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The New Print Edition of CounterPunch, Only for Our Newsletter Subscribers!

General Petraeus' Fake War
How the Press and Congress Eagerly Swallowed It

EXCLUSIVE  to subscribers in our latest newsletter, Gareth Porter dissects two years’ worth of successful lying by Gen Petraeus and his propaganda team. Guess what? The FBI AND DOJ didn’t specially  target Muhammad Ali. Those G-men were just following normal procedures! Alexander Cockburn reviews the latest effort to “revise” the Sixties. Dick Cheney “didn’t understand the legalities.” James Abourezk describes his efforts to close down the lethal liquor operators that prey on the Pine Ridge Reservation. Whatever happened to the class war? Read Serge Halimi and find out.   Get your copy today by subscribing online or calling 1-800-840-3683 Contributions to CounterPunch are tax-deductible. Click here to make a donation. If you find our site useful please: Subscribe Now! CounterPunch books and gear make great presents.

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St. Clair on Tour in the Heartland

Today's Stories

June 30, 2008

Peter Lee
Did a Plutonium Generator End Up in the Ganges?

Jeff Sommers
Burying the Bloody Shirt; A New Age for Latvia Dawns? "Astatu Loskutovu!"

David Macaray
The AFL-CIO Votes to Endorse Obama

Martha Rosenberg
Sex Work is Different from Sex Slavery, aver Carnal Toilers

David Price
Blind Whistling Phreaks and the FBI's Historical Reliance on Phone Tap Criminality

Alexandra Early
Report from El Salvador: Why They All Keep Coming

June 28 / 29, 2008

Alexander Cockburn
Guess What "Surprise" Republicans Yearn For

Jeffrey St. Clair
Nike's Bad Air

Joan P. Mencher
The Human Right to Eat

Nikolas Kozloff
Nader, Obama and White Talk

Jason Hribal
Tillie, Elephants and the Zoo

Alan Maass
Obama Swerves Right

Robert Fantina
Iraq and the New York Times

Bill Moyers /
Michael Winship

It Was Oil, All Along

Mike Whitney
A Glimmer of Light in Television Wasteland

Justin E. H. Smith
Collective Guilt and the Fate of Kosovo

Pham Binh
The Mendacity of Hope

David Yearsley
The Rest is Noise

Christopher Ketcham
19 Aphorisms

Jeremy R. Hammond
Bush and the Press vs. the Constitution

Kathleen M. Barry
An Open Letter to Barney Frank on Israel

Walter Brasch
Politics and Animal Cruelty in Pennsylvania

Brett Drugge
A Field Trip to the Reagan Library

Susie Day
Sex Sans the City

Website of the Day
How to Expose a Hypocritcal Politician

June 27, 2008

Franklin C. Spinney
The Defense Reform Trap

Jonathan Cook
Israel's Encaging of Gaza

Brian Cloughley
Chaos in Afghanistan

Saree Makdisi
Occupation by Bureaucracy

Liliana Segura
Reactionary Change: Obama and the Death Penalty

Paul Krassner
Remembering George Carlin

William S. Lind
The War and the Yellow Press

Candace Cohn
Embracing Big Brother

Ron Jacobs
What's a Voter to Do?

Binoy Kampmark
Beached in Chile

Website of the Day
Zoom Uganda

June 26, 2008

Patrick Cockburn
Who's Actually Winning in Iraq?

Nikolas Kozloff
Kinder and Gentler Assassination Techniques? Obama Waffles on School of the Americas

William P. O'Connor
The Drone of Experts

Saul Landau
McClellan's Mini Mea Culpa

Ashley Smith
Which Way Forward for the Antiwar Movement?

Dave Lindorff
Our Kids and Their Kids: Terrorists or Victims?

David Macaray
A Brief History of Union Negotiations

Binoy Kampmark
Warming Seats at the Hague: John Howard and War Crimes

Matt Reichel
There's No Hope at the Ballot Box

Remi Kenazi
You Don't Mess With the Racism!

Website of the Day
A Movement Afoot in the Heartlands

 

June 25, 2008

David H. Price
The Minerva Consortium: Social Science in Harness

Stephen Soldz
The Torture Trainers and the APA

Andy Worthington
Six Years Late, Court Throws Out Gitmo Case

Marjorie Cohn
Scalia Cites False Information in Habeas Dissent

Joanne Mariner
What Boumediene Means

Ralph Nader
Starving AMTRAK

Robert Weissman
High Flyers and Soaring Inequality

Christopher Brauchli
Blackout at the EPA

Suren Pillay
A Picture of Things to Come?

Seth Sandronsky
UC Workers Avert Walkout

Website of the Day
Obama Talkin' White

June 24, 2008

Ishmael Reed
Obama: the Big Let Down

P. Sainath
They've Got the World by the Belly

Nikolas Kozloff
Charlie Black's Play Book: McCain Needs Another 9/11

Gregory Kafoury
Obama's Rightward Lurch

Betty Shamieh
Fear of Flailing: Erica Jong's "Arabs and Other Animals"

Mike Whitney
Gas Price Gouging: Don't Blame the Saudis

Andy Worthington
Italy's Forgotten Prisoners in Guantánamo

Bill Christison
Towards a World Parliament

Philippe Marlière
Spoiling Sarko's Euro-Show

Website of the Day
Who Owns You?

June 23, 2008

Michael Hudson
How Should the Middle East Invest Its Oil Profits?

John Ross
Killing Farmers with Killer Seeds

Peter Montague
Environmental Enron: the Clean Coal Con

Ramzy Baroud
Gaza's Dying Children

Robert Fantina
McCain, Racism and the Supreme Court

Robert Weitzel
A MAD Foreign Policy: America's Irrational Defense of Israel

David Macaray
The Supreme Court's Hostility to Organized Labor

Howard Lisnoff
Where's the Anger?

Richard Rhames
Grieving Mr. Gotcha: Russert, GE and Neutron Jack

Gail Dines
Penn, Porn and Me

Tim Matson
Bright Ideas for Storms and Blackouts

June 21 / 22, 2008

Alexander Cockburn
The Russert Send-Off

Jeffrey St. Clair
Adventures in the Endangered Skin Trade

Pam Martens
A Secret Oil Gusher Inside Citigroup

Mike Whitney
The Game is Over: an Interview with Michael Hudson on the Economy

Chris Floyd
Torturegate

Tim Wise
The Ugly Side of Disaster: Katrina and the Midwest Floods

Paul Craig Roberts
A Totally Lawless Regime

Michael Winship
How Countrywide Leveraged Washington

Ron Jacobs
Vietnam Blues

Ramzy Baroud
Palestine in the American Imagination

Alan Farago
The Off-Shore Drilling Scam

Michael Yates
Paul Krugman on Race: Ignorant and Disingenuous

Dave Lindorff
Keeping America Safe: Prosecuting Children as Terrorists

Bernard Chazelle
Why Israel Won't Accept a Two-State Solution

Linda Mamoun
Mearsheimer and Walt in Tel Aviv

Jo-Shing Yang
Dying of Hunger, Dying of Thirst

Robert Jensen
Fear and Hope on a Runaway Train

Website of the Weekend
Slavery By Another Name

 

June 20, 2008

Robert Oscar Lopez
Brownout in Black Camelot: Obama and Latino Voters

Paul Craig Roberts
John Yoo, Totalitarian

Bouthaina Shaaban
The Real Arab AIPAC

Bill Quigley
The Big Lock-Up

Moshe Adler
Is Cuba Done With Equality?

Patrick Cockburn
An End to Iraq Contractor Immunity?

Andy Worthington
John McCain, Torture Puppet

Norman Solomon
Health Care and the Ghosts of War

Martha Rosenberg
Can Wyeth Fool American Women Twice?

June 19, 2008

Ralph Nader
Why Won't Corporations Take On Big Oil?

Chellis Glendinning
Techno-Fascism: Every Move You Make

Neve Gordon
Learning to Drive in Rafah

Dave Lindorff
Killing the News in Iraq

Sheldon Richman
Habeas Corpus Saved--Barely

George Bisharat
Obama's Missteps

Jackie Corr
Dear Mr. Kilowatt

Farzana Versey
Will Gorkhaland Become a Reality?

Website of the Day
Trouble on the Range

June 18, 2008

Nicole Colson
Hunger and Humiliation in the Belt-Tightening Economy

Rev. William E. Alberts
The "F" Word and the White Press

Vijay Prashad
Obama's Genuflections to the Swing Lobby

Parvez Ahmed
Oil Prices, Market Regulation and the Election

Bob Moss
Judicial Warfare in Boumediene

Dave Lindorff
The Elephant in the Room

David Wilson
Bush in London

June 17, 2008

Conn Hallinan
The Brain Trauma Vets

Wajahat Ali
Chomsky Speaks: On Iran and Iraq

Marjorie Cohn
Reviving Habeas Corpus

Uri Avnery
Two Professors: Mearsheimer and Walt in Israel

David Macaray
Adversarial Relationship

Rannie Amiri
Forgotten Lives in a Forgotten War

Website of the Day
Pentagon Money

June 16, 2008

Uri Avnery
An Apology

Corey D. B. Walker
The Racial Politics of Symbols

Howard Lisnoff
Files Upon Files

Dennis Loo
2008 Elections: Of Whales and Worms

Paul Craig Roberts
Obama and the Fall Into Tyranny

June 13 / 15, 2008

Douglas Valentine
McCain: War Hero or Go-To Collaborator?

Alexander Cockburn
Change, What Change?

Jeffrey St. Clair
The Politics of Timber Theft

Peter Linebaugh
On Wat Tyler Day

Ishmael Reed
The Colossus: Sonny Rollins, Take One

Joe Bageant
Old Dogs and Hard Time

Harry Browne
Ireland Shows the Way!

Andy Worthington
The Supreme Court's Gitmo Decision: What Does It Mean?

Jeff Sharlet
The F-Word

Binoy Kampmark
They Gassed Us: Agent Orange in OZ

Alan Farago
His Little Piece of the Pie

Brian Cloughley
America the Detested: the Pakistan Airstrikes

Manuel Garcia, Jr.
How to Stretch Gasoline

Reza Fiyouzat
Oil and Racism

Patrick Bond /
Richard Kamidza
How Europe Underdevelops Africa

David Yearsley
Music in the Rubble

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
Thank You, Dennis Kucinich!

Ronnie Cummins
Don't Panic; Go Organic

Dan Bacher
Bush Tries to Raid Salmon Disaster Funds

Michael Dickinson
Jesus in Megiddo Prison

Seth Sandronsky
My Father's World

Poets' Basement
Tu Fu / Rexroth

Website of the Weekend
Torture and the American Psyche

June 12, 2008

Judith Levine
As Cranes Fall and People Die

Patrick Cockburn
Amid Iraqi Fury, U.S. Offers Concessions on Military Bases

Saul Landau
The Iraq War Becomes Suicidal

Christopher Brauchli
Bush Bling-Bling: Government by Crony

Norman Solomon
Deadly Diplomacy

Helen Redmond
Why Can't We All Get KennedyCare?

Laura Carlsen
No Rest for the Working Poor

Jeremy R. Hammond
Threats Against Iran Escalate

Anne Landman
Pinkwashing: Can Shopping Cure Breast Cancer?

Website of the Day
Fire in Watts

June 11, 2008

Paul Craig Roberts
Why Oil Prices Are So High

Ralph Nader
Wall Street Gamblers

Joshua Frank
Why I Can't Support Barack Obama

Clifton Ross
Conversation in Miami: the Neoliberal Left and Socialism

Muhammad Idrees Ahmad
Whatever Happened to "Democracy Now?"

Stephen Lendman
Exposing Pentagon and CIA Corruption

Diane Farsetta
Talking Back to Bill O'Reilly

Ron Jacobs
The Sixties Painted Black

Deborah Rich
Hay Belly Nation: the FDA and the O-Word

Hop Wechsler
A Friend of Women? My Bill Clinton ... and Ours

Website of the Day
A New Path to the Waterfall

June 10, 2008

Alan Farago
John McCain and the Company He Keeps

James G. Abourezk
Deadly Fallout From Obama's Groveling Before Israel Lobby

Saree Makdisi
Banned in the U.S.A. (Almost)

Malini Johar Schueller
A Picture From Beirut

John Ross
Killing Foods, Killing People

Wajahat Ali
Rumi and Sufism

Peter Morici
Bernanke Aggravates Recession Risks

Jordan Flaherty
Inside Angola Prison, Louisiana's Last Slave Plantation

Gary Macfarlane
Collaboration on the Clearwater: Is It Legitimate?

Joanne Mariner
The Gitmo Trials: an Inglorious Start

Website of the Day
The End of the Clinton Machine?

June 9, 2008

Uri Avnery
No, I Can't: Obama, Israel and AIPAC

Nikolas Kozloff
McCain & the Republican Insitute: Promoting Iraqi Occupation for "a Million Years"

Allan Nairn
Drawing Your Last Breath Hungry

Dennis Loo
Threats on Iran and the "Batterer's Defense"

Harry Browne
Irish Euro Vote Comes Down to the Wire

C. Hand
U. S. Bid to Hike Iran's Gas Prices Seems Doomed

Peter Morici
An Unsustainable Trade Deficit

Kenneth Couesbouc
A Ripe Time for Inflation

Martha Rosenberg
The Inconvenient Senator Grassley

James L. Secor
Chinese Superstition or Unconscious Oracle?

Website of the Day
Pay Bo Diddley!

June 7 / 8, 2008

Alexander Cockburn
Obama Goes Over the Top

Ishmael Reed
How Miles Davis Changed My Life

Jeffrey St. Clair
What a Miner's Life is Worth

Nikolas Kozloff
Meet the King the Beers: John McCain and Latin America

Dave Lindorff
The High Cost of a Single War-Like Remark: Oil Prices, Israel, Iran and the U.S.

Robert Fantina
When Truth is the Casualty

Conn Hallinan
Iran and Rumors of War

Neve Gordon
The Occupation and the Politics of Death

Tom Barry
The Deterrence Strategy of Homeland Security

Patrick Irelan
Raiding the Packing House

Tim Wise
Your Whiteness is Showing

David Ker Thomson
The Hard Question

Joshua Frank
"Socialist" Wins Republican Nomination in Montana

David Yearsley
Disaster Music

James T. Phillips
1968: Year of the Rat

Joe Allen
The Real Bobby Kennedy

P. Sainath
Making Life Brighter in Kondapur

David Macaray
Should Unions be More Democratic?

B.R. Gowani
Experience and the Two-for-One

Fred Gardner
What Happened (at the DA's Office)

Peter Harley
Technology to the Rescue? Kurzweil and the Human Machines

Michael Dickinson
Surrender the Bones of Geronimo!

Jen Roesch
Where are the Real Women in Sex and the City?

Poets' Basement
Gibbons, Landau, and Buknatski

Website of the Day
Partying with the Waltons


June 6, 2008

Frank Barat
An Interview with Ilan Pappé and Noam Chomsky on the Future of Israel / Palestine

Patrick Cockburn
U.S. Extorts Iraq to Approve Military Deal

Gary Leupp
Cheney Enrages Iraqis Over Security Deal

James Abourezk
Name That Terrorist

Peter Morici
Recession Grips the Jobs Market

Faheem Hussain
What is NATO Doing in Afghanistan?

Andy Worthington
Guantánamo's Britons Go on Hunger Strike

Ayesha Ijaz Khan
How Will Musharraf Go? Impeachment or Safe Exit?

Dave Lindorff
Congress Needs to Defend Itself

Website of the Day
Backstage with Bo Diddley

June 5, 2008

Patrick Cockburn
Bush's Secret Deal Would Ensure Permanent U.S. Occupation of Iraq

Sharon Smith
Hillary's Wreckage

Nikolas Kozloff
Obama's Electoral Dilemma: Latinos or Reagan Democrats?

Linn Washington, Jr.
Police Brutality and Cover-Up in Philly

Omar Barghouti
60 Years of Nakba, 41 Years of Occupation ...

Scott Pellegrino
Jim Crow Radio: Bob Grant's Lifetime Achievement Award

John Walsh
Obama Woos AIPAC

Dan Bacher
The Parching of California

DC Larson
Nazi Rockers ... F-Off

Robert Jensen
Masculine, Feminine or Human?

Website of the Day
Ohio Cops Attack Long Walkers

June 4, 2008

Eric Walberg
Princess Patricia and the Taliban

Gary Leupp
Iran and EFPs: Chronology of a Lie

Ralph Nader
Disenfranchised Youth

Dave Lindorff
Of Whiners and Poor Losers

George Wuerthner
Farm Economics

Victor M. Rodriguez
The Puzzle of Race and Politics

Remi Kanazi
Why a Cultural Boycott of Israel is Needed

Stephane Luçon
Renault's Romanian Fairyland Suspended

Farzana Versey
The Tablighi Jamaat Movement

Laray Polk
The Militarization of Space

Website of the Day
Red State Rebels

June 3, 2008

Paul Craig Roberts /
Lawrence M. Stratton
Legislating Tyranny

Mike Whitney
The Withering Economy

Steve Early
San Juan Showdown

Manuel Otero
Why Hillary Won Puerto Rico: the View from the Colony

George Bisharat
The Hope of a Victimized People

Nikolas Kozloff
Obama's VP Quandry

Dan Bacher
Death on the Salmon Highway

Website of the Day
Censoring Bill Knott?

June 2, 2008

Uri Avnery
The Olmert Scandal

Nikolas Kozloff
Obama's Latino Problem Getting Worse

Allan J. Lichtman
Revisionist History: Bush, Borah and Hitler

Malini Johar Schueller
The Color of Randomness: Returning to the US From Beirut Via Syria

Robert Weissman
What's Driving Skyrocketing Oil Prices?

Peter Morici
Bailing Out Wall Street

Manuel Garcia, Jr.
Don't Get Burned: How to Protect Yourself From Raytheon's Pain Gun

John Ross
Celebrating Catholic Fanaticism in Mexico

Ahmad Al-Akhras
Encounters with the Watch List

Website of the Day
Man on Earth

May 31 / June 1, 2008

Alexander Cockburn
The Worst is Yet to Come

Jeffrey St. Clair
Arkansas Bloodsuckers

Gary Leupp
How McClellan Prettifies Bush

Stan Cox
Broken Agriculture

Rannie Amiri
Lebanon: the Domino That Wouldn't Fall

P. Sainath
A Guaranteed Day's Work--in the Fields, at 110 Degrees, for $2 a Day

Binoy Kampmark
Going Bankrupt in Vallejo

Robert Fantina
Bush, Rice and McClellan

Seth Sandronsky
Will There be Water Riots, as Sacramento Goes Dry?

Corporate Crime Reporter
Death Penalty for Bush?

Anthony DiMaggio
Gaming the Ghetto: Grand Theft Auto IV, Racist Media and the Concrete Jungle

Karl Grossman
A Half-Trillion for Nukes

Matt Reichel
From Vegas to the Heartland and Back Again

Paul Myron Hillier
Of Gas and God

Andy Worthington
Suicide at Guantánamo

David Yearsley
And the Winner is ... Wayne Shorter

Daniel Cassidy
Free Lunch

Charles Thomson
If Hitler Had Been a Hippy ...

Gary Corseri
A Dream Deferred: Activism and the Arts

Wajahat Ali
Sex and the City Through a Man's Eyes

Ron Jacobs
Robins Weep

Poets' Basement
McNeill and Davies

Website of the Day
Last Charge of the Light Horse

 

May 30, 2008

Bassam Aramin
Here's the Truth You've Been Running From

Andrew Cockburn
Petraeus' Iran Obsession

Saul Landau
How We Got Into This Mess

Nikolas Kozloff
Meet South America's New Secessionists

Robert Sandels
Turning Back the Clock on Cuba

Dave Lindorff
Talk is Cheap

Martha Rosenberg
Raiding Big Meat; Arresting the Wrong People

Harvey Wasserman
Lieberman & McCain: Linking Internet Censorship and Atomic Reactor Terror

Doug Giebel
A Plague on Both Your Houses (of Congress)

Shaun Harkin
The Trial of the Raytheon 9

Website of the Day
The Once and Future Environmental Movement

May 29, 2008

Jeffrey St. Clair
Bill Clinton and the Rich Women

Nikolas Kozloff
Puerto Rico, Obama and the Politics of Race

Col. Dan Smith
Deceiving the Dead

Karl Grossman
The Most Lucrative Incentive for Nuclear Power in the History of the United States

William S. Lind
Inside the Washington Game

Robert Weissman
What to do About the Price of Oil

Dave Lindorff
Why Puerto Rico Won't Matter

David Macaray
A Union Fable

Chris Genovali
Fear and Loathing in the Northern Rockies

Laura Carlsen
Mexico's Battle Over Oil

Website of the Day
Support Antiwar.com

May 28, 2008

Wajahat Ali
The Libertarian Dark Horse: An Exclusive Interview with Ron Paul

Ralph Nader
What's Really Driving the High Price of Oil?

Brian McKenna
Why I Want to Teach Anthropology at the Army War College

Corporate Crime Reporter
Why Vincent Bugliosi Wants to Prosecute George W. Bush for Murder

Brian Cloughley
The Attack on Damadola

Eric Walberg
Opium for the Masses from Afghanistan

Michael Dickinson
Raytheon's Pain Ray: Coming to a Protest Near You

Ijaz Khan
Opening Windows in Pakistan

Website of the Day
Older Than America

May 27, 2008

Alexander Cockburn
In Her Mind She's Killed Before: the Plot to Assassinate Ralph Nader

Greg Kafoury
Is Obama Turning (Further) Right?

Jean Bricmont
Western Delusions

Tim Wise
Farrakhan is not the Problem

Ricardo Alarcón
Puerto Rico's Turn

Stephen Soldz
APA Supports Psychologist Engagement in Bush Regime Interrogations

Andy Worthington
The Guantánamo 16

Alan Singer
Vapid, Stupid and Insulting: Chuck Schumer Speaks to the Graduates

Richard Neville
Storm in an A-Cup

Susie Day
Gone with the W

May 26, 2008

Uri Avnery
The Syrian Option

Bill Quigley
War Immemorial Day

Col. Dan Smith
Retreating from Hell: a Different Memorial Day

Cindy Sheehan
Why Memorial Day is a Double-Whammy for Me

Marjorie Cohn
Hillary's Assassination Politics: Her Last Shot?

Fred Gardner
Does the VA Care?

Raymond J. Lawrence
Pain Pays: Getting Rich at NY Presbyterian Hospital

Harvey Wasserman
Mugging the Election System

Moncia Benderman
Truth Matters

David Rovics
In Praise of Utah Phillips

Website of the Day
Fox News Jokes About "Knocking Off" Osama and Obama

May 24 / 25, 2008

Alexander Cockburn
Death-Wish Hillary Primes Manchurian Candidate

Jeffrey St. Clair
Yellowstone: How Sununu Shrank the Ecosystem

Barbara Rose Johnston
Dam Legacies, Damned Futures

Nikolas Kozloff
U.S. Fourth Fleet in Venezuelan Waters

Adriana Kojeve
The Environment and the 2008 Elections

Robert Fantina
Justice Department's Revelations on Torture

Dave Lindorff
Bush's War on Children in Iraq

David Yearsley
The War on Kitsch

Nelson P. Valdés
The Buying of "Democracy" Agents in Cuba

Kathleen M. Barry
Celebrating Ethnic Cleansing

John Ross
Mexico's Narco Opera Reaches for High Point

Allison Kilkenny
Apathy Doesn't Live in Bronx

Fred Gardner
Orangeburg, 1968

Elizabeth Schulte
Can the Whole World be Fed?

Daniel Gross
Remembering the Wendy's Massacre: the Dangerous Side of Retail Work

Christopher Brauchli
The Search for a Token Right-winger

Richard Rhames
A Nation of Sheep

Daniel Cassidy
My Mother

Poets' Basement
Davies, Klipschutz and Willson

Website of the Weekend
Happy Birthday, Bob

 

May 23, 2008

Paul Craig Roberts
War Abroad, Poverty at Home

Alan Farago
The Radical Extremists of the Building Industry

Conn Hallinan
Ballots and Bullets: From Beirut to Bolivia

Mark Engler
The World After Bush

George Wuerthner
Cars and Cows: Living Large in America

Kamran Matin
The Kurds and American Neo-Imperialism

Sandy Boyer /
Shaun Harkin
The Long Incarceration of Pol Brennan

Robert Weitzel
A "Holey" Instrument of Peace in Iraq

Cindy Sheehan
An Uphill Battle

Liaquat Ali Khan
Pakistan's Futile Constitutional Amendment

Website of the Day
A Message from the Moral Compass of the McCain Campaign

 

May 22, 2008

Vijay Prashad
Racist Grammar

Joanne Mariner
A Military Commissions Cheat Sheet

Sharon Smith
60 Years of Apartheid

Jeff Birkenstein
Disaster Redux: Some Early Thoughts on the Earthquake in China

Brendan McQuade
From Obama to the PRTs in Iraq

Peter Morici
The Sorry State of the Banking Industry

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
Restoration Boulevard

Dave Zirin
What I Want to Ask Mary Tillman

Ron Jacobs
CPR for the Antiwar Movement

Stephen Lendman
Immoral Hazard

Website of the Day
Hagee: God Sent Hitler to Drive the Jews to Israel

May 21, 2008

Jeffrey St. Clair
The Gothic Politics of Hillary Clinton

Nikolas Kozloff
U.S. Military Bases in South America

Alan Farago
Miami, Cuba and the Presidential Campaign

Dave Lindorff
Big John and the Scary, Scary Iran Threat

David Model
Genocide in Iraq?

Eric Walberg
Afghanistan: Who is the Enemy?

Franklin Lamb
Lebanon Gets a President

Kenneth Couesbouc
Tax Against Tyrann
y

Website of the Day
Child Labor and War-Affected Children: a Photo Essay

 

May 20, 2008

Ralph Nader
A Trip Inside Google

Uri Avnery
With Friends Like These

Patrick Irelan
The Empire and the Fleet

Ray McGovern
Come Out, Admiral Fallon, Wherever You Are

David Macaray
The UAW Strike Against American Axle

Chris Genovali
Big Oil on the Water: Skating Around the Tanker Issue

Ibrahim Fawal
Birmingham, Israel and the Nakba

Christopher Ketcham
Let Us Now Praise Famous Suicides

Andy Worthington
Guantánamo Trial Delayed

Martha Rosenberg
Merck is a Repeat Offender

Website of the Day
Defend the Students Who Pied Tom Friedman

May 19, 2008

Saul Landau
Cuba Will Live

Paul Craig Roberts
The Metamorphosis of the Conservative Movement

Brian McKenna
Brotherly Love in Philly's Badlands

Patrick Cockburn
City of the Dead: Mosul on Lockdown

B. R. Gowani
The Central Problem Pakistan Needs to Tackle

Dr. Trudy Bond
Psychologists and Torture: If Not Now, When?

Cindy Sheehan
Whose War is It?

John Mohawk
The Warriors Who Turned to Peace

Remi Kanazi
When Free Speech Doesn't Come for Free

Robert Day
I Get a Horse

Website of the Day
Evolve or Die

Subscribe Online

June 30, 2008

Did A Plutonium Generator End Up in the Ganges?

“Making A Billion Hindus Glow in the Dark"

By PETER LEE

For the U.S. intelligence establishment, the Cold War was a time of certainties: Communism had to be stopped; no cost was too great, no technological obstacle was insurmountable. And, in the case of gaining information on China's missile program, no mountain was too high.

A legendary CIA mission - employing some of the world's greatest mountaineers - sought to place a nuclear powered listening post on Nanda Devi and Nanda Kot, two of the highest peaks in the Himalayas, to eavesdrop on Chinese missile tests at Lop Nor. But in planning its Himalayan adventure, the CIA apparently disregarded the dangers and unpredictability of the element at the heart of its certainties - plutonium - and the consequences haunt the mission and its survivors to this day.

In 1966, four pounds of plutonium were lost on Nanda Devi, a sacred Himalayan peak at the headwaters of the Ganges, and to this day nobod~ knows where the plutonium is, what it did to the mountaineers and Sherpas on the expedition, or what it n-tight do to the hundreds of millions of people who live and die along India's sacred river.

The Himalayan expeditions and their aftermath are chronicled in An Eye on Top of the World by Pete Takeda (Thunder's Mouth Press, New York, 20o6). Takeda, himself a mountaineer, won the cooperation of the US. mission members and journeyed to the Himalayas to retrace the steps of the expedition almost forty years later - and to share with his readers the suffering, terror, and exaltation that high altitude climbers risk their fives to experience.

Conceptually, the mission was quite simple. Simple enough to be pitched, cocktail-napkin style, to Air Force Gen. Curtis LeMay by a patriotic mountaineer Barry Bishop at a reception in Washington in 1964.
In those pre-satellite, pre-digital days, missiles fitted with simple radio devices and instruments transmitted unencrypted telemetry data on speed and altitude during their test flights to base stations for analysis. Anyone with a line-of-sight radio receiver could listen in.

To shield their program from prying electronic ears, China tested its missiles in the western wastes of Lop Nor. The only place for outsiders to access the signal was on top of the Himalayas.

So, the CIA took on the project and decided to place a radio receiver in one of the most inhospitable and inaccessible locations on earth, 25,500 feet above sea level, on top of Nanda Devi.

Obviously, the station would be unmanned. And, obviously, there was no place to plug it in. Given the immense difficulties of a Himalayan assault, replacing a battery every few months, as had been done with unmanned weather stations during World War II, was unworkable.

 A solution was found in the radioisotopic thermal generator, or RTG, which had already been proven as a power source for satellites in the US. space program.

The RTG exploits a characteristic of bimetallic circuits, the Seebeck effect, that has been known since the 19th century. Passing electricity through a bimetallic circuit can generate cold ... and passing heat through the circuit can generate electricity. If the heat is coming from the natural decay of plutonium 238 (a highly radioactive isotope - with a half life Of 87 years - that can produce surface temperatures of 1050 C in some configurations),
a generator that can operate for decades at high power without refueling or service is created.

The CIA commissioned the construction of an RTG-powered radio transceiver and recruited a high-level team of six American mountaineers to place it on Nanda Devi. It also reached out to the Indian Intelligence Bureau (IB) for assistance. The Indian IB, suspicious of the Chinese, agreed to cooperate informally with the United States despite the Indian government's official non-aligned policy.

Captain M. S. Kohli of the Indian navy, who had become a national hero as the first Indian to reach the top of Everest in 1965, was given the immense task of handling the logistics and recruiting the Indian climbers, porters, and Sherpas needed to push a piece of equipment the size of a decent-sized refrigerator to the top of a Himalayan peak.

Kohli wrote his own memoir of the expedition, Spies in the Himalayas, together with Kenneth Conboy, a writer on security affairs affiliated with the Heritage Foundation. Kohli's account differs strikingly in some details from Takeda's in terms of who messed up during the disastrous mission, but the overall narrative is the same.

In the fall of 1965, the joint AmericanIndian expedition trekked to the base of Nanda Devi, where it received helicopter delivery of the transceiver/RTG assembly and four pounds Of PU 238 fabricated into seven jacketed rods. A team Of 31 - one of the largest climbing teams ever fielded in the region - toiled up the mountain for three weeks with the fueled RTG and five boxes of antennas and radio gear.

just as a team of American and Indian climbers and Sherpas was about to reach the top with the transceiver, bad weather, that bugbear of Himalayan expeditions, set in. The climbing season was over, and installation would have to be attempted again in the next year. To spare the team the extremely onerous task of hauling the transceiver down the mountain and back up again, it was decided to secure the device to a rocky outcropping and return for it next year.

When the climbers returned in the spring of 1966, they discovered to their horror that the transceiver - and the entire ledge it had been secured to - had been swept off the mountain by an avalanche.

Somewhere, thousands of feet below, were the transceiver with its RTG. Somewhere down there, probably in the immense glacier that uncoils lazily from the foot of the mountain toward the Indian plain, where its melting ice feeds the headwaters of the Ganges. Frantic efforts were made, on that and subsequent expeditions, to locate the RTG. But it was never found and eventually the CIA gave up.

The CIA was defeated by the RTGs salient characteristic - the heat of the plutonium inside it. When the RTG struck the icy surface, it simply melted its way out of sight into the heart of the glacier.

Best-case scenario is that the RTG is intact, happily sitting on bedrock and burbling like a giant, million-dollar Slushee machine, while the glacier melts and slips around it. Worst case is that some combination of ice and rock crushed the hardened casing of the RTG and swept plutonium grit down into the melt zone and into the Ganges.

The worst case was very much on the Indian government's mind when the reporter Howard Kohn picked up on U.S. mountaineers' gossip and broke the story in an article entitled "The Nanda Devi Caper" in Outside magazine in 1978.

India's prime minister had to reassure the nation that everything was OK, and backed it up with a government report that provides the only official confirmation of the whole incredible affair. (The US. has never declassified the mission; when I corresponded with one of the principals concerning the affair, he remarked, "Officially we can only consider [Takeda's and Kohli & Conboy's] books out on the subject as science fiction or other types of fiction:')

As the Indian report pointed out, any released plutonium - twice as heavy as lead - would probably settle out of the water into the gravel riverbed of the upper Ganges before it entered India's most populous areas. If it did enter the Indian plain, the plutonium would be so diluted by the immense volume of the water flowing in the Ganges that the likelihood of serious health problems for a great many people who drank from the river was relatively small.

So, in theory, there was no big problem. In practice, it's hard to be sure with plutonium -especially PU 238 in its early 1960s incarnation as RTG fuel.
Plutonium is perhaps the most protean of elements. First created in 1941 by a team headed by Glenn Seaborg, it really doesn't belong on this earth. And plutonium acts like it's really not very happy to be here.

Atomically, a single lump of plutonium exists as a stew of twenty different isotopes ceaselessly decaying and splitting, forming different elements, recombining to its original form, changing again, ticking with radiation as it swirls impatiently through its permutations.

Physically and chemically, plutonium is equally problematic. A plutonium advocate, David Fishlock of the UK group SONE (Supporters of Nuclear Energy), described his favorite element:

"It has six allotropic forms or crystal structures; more than any other element. One is so brittle it shatters like glass. Worse, it has a perplexing tendency to switch from one to another with significantly different properties, as the temperature changes. Finely divided, as swarf or fillings, it can catch fire spontaneously. No one seems to know the color of the flame, but magenta is a good guess. All this makes it infuriating to work with. Too much in one place can 'go critical’; a weak but deadly kind of nuclear explosion that releases gamma rays.”

 And, of course, plutonium is very dangerous.

In the early years of the nuclear age, plutonium displayed an alarming propensity for confounding, eluding, and even killing its human captors.
Beyond the destruction of Nagasaki and the notorious deaths in two separate incidents of Harry Daghlian and Louis Slotin while "tickling the dragon's tail", i.e., manipulating blocks of plutonium in order to ascertain its critical mass during the Manhattan Project, the annals of early plutonium health physics are an alarming litany of blue flashes, exploding
glove boxes, irradiation, and the occasional emergency amputation,
If incinerated, injected into the atmosphere as microparticulates, inhaled and lodged in the lung, a few micrograms can cause cancer.

U.S. government documents from the 1960s also reveal that Pu 238 slurries displayed an alarming tendency for radiation excursions while stored in tanks. This led to guidelines that limited the quantity stored in one place to no more than four pounds - the amount of plutonium load­ed into the RTG on Nanda Devi.

Nevertheless, in the 1950s and 1960s, before it had a vested interest in hyping the dangers of the "dirty bomb," the government was just as eager to employ plutonium in defense, power generation, and terrestrial and celestial RTGS, and convince the public that enhancing the environment's meager bounty of transuranic elements was not a particularly dangerous or reckless thing to do.

Plutoniunfs defenders debunked the canard that "plute" is, gram for gram, the deadliest substance on earth - radium, sarin, and ricin are reputedly worse. To support their case, they cited the manageable risk of plutonium 238's routine emission - the alpha particle.

Alpha particles are deadly but lumbering. Basically the nucleus of helium atom, their positive charge drives them away from other nuclei and limits the damage they can do. Alpha particles can be stopped by paper, plastic, or the thin layer of dead skin covering the human body and will wreak havoc only if inhaled or ingested. In an RTG, they are safely buttoned up inside the fuel cell's tantalum and alloy cladding.

When the young Queen Elizabeth visited the UK Atomic Energy Establishment at Harwood, a physicist there, Dr. Eric Voice, offered her a lump of plutonium in a plastic bag. The queen is one of the few people to have experienced plutoniums unique tactile signature - the warm, heavy mass pours heat into the hand "like a live rabbit. " There was no report of any ill effects suffered by the monarch as a result.

A dedicated plutonium evangelist, Voice had himself injected with plutonium in the 1990s to demonstrate that safety concerns were overblown. Over the next few years, he went the extra mile and inhaled plutonium in a series of tests, Indeed, Mr. Voice died in 2004, five years after the tests concluded, of motor neuron disease, i.e., non-plutonium causes. He received the thanks of a grateful nation - but not the cremation he desired. Cautiously, the British government entombed his remains in a lead-lined coffin instead.
However, theoretical plutonium 238- a dependable, single-minded emitter of alpha particles - and real world plutonium 238 are two different things. I discovered this in a trove of nuclear-related documents once made publicly by the Los Alamos National Laboratory but withdrawn in 2002. Thanks to the efforts of researchers Gregory Walker and Carey Sublette, they are now available on the website of the Federation of American Scientists.

Real-world plutonium 238 - especially in its early 1960s incarnation - was abuzz with neutron radiation. Neutrons are everybody's least favorite particles because they are heavy, carry no charge, aren't stopped at the skin, and can pingpong freely through the human anatomy colliding and combining with nuclei, eliciting secondary radiation and cell damage. Neutron radiation is classed as highly penetrating, demands an immense amount of shielding, and is subject to a lox health effects multiplier. Exposure to the same energy of neutron radiation is considered to be ten times more dangerous than beta and gamma radiation and as dangerous as inhaled alpha particles.

Plutoniums 238's natural decay emits few neutron particles - about 2,100 per gram per second. However, for the Nanda Devi RTG, hidden in the matrix of plutonium physics and chemistry was another, much more significant source of neutrons - the alpha-neutron reaction.
Plutonium 238 fuel is considerably more complicated than pure plutonium 238. It hosts an admixture of approximately is per cent of five other plutonium isotopes formed during the creation of PU 238 in the reactor, each with their own radiation profile. It can also contain small but significant quantities - at the parts per million and parts per billion level - of fight element impurities such as fluorine, beryllium, boron, and aluminum.

The alpha-neutron effect occurs when the alpha particles emitted by the decay of the plutonium 238 atom collide with susceptible light element impurities inside the metal itself The impurities absorb the alpha particles and release neutrons instead. Light element impurities were a fact of life in the 1960s, as scientists and technicians struggled with enormous challenges of physics, chemistry, process design and safety to generate plutonium 238 in reactor fuel rods and extract, purify and reduce it to metal.

When the plutonium fuel cells des­tined for Nanda Devi and Nanda Kot were fabricated, apparently not all the problems had been licked. To a certain degree, fight-element contamination was built into the process. A key step involved reacting plutonium with fluorine - one of those light elements - to produce plutonium tetrafluoride. It also produced an abundance of neutrons, enough to justify the full radiation safety paraphernalia of counters and badges, remote handling equipment, and 16-inch thick Lucite shielding to protect the technicians.

After the PU 238 was reduced to metal and the fuel went into space on probes and satellites, a certain amount of lightelement contamination - and neutrons - inevitably went with it. The RTGs had to be packaged in graphite containers attached to booms, so their radiation as well as their heat would attenuate before reaching the mission electronics.

In 1967, Los Alamos evaluated existing RTG plutonium for use as a power source in heart pacemakers - and rejected it. Tests showed that the fuel emitted unacceptably high levels of neutron radiation due to light element contamination ' and the alpha-neutron reaction. How much radiation? As much as 150 times as many neutrons as should have been expected based on a pure Pu 238/PU 239 mixture. In a four-pound RTG fuel array, that's not enough neutron radiation to cause acute radiation sickness - but it's enough to present a genuine cancer risk to humans.

 So RTG radiation safety was not simply a matter of alpha particles buzzing harmlessly against the alloy cladding of the fuel cell like bewildered bumblebees in a jar. Neutrons were most certainly in the mix, and a goodly number would unavoidably have gone streaming through the minimal alloy and graphite shielding, into the atmosphere, and into the tissues of whoever was standing nearby.

Clearly, among specialists in the RTG program in the 1960s there was knowledge of the neutron issue, but that awareness does not seem to have filtered down to the Himalayan expeditions.

Accounts of fuel and radiation safety issues differ markedly between the Indian and American mountaineers (Captain Kohli declined to be interviewed by Pete Takeda for his book; nor did Kohli and Conboy interview any of the US. climbers for their book).

Kohli and Conboy state that the American side distributed radiation badges "that changed color" -not a normal attribute of film badges, which normally have to be developed in a lab - but the US. team members interviewed by Takeda have no such recollection.

Jim McCarthy, the American alpinist and lawyer who was trained at Martin Marietta to load the PU 238 fuel into the RTG, is mistakenly identified by Kohli and Conboy as an experienced Atomic Energy Commission technician and the mission's authority on radiation matters. McCarthy, on the other hand, has stated emphatically to Pete Takeda that neutron radiation hazards were never discussed during his specialized training or, for that matter, at any point in the mission.

The U.S. team members interviewed by Takeda claim they received only rudimentary instruction and minimal information concerning the radioactive character of the device they were handling. Nevertheless, the other team members were expected to rely upon the purported experience of the Americans in matters of nuclear safety.

Sifting through the conflicting accounts, it is difficult to avoid the conclusion that the CIA should have and would have been aware of radiation safety issues surrounding the RTGs - but chose to discount them as an unnecessary complication and distraction to the urgent and Herculean task of pushing a transceiver up a Himalayan mountain to eavesdrop on Lop Nor.
In a telling indication of what the CIA knew, and what its priorities were, neutron detectors were sent to Nanda Devi,  but not for radiation safety reasons.

After the disappearance of the RTG had horrified Indian intelligence, threatening to trigger a diplomatic incident and public relations fiasco, teams were mobilized in 1966 and 1967 to scour the slopes of Nanda Devi for months in an intensive effort to recover the expensive and embarrassing device.

Both teams were equipped with metal detectors-and with neutron counters. They were instructed to search for neutron radiation at a rate of 1,000 counts per second-about ten times above background. They found nothing and in 1968 the search effort was abandoned.

When the hurriedly planned and hastily executed scheme unraveled, humor was the antidote to failure - at least at CIA headquarters. In the embarrassing aftermath of the loss of the Nanda Devi RTG, the project was reputedly referred to at Langley as "Making a Billion Hindus Glow in the Dark." Of course, it was not the Indians - or the Americans - who bore the brunt of the radiation. The people who were closest to the RTGs for the longest period of time were the Sherpas, the Nepalese villagers whose experience, stamina, and determination have been crucial to every Himalayan assault - including the ridiculous task of pushing a nuclear-power transceiver to a mountaintop.

The Sherpas packing the RTG up the mountain conceived a strong affection for the device. It was very warm, a welcome characteristic in a high altitude environment that afflicts climbers with cold, hypoxia, low metabolism, and accelerated loss of body fat. They called the RTG Guru Rinpoche, in a joking reference to its mysterious heat energy and supposed divinity. They argued over who would carry it, as the team inched its way up the slopes of Nanda Devi during the three-week assault. While the rest of the transceiver froze outdoors through the Himalayan nights, the RTG was welcome in the Sherpas' tents.

 Jim McCarthy, the mountaineer in charge of fueling the RTG, recalled: "They had no idea of what it was '. After it was loaded, they'd put the thing in the middle of their tent and huddle around it" [Takeda, P. 2001
The ad hoc and apparently haphazard nature of the radiation precautions can also be seen from Kohli and Conboy's account contrasting the silent, wary caution of the American and Indian climbers with the Sherpas' enthusiastic and unwitting embrace of the RTG. "Oblivious to any danger, the Sherpas snuggled up to the device, warming their hands and patting their faces. Despite Jim's assurances that the chance of dangerous radiation exposure was minimal, the friends and members [the mission euphemism for the American and Indian climbers, respectively] were not inclined to join the Sherpas." (Conboy & Kohli, Pg. 78).

For some of the Sherpas, the Nanda Devi RTG was just the beginning of their exposure. Because losing an RTG on Nanda Devi did not end the CIA's interest in a listening post on top of the Himalayas.

Further review after the first botched mission convinced the CIA that a lower, more accessible summit on the mountain of Nanda Kot - lower than Nanda Devi, perhaps, but still a major peak at 22,500 feet - would be a suitable location for the transceiver. So, in the following year, yet another team - including Captain Kohli and using some of the same Sherpas - hauled a second RTG-powered device up Nanda Kot.

This time, they successfully installed it. However, after a few months the signals stopped. Another arduous assault revealed the presence of an insidious countermeasure - snow. It had completely buried the transceiver and its antennae, rendering them useless.

In good news for the CIA, an intensive search over the featureless summit discovered the RTG, humming away blissfully under the snow in a glistening cavern five feet across that it had melted for itself. In bad news for the Sherpas, the CIA decided to abandon the Nanda Kot location (and RTG-powered listening posts in general - Nanda Kot was the last gasp), and the unwitting Sherpas received a third dose of exposure in October 1967 as they laboriously lugged the RTG back down the mountain again.
Captain Kohli, responsible for recruiting the Sherpas and, in a way, responsible for their ultimate well-being, believes there were no radiation-related health issues. I corresponded with Captain Kohh about any problems the Sherpas might have experienced. He replied:
"After the expedition they left for their hometowns. It is, therefore, not possible to find out whether there was any radio activity effect on those who carried it. According to nuclear experts, it is quite safe to carry. In fact, Sherpas were happy to use it because of its heat, they remained cozy while carrying it.

"As for members, Sonam Gyatso died
in 1968 from cirrhosis of liver. Some suspected some effect of radio activity, but I do not agree' "

In his book, speaking in the third person, Captain Kohli movingly describes the death of Sonam Gyatso in an Indian hospital in 1968:

"Kohli looked at his friend and began to weep. Barely alive, Sonaff’s robust frame looked frail and shrunken. His face, normally burned a rich chocolate from the strong ultraviolet rays at high altitude, was waxy and lifeless, the color drained from his lips ... Kohh leaned forward and touched his friend's hand. As if by a miracle, Sonam opened his eyes, leveled a distant stare in Kohli's direction, and feebly tried to lift his right arm. Pointing a finger at his wife, his eyes grew slightly more focused. 'Look after her, Sonam whispered. He tried to say more, but nothing came out. His eyes and finger remained frozen, but his chest stopped moving.

"His Holiness Gyalwa Karmapa [the incarnation of Chenrezig, the bodhisattva of compassion, as head of the Black Hat sect of Tibetan Buddhism] will accept you at his feet," said Kohli." [Kohh & Conboy, p.180]
Kohli attributed Sonam's death to his lifetime of drinking. But Jim McCarthy has a different perspective. In 1971, five years after the expedition and three years after Sonam Gyatso died, McCarthy came down with testicular cancer. According to the weighting factors, developed over sixty years of observation, the gonads are the tissue most vulnerable to radiation exposure. McCarthy adamantly attributes his cancer to exposure received while directly handling the plutonium fuel rods - alloy jacketed but essentially transparent to neutron radiation - before inserting them into the RTG.

Takeda quotes him as saying:

"I was the only guy who handled the actual plutonium and I'm the one who loaded the device. I had to straddle the f--- ing thing. Let me tell you, the fuel rods were nice and wildly warm ... No question, there was no shielding at all and I got a large dose of radiation." [Takeda,
pp.199-200]

Regarding the Sherpas, McCarthy stated in 2005-. "If you challenge the Indians to prove any of those Sherpas are alive today, it can’t be done. They are all dead" [Takeda, p. 200]

McCarthy's claims can be challenged - but they can't be dismissed Too little is known about the circumstances of the climbers' neutron radiation exposure to draw definitive conclusions.

The Sherpas were, of course, ignorant of the nuclear nature of the device, the radiation that may have poured out of the fuel rods and through the graphite casing, and what it might do to them. Even the
names of the Sherpas who bore the brunt of the exposure are largely unknown, let alone any calculation, record, or recollection of who spent how much time how close to the RTG. What the neutron radiation did to the Sherpas is a matter of melancholy conjecture.

The Sherpas carried the legacy of their nuclear encounter back to their mountain villages. When they died there, their remains were disposed of through cremation or sky burial, The answer to the question of how they died is literally not on this earth.

We will probably never know what really happened. The answer is lost in the buzz of radiation and the hum of statistical noise, just as the RTG itself lies lost, remote, and deadly somewhere in the Himalayas.

Peter Lee is a business man who has spent thirty years observing, analyzing, and writing on Asian affairs. He gratefully acknowledges the assistance of Pete Takeda in preparing this article. Lee can be reached at peterrlee-2000@yahoo.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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