
Lenni Brenner
Jefferson is for Today
Elaine
Cassel
Fucking Furious on the Fourth
Ben Tripp
How Free Are We?
Wayne
Madsen
A Sad Independence Day
John Stanton
Happy Birthday, America! 227 Years of War
Jim
Lobe
Bush's Surreal AIDS Appointment
John Blair
Return to Marble Hill: Indiana's Rusting Nuke
Lisa
Walsh Thomas
Heavy Reckoning at Qaim
David Vest
Wake Up and Smell the Dynamite
Adam
Engel
Queer as Grass
Poets'
Basement
Christian, Witherup, Albert & St. Clair
Website
of the Weekend
The Lipstick Librarian

Hot Stories
Wendell
Berry
Small Destructions Add Up
CounterPunch
Wire
WMD: Who Said What When
Cindy
Corrie
A Mother's Day Talk: the Daughter
I Can't Hear From
Elaine
Cassel
Civil Liberties
Watch
Michel
Guerrin
Embedded Photographer Says: "I
Saw Marines Kill Civilians"
Uzma
Aslam Khan
The Unbearably Grim Aftermath of War:
What America Says Does Not Go
Paul de Rooij
Arrogant
Propaganda
Gore Vidal
The
Erosion of the American Dream
Francis Boyle
Impeach
Bush: A Draft Resolution
Click Here
for More Stories.

|
July
26, 2003
CounterPunch
Diary
New
York Times Screws Up Again;
Uday, Qusay Deaths are Bad for Bush and Blair;
Kroeber and the Indians:
General Hitchens Visits the Front
By ALEXANDER COCKBURN
Reeling from one blunder to the next, the New
York Times plummeted to new depths on July 25, combining a serious
falsehood with possible misrepresentation of authorship.
On the op page for 7/25 appeared a column,
datelined Havana, under the name Gustavo Arcos Bergnes, identified
as Secretary General of the Cuban Committee for Human Rights,
and titled "A Prisoner Becomes A Warden". The column
narrated how its author had been with Castro in the original
attack on the Moncada in 1953, had been imprisoned by Batista
along with Castro and other comrades, had eventually turned against
Castro. The thrust of the column was to compare the relatively
decent prison and trial conditions (and eventual amnesty) enjoyed
by Castro and the others in l953, with the grim sufferings and
stinted rights of political prisoners in Cuba today.
Towards the end of the piece came the
following sentence: "(Although there is no doubt in my mind
that my younger brother, Sebastián, died in prison in
1997 because of deliberate lack of medical attention.)"
In fact Sebastian Arcos died in Miami
of cancer, a couple of years after he was released from prison
for humanitarian
reasons. But surely, you ask, Gustavo Arcos would remember
where his brother died.
Gustavo is a brave and admirable person,
but he is also very old and frail. The odds that he wrote that
op-ed are slim indeed. For one thing, he doesn't speak English.
On the topic of the mess at the NYT,
our old friend (and CounterPuncher), former Times-man John L.
Hess had this to say on WBAI on July 15: "Bill Keller wrote
not long ago that he was amazed to find himself a hawk. That's
the mark of a true Times man. He may waver around, but he comes
out Right in the end. The staff clapped hands yesterday when
he was named executive editor. They were
all sore at Howell Raines for saying he'd been chosen as editor
to shake them out of their sleepy ways. It's no doubt true that
his drive to make a splash encouraged some reporters to go hog
wild. Yesterday the Times ran half a page of corrections to a
single article and it was the third such public disgrace in a
few weeks.
"But there are several reasons to
doubt that Keller is the man to cure that. For one thing, he
was the editor in charge when the Times ran waged a campaign
accusing Wen Ho Lee of selling atomic secrets to China. For another,
neither Bill Keller nor Howell Raines nor their boss Arthur Sulzberger
has uttered one peep about the serial lying of Judith Miller.
For two years, she's been faking evidence about weapons of mass
destruction. Alex Cockburn has a devastating wrap-up in the print
edition of CounterPunch of Miller quotes that helped drag us
into war with Iraq. When the Times does a skin-back of that campaign
I'll believe it has truly reformed."
Bye, Bye Uday and
Qusay: Why the news is Bad For Bush and Blair
Short of good news ever since the end
of the formal war, Bush and Blair are naturally exultant that
Saddam's sons, Uday and Qusay, have been satisfactorily incinerated
in Mosul, presumably victims of someone eager to collar the $30
million reward for turning them in.
But though Saddam's sons deserve everything
they got, and more, the news of their demise should not be cause
for great rejoicing in the White House and 10 Downing Street.
In the event that Saddam soon follows his sons into the Great
Hereafter, that would not, in anything other than the short term,
be great news for Bush and Blair either.
For obvious reasons, Bush and his entourage
have been eager to identify Saddam, Uday and Qusay as the instigators
of the attacks on the US and UK occupying forces, with attendant
steady, demoralizing trickle of casualties.
\To suggest otherwise would be to concede
that there might be long-term, organized opposition to the Allied
occupation which has less to do with Saddam Hussein and his clan,
and more with nationalist, or Islamic/nationalist opposition
to the invaders.
The fact that Uday and Qusay were holed
up in the house of a relative scarcely suggests that they had
elaborate flight plans, replete with secret command bunkers,
prepared in advance of the US/UK invasion. It looks as though,
like many others suddenly on the run, the only plan they could
come up with was an desperate rap on the door of a family friend.
With his epic record of blunders and
miscalculations we're probably safe in assuming Saddam wasn't
much better prepared. All those elaborate scenarios about ratlines
to Russia or even nearby Syria were so much hooey. So in the
end the huge reward for Saddam will weigh heavier than loyalty
or fear and he'll end up dead too.
With Uday and Qusay finished off, Bush
may enjoy a short-term uptick on the polls. Maybe the attacks
on US and UK troops will slow, but they certainly won't stop
and in the medium term they'll probably increase.
Remember, many Iraqis saw the only virtue
of the invasion as the end of a hated regime. If Saddam gets
nailed too, that fear will finally dissipate and then more Iraqis
will focus on the business of driving the Americans and the British
out of their country. More US and British troops will get killed,
but the rationale that this is the last ditch resistance of the
cornered Saddam clan will have disappeared.
It's a cynical proposition, but Bush
and Blair will be much better off if Saddam is not run to earth,
at least until some advanced point in next year's presidential
campaign season.
Even the killing of Uday and Qusay won't
help much in the steady erosion in both Bush and Blair's popularity,
because of the reasons for their slump. They stitched together
a handsome patchwork of lies about Saddam's Weapons of Mass Destruction
and that patchwork has fallen apart. No amount of grandstanding
by Blair in Congress about the absolutions of history alters
that.
Take the current uproar in the UK about
the suicide of Dr David Kelly, the biowar expert charged by Blair
and his minions with leaking disobliging information to the BBC.
The plan of Blair's spin team in 10 Downing Street, headed by
Alastair Campbell, has been to create a diversion, to occlude
the obvious: that Blair and his cohort obviously mangled the
truth about Saddam's WMDs.
This is the reason for all the howling
from Number 10 about the BBC's charges, based on interviews with
Kelly by three separate BBC reporters, that Blair's people "sexed
up" (words never used by the BBC)the original report on
WMDs prepared by Britain's intelligence services.
But the record is clear enough. First,
Britain's intelligence services rushed from one preposterous
piece of inflation to the next, accepted crude forgeries, plagiarized
a student's essay off the internet, and so forth. Kelly himself
was an assiduous threat inflator till near the end, and maybe
guilt over his own role, contributed to his very strange decision
to kill himself. (Or maybe the security services were threatening
him with some damaging personal revelation unless he denounced
the BBC for misrepresenting his remarks to their reporters.)
Then Blair and his team took these threat
inflations and inflated them even further. Whether it was some
intelligence officer in MI6 or one of Blair's flacks who came
up with the notorious 45-minute launch time for one of Saddam's
bioweapons is a legitimate but not very important question. They
were all in the business of exaggeration, as was UNSCOM, which
has thus far escaped well-deserved rebuke. The same is true this
side of the Atlantic. The press has finally caught up with the
matter and won't let it drop. Neither will the Democrats.
It will take a lot more than the killing
of Uday or Qusay to turn this tide.
Kroeber and the California
Indians
Driving up highway 101 from Eureka to
Crescent City, just south of Orick I kept an eye out for a scenic
rest area which, according to a memoir by his wife, Theodora,
had once been the site of a cabin owned by Alfred Kroeber.
It's through Kroeber that the Yurok made
their way in the world of learning, their lives distilled into
a monograph and footnote. In 1900, Kroeber, the father of academic
anthropology in California, began a series of encounters with
the Yurok that lasted many years. Many of these Q & A sessions
were at this cabin formerly located in the scenic rest area where
I was now peering under the hood of my wagon, trying to figure
out why my brakes had stopped working.
Here, at the place known as Sigornoy,
Kroeber would interrogate Indians, chiefly Robert Spott, a Yurok
theocrat. Their conversations eventually had academic consequence
in such works as Yurok Narratives and figured in Kroeber's dispassionate
reflections on the supposed 'character' of the Yurok, scattered
through various works. The Yurok were, he wrote on one occasion,
an 'inwardly fearful peoplethe men often seemed to me withdrawn.'
Kroeber mused that 'for some reason, the culture had simply gone
hypochondriac.'
Kroeber never got around to mentioning
that between 1848, the start of the gold rush, and 1910, the
Yurok population in the region was reduced from about two and
a half thousand individuals to about 610. Disease, starvation
and murder had wiped out about 75 per cent of the group. It is
as though an anthropologist studying the inward fears of Polish
Jews never mentioned Auschwitz.
In his Handbook of the Indians of California,
published by the bureau of American Ethnology in 1925, Kroeber
wrote that 'there is one Indian in California today for every
eight that lived in the same area before the white man came.'
Then he mused that 'the causes of this decline of nearly 90%are
obscure.'
Kroeber, eager to identify American anthropology
in terms of 'millennial sweeps and grand contours', had little
patience with that shorter chronological span encompassing the
extermination of most of the California tribal groups he was
presuming to study. As he put it, 'the billions of woes and gratifications
of peaceful citizens or bloody deaths' were of no concern. He
visited the desperate native Americans of California , writing
these tranquil ethnologies, sometimes, after only a couple weeks
with the group, all but ignoring the end of history elapsing
before his eyes.
This posture bothered some of Kroeber's
professional associates. The linguist Edward Sapir wrote him
in 1938, 'You find anchorage--as most people do, for that matter--in
an imaginative sundered system of cultural and social values
in the face of which the individual has almost to apologize for
presuming to exist at all. It seems to me that if people were
less amenable to cultural and social mythology, we'd have less
Hitlerism in the world.'
In the back of my station wagon I had
the special 1989 California issue of The American Indian Quarterly,
in which Thomas Buckley discussed Kroeber's attitude to the Yurok
and his relationship with the Yurok aristocrat, Spott. Buckley
described how Kroeber was once asked why he hadn't paid any attention
to recent Yurok history and acculturation. Kroeber answered that
he 'couldn't stand all the tears' that these topics elicited
from his Yurok informants.
Not that Kroeber was indifferent to pain.
He'd been through a fairly harrowing time in the century's second
decade, suffering from Meniere's disease and psychic ailments,
undergoing some lengthy sessions with a Freudian psychoanalyst.
He also corresponded with Freud himself. Kroeber's remark about
the tears reminding me of a sudden outburst from Freud once,
to one of his intimates, about the filthy and despicable lives
of people who ended up on his couch in Bergasse 19.
There may be a secret text here. A fellow
who had it from a Yurok once told me Kroeber was a closet gay
and Spott was his lover. Freud fortified Kroeber's addiction
to the sweeping cultural judgement. 'Among other things', Kroeber
wrote in his big work Anthropology, 'Freud set orderly, economical,
and tenacious; or, in its less pleasant aspects, pedantically
precise, conscientious, and persistent; miserly; and obstinate
to vindictivenessNow, just as the anal-type description fits
certain individuals quite strikingly, it seems to agree pretty
well with the average or modal personality produced under certain
cultures. This holds for instance for the Yurok of native California
and their cotribes of the same culture. It holds also for certain
Melanesians On the contrary, within Oceania, Polynesians, Indonesians,
and Australians are wholly unanal in character, the Australians
in fact standing at a sort of opposite pole of living happily
in disorder, in freedom from possessions, and in fluctuations
of the moment. And the Siamese are certainly oral if the type
has any validity at all.'
Kroeber was basing his perceptions of
the Siamese on the work of Ruth Benedict, who had never been
to Siam but was keen on majestic generalizations about native
traits, having begun her career by contrasting two American Indian
cultures, that of the Plains bison hunters and that of the Southwestern
Zuni and other Pueblo farmers, as being respectively Dionysiac
and 'Apollinian' (to use Kroeber's spelling). During the second
World War, the US government commissioned Benedict to write
a study of Siam and she responded speedily enough, stating in
her book that much in Siamese politics and society could be explained
by early child nurture, during which period infants were permitted
to manipulate their genitals freely.
Spott was once reproached by his nephew
for spending so much time with Kroeber, whose work didn't do
the Yurok much good. 'Ah, Harry,' Spott answered, 'white men
hurt so much. We have to help him.'
The Indian had a surer grip on the ethno-cultural
problems.
General Hitchens Visits
The Front
From the New York Post
July 24, 2003 -- For Christopher Hitchens, the dramatic deaths
of Saddam Hussein's evil spawn will always be the one that got
away. The Vanity Fair reporter was in Mosul, Iraq, being shown
around by the 101st Airborne the day before the crack American
unit cornered Qusay and Uday Hussein and killed them in a six-hour
firefight. "I flew back to Washington, D.C., on Monday night,"
he tells PAGE SIX. "I had just gotten in and was making
some phone calls, when my friend said, 'Turn on the TV.' "
Hitchens wasn't surprised by the lethal efficiency of the U.S.
Army, and praised its military intelligence. "They were
rolling up these networks. They were getting more tips than they
knew what to do with," he said. "They were very, very
confident."
Hitchens said media coverage, which focuses
on U.S. casualties and the complaints of soldiers who want to
go home, left him unprepared for the reality in Iraq. "Morale
is very high" among both troops and Iraqi citizens. "People
waving American flags at the troops in the street: you can't
fake that."
It doesn't seem to have occurred to Hitchens
to inquire where the Iraqis got those flags.
Alexander Cockburn is the coeditor of The
Politics of Anti-Semitism.
Weekend Edition Features for July 19 / 20, 2003
Arthur
Mitzman
Will the Pax Americana be More Sustainable
Than the Dot.com Bubble?
Julian
Bond
We Shall be Heard
Cynthia
McKinney
Bush's Racial Politics at Home and Abroad
Mel
Goodman
What is to be Done with the CIA?
Jason Leopold
Tenet Blames Wolfowitz
Mickey
Z.
History Forgave Churchill
Doug Giebel
Impeachment as the Message
Jon
Brown
Whipping the Post
Mano Singham
Cheney's Oil Maps
Steven
Sherman
Nickle, Dimed and Slimed at UNC
Robin Philpot
Liberia: History Doesn't Repeat Itself, It Stutters
Khaldoun
Khelil
Capturing Friedman
Jeffrey
St. Clair
You Must Leave Home, Again: Gilad Atzmon's A Guide to the Perplexed
Lenni
Brenner
Sitting in with Mingus
Vanessa
Jones
Three Dog Night
Adam
Engel
Video Judas Video
Poets'
Basement
Foley, Smith and Curtis
Website
of the Weekend
Illegal Art
Keep CounterPunch
Alive:
Make
a Tax-Deductible Donation Today Online!
home / subscribe
/ about us / books
/ archives / search
/ links /
|