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THE ORIGINS OF THE ISRAEL LOBBY

"It was impossible to hold the line. All we got was a battering from the Jews."
--John Foster Dulles, Secretary of State, 1956

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"Imperial Crusades: a Diary of Three Wars" by Cockburn and St. Clair

Today's Stories

April 11, 2007

Vijay Prashad
The Generation of IEDs and iPods

April 10, 2007

James G. Abourezk
How Syria Helped the US in the "War on Terror"--and How Bush Said "Thanks"

Earl Ofari Hutchinson
Why Imus Should be Fired--And Why He Won't Be

Joshua Frank
Democrats for War

Lee Sustar
How Concessions by UAW Lost Jobs

Joseph Grosso
Tiger Woods in Dubai: Luxury and Exploitation

Nirmal Ghosh
China and the Fate of the Tiger

Robert Jensen
Impeach the System

Ramzy Baroud
Not an Intellectual Squabble

Paul Rockwell
History Will Vindicate Lt. Ehren Watada

Mario Joseph and
Brian Concannon

Solidaridad? Chávez in Haiti

Fred Wilhelms
Why the New Royalty Rates Hurt Artists

Website of the Day
Thaw!

 

April 9, 2007

Saul Landau
Whining Imperialists

Uri Avnery
Shalom, Shin Bet

Nicole Colson
Sami Al-Arian's Nightmare: an Interview with Nahla Al-Arian

Gideon Levy
Israel Does Not Want Peace

Corporate Crime Reporter
Big Coal Invokes Reverse Nuremberg Defense

Evelyn Pringle
The Surge in Casualties

Hill Kemp
Mega Lessons from Iraq War, Year 5

Martha Rosenberg
Monsanto's Desperate Plea: "Regulate Our Competitors!"

Keith Rosenthal
Behind Boston's Recent "Crime Wave"

Jane Stillwater
Green Zone Cabin Fever

Website of the Day
Support Norman Finkelstein


April 7 / 8, 2007

Alexander Cockburn
Dead Dogs Don't Bleed: How Giuliani Lost America

Sara Roy
A Jewish Plea

Arno J. Mayer
Back to Cleopatra's Nose: Bush-Bashing and Empire's Onward March

Jeffrey St. Clair
In the Realm of the Grizzly Kings

Vicente Navarro
Why Huntington and Beck Are Wrong

Fidel Castro
Where Have All the Bees Gone? And Other Reflections on the Internationalizaton of Genocide

Fred Gardner
Medical News from the Business Pages

Ralph Nader
The IRS Owes You Money

David N. Rahni
Test Tube Zealots: American Chemical Society Purges Iranian Chemists

Arthur Neslen
When an Anti-Semite is Not an Anti-Semite

Pratyush Chandra
Joseph Stiglitz's "Another World"

Missy Beattie
Enough Already! The Politics of Exasperation

Marc Levy
A Beginner's Guide to Combat

Poets' Basement
Reiss, Holt, Orloski and Louise

Website of the Weekend
Reactor Man

 

April 6, 2007

Franklin Lamb
Why is Hezbollah on the Terrorism List?

Gloria La Riva
On the Case of the Cuban Five and Luis Posada Carriles

Corporate Crime Reporter
The Politics of Coal in West Virginia

Ron Jacobs
Good Friday, Beethoven and Patti Smith

Felice Pace
Simon Says: The Pro-Israel Bias of NPR

Walter Brasch
Treason in the White House?

David Swanson
Heroes, Sung and Unsung

Sylvia Syracuse
Roadside Rampage: Salvadoran Murders in Guatemala


April 5, 2007

Patrick Cockburn
A De Facto Hostage Exchange

Tom Barry
The Fred Thompson Factor

Richard W. Behan
Congressional Complicity

Nicola Nasser
Playing US Politics with Iraqi Blood for Oil

Bernadine Dohrn
The New and Old SDS: Convergence Not Division

Laray Polk
Lucky Dragon: Does the World Really Need a New H-Bomb?

Helen Redmond
Female Chauvinist Pigs?

 

April 4, 2007

Col. Dan Smith
"Have You No Sense of Decency?": the Tillman Affair and the Moral Decay of the Army

Joshua Frank
Democratic Blood Money: Sen. Feinstein's War Profiteering

Margaret Kimberly
Of Confessions and Torture

Sharon Smith
Circuit City's Guinea Pigs: the Latest Trend in Corporate America

Jeff Cohen and Norman Solomon
The Martin Luther King You Don't See on TV

Martin Luther King,Jr.
Beyond Vietnam

Bill Quigley
Incident at Fort Huachuca, the Army's Torture Training Center

Dave Zirin
Picking Chicago's Pockets with the Olympics

Evelyn Pringle
Drug Companies Want Women of Childrearing Years

Peter Rost, MD
Pfizer's Puny Fine

Website of the Day
Crash of the Honey Bees

 

April 3, 2007

Patrick Cockburn
US's Bungled Plan to Kidnap Iran's Top Spook Prompted hostage Taking

Marjorie Cohn
Coming Up Short on Habeas Corpus for Gitmo Detainees

Brian M. Downing
The Army's Road to Iraq

Corporate Crime Reporter
Coddling Pfizer: Praise the Criminal, Dis the Whistleblower

Carol Norris
A Psychologist on Sexual Assault: Yes, Virginia, There is a Sollution

Ralph Nader
Tailpipe Blues

Dave Lindorff
I Quit: A Movement of One (Or a Maybe a Million)

Scott Bontz
The Great Depletion

Thomas Dolby
Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye, Racism and the National Anthem

Website of the Day
Cockburn on BookTV


April 2, 2007

Gary Leupp
A Bogus Hostage Crisis

Uri Avnery
Condi in the Middle East: Olmert and the Pussycat

James Petras
Palestine: The Political Economy of a Disaster

Norman Solomon
McCain in Baghdad: Walking in McNamara's Footsteps

Robert Fisk
War of Humiliation

Stanley Heller
A Neocon Looks Two Conquests Ahead: The Ravings of James Woolsey

Sherwood Ross
How the Pentagon Cheats Iraq Vets Out of Medical Care and Disability Pay

Monica Benderman
On Keeping Men Alive: Report from Ft. Stewart

Stephen Fleischman
Winners and Losers in a Dog-Eat-Dog System

Anne McElroy Dachel
Never Mind the Mercury

Website of the Day
Midwestern Common Sense on the War


March 31 / April 1, 2007

Cockburn / St. Clair
That Was an Antiwar Vote?

Fred Gardner
How Corrupt is Malcolm Gladwell? Shilling for Enron and Breast Cancer

Greg Moses
The Pirates of Homeland Security

Gary Leupp
300 vs. Iran (and Herodotus)

Robert Fisk
Shakespeare and War

Roger Morris
The Politics of the Witch Hunt

Conn Hallinan
The Price of Fire: Oil, Water and Resistance in Bolivia

Kristin J. Anderson
A Protocol for Death

Jason Hribal
California's Most Unhappy Cows

John Ross
Strange Fruit Down South

Christopher Brauchli
Bush and the Politics of Falsehoods: If You're Going to Lie, Lie Big

David Underhill
War Breeds Stranger Bedfellows

Elizabeth Schulte
The Pentagon's "Don't Ask" Disaster

Ben Terrall
Time for Lula to Stop Doing Bush's Dirty Work in Haiti

Missy Beattie
Guess Who Isn't Coming to Dinner: The Story of King Abdullah and the O-Word

Sonja Karkar
How Palestine Became Israel's Land

Daniel Wolff
Have You Heard the News?

David Vest
A Romanian Jazz Rebel Drops a Bomb on Paris

Ron Jacobs
Wynton Marsalis Checks In on the Land That Never Has Been Yet

Poets' Basement
Davies, Holt, Wigley and Landau

Website of the Weekend
Kansas City Rocks

 


March 30, 2007

Alan Maass
Oil and the Empire

Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity
A Memo on Iran: Brinksmanship in Uncharted Waters

Richard W. Behan
George Bush's Land Mine: If Iraqis Get Revenue Sharing, Exxon Gets Their Oil

Gabriel Kolko
Israel's Last Chance

William S. Lind
Operation Anabasis

Stedjan / Weis
The Cluster Bomb Treaty: Again, It's the US vs. the World

Kevin Zeese
Is Bush Lame or Is Congress?

David Busch
Homeless in LA

Fidel Castro
Biofuels and Global Hunger

CounterPunch News Service
Mistrial in Olympia 15 Case

Website of the Day
Free Shaquanda Cotton


March 29, 2007

Saul Landau
Comparing Padillas

Patrick Cockburn
When Iraqi Cops Go on a Rampage

Dave Lindorff
War and the Futures Market: Oil Traders Fear an Attack on Iran

Arthur Neslen
Normalizing Injustice: Jaffa's Ugly Truth

Michael Dickinson
Incident at Westminster Abbey

Ingmar Lee
Plantskyyd: Planting Trees with Pig's Blood in British Columbia

Aseem Shrivastava
As India Goes Global, the Public Goes Private

Marlene Martin
Sacco and Vanzetti, Revisited

Mahmoud El-Yousseph
Wake Up, You Live in America!

Michael Foley
A Citizen's Peace Lobby

Website of the Day
Impeach Bush Club Parade


March 28, 2007

Nicole Colson
The Ongoing Persecution of Sami Al-Arian

Harry Clark
Michigan Peaceworks on Palestine

Larry Everest
Another $100 Billion to Continue the War

Jonathan M. Feldman
Citigroup, Property and Theft

Dave Zirin
Yet Another Book on Muhammad Ali (and Why I Wrote It)

Jane Stillwater
How Runaway Inflation Has Slipped Under the Radar

Ayesha Ijaz Khan
Pakistan's Cry for Justice

Jim Wilfong
Who Owns Maine's Water?

Hawra Karama
An Open Letter to Kanan Makiya, an Iraqi Uncle Tom

Website of the Day
Free Fire on Iraqi Civilians



March 27, 2007

Iain Boal /
Standard Schaefer
British Petroleum and the New Greenmail

Patrick Cockburn
The Hostage Game

Monica Benderman
On Ending War: Is America Ready for the Troops When They Come Home?

Corporate Crime Reporter
Political Players and Single Payer

Joshua Frank
Dems in Power: Broken Promises and Bald-Faced Lies

Harvey Wasserman
Will Al Gore Deliver Us to Solartopia?

Sen. Russell Feingold
FBI Abuses of the Patriot Act

Tillman Family
Crimes and Cover Ups are Not "Missteps"

Patrick Bond
Zimbabwe's Descent

David Judd
Arbitrary Discipline at Columbia

Website of the Day
Why Work?


March 26, 2007

Patrick Cockburn
Seven Days on Iraq's Cruel Roads

Uri Avnery
Schoolbooks and Borders

Greg Moses
Hothouses for Hapless Masses on the Rio Grande

Bill Hatch
A Plague of Big Shots

John V. Walsh
The Democrats' War Funding Debacle

Diane Christian
God Does Not Love the Aggressor

Dan La Botz
The Immigration Movement at a Crossroads

Frederico Fuentes
Latin America Tells Bush to "Get Out!"

Sunsara Taylor
Democrats' Victory Means More Iraqi Deaths

Mickey Z.
Pat Tillman: Beyond the Hype

Website of the Day
DynCorp's Iraq Training Policy

 


March 24 / 25, 2007

Alexander Cockburn
Where are the Laptop Bombardiers Now?

Jeffrey St. Clair
Nuclear Saviors?: Kyoto, Gore and the Atomic Lobby

David Rosen
An American Obituary: Anna Nicole Smith and the Exploitation of Nature

Ron Jacobs
The Political History of the Car Bomb

Robert Fantina
Vietnam and Iraq, the Rhetoric Remains the Same

Alan Maass
Why Ralph Nader Took a Stand

Atul Gawande
On Washing Hands: A Surgeon's Notes on How Infections Spread in Hospitals

Marianne McDonald
Staging Anti-Colonial Protest

China Hand
Zealots Scheme to Derail North Korea Accord

Kaz Dziamka
The Iroquois Way of Impeachment

Andrew Wimmer
The Nursemaid's Tale

Don Monkerud
World's Biggest Debtor Nation

Anthony Papa
Bong Hits 4 Jesus Case

Matthew Provonsha
Return of the Black Bloc

Missy Beattie
Calling Youth and Young Adults

Stephen Fleischman
Confrontation, At Last

Poets' Basement
Newberry, Laymon, Harley and Buknatski

Website of the Weekend
An Interview with Ron Jacobs

Song of the Weekend
"Who Would Jesus Bomb?"


March 23, 2007

Saul Landau
Return to Syria

Patrick Cockburn
Welcome to Iraq, Mr. Ban

Greg Moses
Protesting Immigrant Prisons in the Rio Grande Valley

Rep. Ron Paul
The War Funding Bill

Franklin Lamb
Will Hezbollah Hand Israel Its 6th Defeat?

Stephen Gowans
Mugabe Gets the Milosevic Treatment

Roger Burbach
Leftist Victory in Ecuador

Dave Lindorff
The Gutless Mini-Politics of the Congressional Democrats

William S. Lind
Candles in the Hurricane

Alan Mammoser
The New Rules of Food

Russell Hoffman
Al Gore's Nose is Glowing

Website of the Day
Global Outsourcing and the US Working Class

 

March 22, 2007

Patrick Cockburn
Oil-Rich Kirkuk at the Melting Point

Robin Blackburn
Toxic Waste in the Sub-Prime Market

Michael Donnelly
Mr. Green Goes to Washington: Another Oscar Performance from Al Gore

Uzma Aslam Khan
Down Pakistan's No-Constitution Avenue

Lee Sustar
Bush's Braceros: The Ugly Truth About the Guest Worker Program

Robert D. Skeels
LA's Vicious War on the Homeless

Rev. William Alberts
The Forbidden C-Word

Anne McElroy Dachel
The Search for the Elusive Autism Gene

Mickey Z.
This is Your Brain on Meat

Website of the Day
Raimondo Does Hitchens

 


March 21, 2007

Tao Ruspoli
A Conversation with Robbie Conal

James Petras
Meet the Global Ruling Class

Fred Gardner
A U.S. Army Pipe Dream

Corporate Crime Reporter
Cramer Comes Clean: Lies, Market Manipulation and Wall Street

Faisal Kutty
Too Guilty to Fly, Too Innocent to Charge?

Robert Fantina
U.S. Imperialism in Action

Isabella Kenfield and Roger Burbach
Brazilian Opposition to Bush-Lula Ethanol Accords

Lucinda Marshall
Missing in Action: Why is the Peace Movement Ignoring the Impact of War on Women?

Winslow Wheeler
Dem Budget Tricks: Reform Means What We Say It Means!

Website of the Day
Student Day of Action Against the War

 

 

March 20, 2007

Patrick Cockburn
Iraq is a Vast, Blood-Drenched Human Disaster

Winslow T. Wheeler
The Blank Check War

Sharon Smith
Hillary's Cojones: Our Bleached-Blond Thatcher?

Uri Avnery
The New Palestinian Unity Government

Stan Cox
Down-to-a-Trickle Economics

Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz
Hating the Rich

Alan Farago
Why Al Gore Soft-Peddled the Environment in 2000

Richard W. Behan
Impeachment and Patriotism

Juan Antonio Montecino Latin America Has Moved On

David Krieger
The Treaty of Tlatelolco

Peter Rost, MD
An Open Letter to Pfizer's CEO: $11 Million Salary, 36% Raise, 10,000 Fired Employees

Mickey Z.
A Cat-Eat-Cat World: Beyond the Pet Food Recall

Website of the Day
Bringing the War Home

Webclip of the Day
Sunsara Taylor Beats O'Reilly, Again

 

March 19, 2007

Paul Craig Roberts
Crime Blotter: 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue

Patrick Cockburn
Operation Deepening Nightmare

Stauber / Rampton
Why Won't MoveOn Move Forward?

Werther
Plame Wars: Valerie Plame, the Washington Post and the Ghost of Joe McCarthy

Noam Chomsky
In Memory of Tanya Reinhart

Jeff Leys
Tap Dancing on Graves: How Democrats Bought the War

Richard May
And Then There Were None: Europe's Afghan Backlash

Ron Jacobs
Lessons of the Antiwar Movement and the Washington Post's Lessons of the Iraq War

Mike Whitney
Rove in the Dock

Website of the Day
Ringtones That Roar

 

 

March 17 / 18, 2007

Alexander Cockburn
Here Comes Another "Crime Wave"

John Scagliotti
A Sissy's Manifesto

Jeffrey St. Clair
The Green Imposter: When Al Gore Was Veep

Paul Craig Roberts
The Confession Backfired

Greg Moses
Jailing Immigrant Mothers in El Paso

Harry Clark
Thrice-Told Tales: Those Israel-Syria Peace Talks

Brian Cloughley
In the Name of Improving People's Lives: Mounting Civilian Deaths in Afghanistan and Iraq

Mehran Ghassemi
An Interview with Sasan Fayazmanesh on the US, Israel and Iran

William Loren Katz
A Disturbing Expulsion: Racism and the Cherokee Nation

John Ross
Being a Zapatista Where You Live

Ralph Nader
Ban the Bomblets!

Walter Brasch
An Intolerant Minority: the Witch Hunt Against Gays in the Military

Samer Assad
The Palestinian Unity Government: Another for US Diplomacy

Dave Zirin
Bowie Kuhn: Death of a Baseball Reactionary

Ron Jacobs
The Darker Nation's: Remembering and Re-examining the Third World

Missy Beattie
No to War and Pace

Don Santina
First, They Came for the Democrats

Sami Adwan
What Hillary Should Know About Palestinian Schoolbooks

Dr. Susan Block
Gods of Spring: the Erotics of the Equinox

Poets' Basement
Reed, Landau, Engel, Buknatski

Website of the Weekend
God Save Helen Mirren

 

March 16, 2007

R. T. Naylor
The Political Economy of Diamonds

Paul Craig Roberts
The Last Days of Constitutional Rule

Joshua Frank
Obama's Israel Problem

Diane Farsetta
How Reporters Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Nuclear Front Groups

Tom Barry
Tancredo's Putsch: Anti-Immigrant Agenda Veers Hard Right

Stephen Lendman
Plays from a Political Fake Book: Congress's Phony Opposition to War

Al Krebs
Compounding Infamy: Chiquita, Its Workers and Colombia's Death Squads

Jackie Corr
Senator Schumer and the Corruption Culture

Ramzy Baroud
Palestinians Must Redefine Struggle

Reza Fiyouzat
The Chinese Way of Capitalism

Website of the Day
Introducing: the iRak

 

March 15, 2007

Alison Weir
Strip-Searching Children at Israeli Checkpoints

Patrick Cockburn
Baghdad Under Surge

Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity
Memo to Congressional Leaders on Iraq Funding: First Stop the Bleeding

Franklin Spinney
Of Character and Contractors: the Unauthorized Rumsfeld

Standard Schaefer
Biofuels and the Green Resistance

Conn Hallinan
The Right's Stuff in Africa: Neocons, Evangelicals and Sudan

Maureen Webb
Another Patriot Act Abuse

Sonja Karkar
Rachel Corrie and Palestine

Margaret Kimberly
The Profits of Self-Hatred: Malkin and D'Souza, Incorporated

Anthony Papa
The New Capones: It's Time to Rethink Drug Prohibition

Katherine Hancy Wheeler Bush's Latin American Tour: Good Will Lost

Video of the Day
The Easiest Targets

Website of the Day
Memo to Kucinich: Watch Your Back!

 

March 14, 2007

Tao Ruspoli
A Conversation with Peter Linebaugh on the Slave Trade, Magna Carta and the State of the Left

Philip Agee
The Decline of the US, the Rise of Latin America

Bruce Dixon
The Digital Redlining of African-Americans

John Walsh
How One Senator Could End the War

Sunsara Taylor
Red Light, Green Light: the Democrats and Iran

William Johnson
Still Reeling from Katrina: The Spirited Strike at Pascagoula Shipyards

Richard Thieme
Entitlement and Empire

Jeffrey Klein
Right-Wing Academic Values

Nicola Nasser
This Time, Israeli is Missing an Historic Opportunity

Dave Lindorff
Political Hide-and-Seek with the Democrats

Website of the Day
Oil Change

 

March 13, 2007

Catherine Wilkerson, M.D.
Scenes from a Cop Riot

Jonathan Cook
The Real Goal of Israel's Invastion of Lebanon

Robert Bryce
Beyond Redemption: the Legacy of George the Second

Corporate Crime Reporter
Coal-Powered Democrats

Pierre Rimbert
Libération and the Evolution of French Neoliberalism

Dave Lindorff
What's Good for Halliburton is Good ... for Dubai

Elizabeth Schulte
The Repackaging of John Edwards

Norman Solomon
The Pragmatism of Prolonged War

Kevin Zeese
The Democrats' Fraudulent Iraq Exit Plan

Jeff Conant
Greeting Rumsfeld in Taos

Website of the Day
Tacoma and the Big Heat

 

 

March 12, 2007

Marjorie Cohn
Patriot Act Unbound

Col. Dan Smith
Ghost Prisoners, Shadowy Jails and Secret Trials

Paul Craig Roberts
Neocons in Kafkaland

Ingmar Lee
The Sentencing of Betty Krawczyk: a 78-Year-Old Eco-Heroine

Fred Gardner
Cannabis for the Wounded: Another Walter Reed Scandal

Ron Jacobs
Showdown at Port Tacoma: Confronting the War Machine in the Northwest

Ralph Nader
Send the Bush Twins to Iraq!

John Ross
Political Prisoners in Calderon's Mexico

Stephen Fleischman
Bush's Latin American Slip

Eva Carazo Vargas
Why We Reject CAFTA

Website of the Day
Mountain Justice Spring Break

 

March 9 / 11, 2007

Sameer Dossani
Interview with Noam Chomsky: War, Neoliberalism and Empire in the 21st Century

Jeffrey St. Clair
Crude Alliance: The Bi-Partisan Politics of Oil

Dave Marsh
Bono's Bullshit: Not One Red Cent

Patrick Cockburn
Shia Pilgrims Die Despite US Offensive

Jennifer Van Bergen
A Gonzo Argument: Alberto Gonzales's Defense of NSA Domestic Spying

James P. Stevenson
Pardon Whom? Libby and the Cheney Unseen

Arthur J. Versluis
Crusade for Commercialism

Corporate Crime Reporter
Not a Dime's Worth of Difference: Congress and Corporate Crime

Missy Beattie
Too Much Info, Newt!: Sex, God and Praying

Michael Simmons
Annie Get Your Gums: Why I Like Ann Coulter

Kevin Zeese
Making Democrats Pay the Price: Voting Against the War is No Longer Enough

David Swanson
Shocking Video: The Dark Side of the Democrats

John A. Murphy
Are the Congressional Democrats Spineless?

Dave Lindorff
Bush Dodges a Constitutional Bullet in New Mexico: Abetted by Democrats

Nikolas Kozloff
Lights! Camera! Chavez!

Christopher Fons
Bush Goes to Latin America: Is It All About (N)PR?

Mike Roselle
A Thousand Miles of Bad River

Mike Mejia
Justice for Sibel Edmonds

Susie Day
Anna Nicole Smith Bombs Iran!

Michael Donnelly
LA Story: Rock Stars, Porn Stars and Peace

Tao Ruspoli
Just Say Know (Parts 4 and 5)

Poets' Basement
Reed, Laymon, Mezmer and Harley

Website of the Weekend
Japanese Dolphin Massacre

 

March 8, 2007

Elaine Cassel
The Tragic Case of Jose Padilla

Yifat Susskind
Iraq's Other War: Violence Against Women Under US Occupation

Corporate Crime Reporter
Politics and the Prosecutors

Col. Dan Smith
The Sins of Walter Reed

William S. Lind
The Washington Dodgers

Mark Engler
Bush's Latin American Spring Break

Roger Burbach
With Negroponte as Tour Director, Bush's Trip Destined to Fail

Dana Cloud
Return of the Campus Witch Hunts: David Horowitz and the Thought Police

Isabella Kenfield
Brazil's Ethanol Pland: Breeding Rural Poverty and Environmental Degradation

Lucinda Marshall
We Stand with the Women of the World

Tao Ruspoli
Just Say Know: a Personal Look at Drugs and Drug Addiction (Part 3)

Website of the Day
Filibuster for Peace


March 7, 2007

Christopher Ketcham
What Did Israel Know in Advance of the 9/11 Attacks?

Christopher Ketcham
The Kuala Lumpur Deceit: a CIA Cover Up

Alexander Cockburn / Jeffrey St. Clair
Ketcham's Story: Coming in From the Cold

Winslow T. Wheeler
Mismeasuring the Defense Budget

Sean Donahue
Free Scooter Libby!

Dave Lindorff
The Fall Guy Has Fallen

Evelyn Pringle
Psychosis and Mania: ADHD Drug Warnings Come Too Late for Many

Tao Ruspoli
Just Say Know: a Personal Look at Drugs and Drug Addiction

Website of the Day
Debating Iraq: Gaffney Against the World!

 

March 6, 2007

Gary Leupp
Meet Eliot Cohen: "As Extremist a Neocon and Warmonger as It Gets"

Uri Avnery
Esterina Tartman: The Big Mouth of Israeli Fascism

Patrick Cockburn
The War on Terror is a Bust: Bush is Now Al Qaeda's Top Recruiter

Saul Landau
World in Crisis, Candidates in Denial

Corporate Crime Reporter
John Edwards' Big Lie

Ron Jacobs
The Legacy of Lordstown: The Union Makes Us Strong!

Mike Roselle
Judi Bari: Ten Years Gone

P. Sainath
Neoliberalism and the Ideology of the Cancer Cell

Joshua Frank
Dump the Dems, Unite Against the War

Aniket Alam
Women's Day, Lenin and a Riot in Copenhagen

Dave Zirin
Resurrecting Don Barksdale: Basketball's Forgotten Pioneer

Website of the Day
Physicians for a National Health Program

 

March 5, 2007

Greg Moses
Holding Suzi Hazahza for Profit

Patrick Cockburn
Exodus of Iraq's Ancient Minorities

James Petras
Bush vs. Chavez

Frida Berrigan
US Nuclear Hypocrisy and Iran

Marjorie Cohn
Conscientious Objector Faces Court-Martial: the Case of Augustín Aguayo

Douglas Kammen and S.W. Hayati
The Rice Crisis in East Timor

Sen. Barack Obama
On Israel and AIPAC: "We Must Preserve Our Total Commitment to Our Unique Defense Relationship with Israel"

Michael Young
Sy Hersh and Iran: the Dark Side of Spun a Lot?

Dave Lindorff
It's the People of Washington vs. Pelosi, et al

Sonja Karkar
Raiding Nablus: Israel's Hot Winter Offensive

Website of the Day
How Obama Learned to Love Israel

 

March 3 / 4, 2007

Alexander Cockburn
The Persecution of Sami Al-Arian

Corporate Crime Reporter
"No Fingernails, No Good:" Al-Arian Prosecutor's Anti-Muslim Bias

Jeffrey St. Clair
Glory Boy and the Snail Darter: Al Gore, the Origins of a Hypocrite

Patrick Cockburn
War Reporting in Iraq: Only Locals Need Apply

Ralph Nader
Hillary, Inc.: Sen. Clinton and Corporate America

M. Shahid Alam
American Mamlukes

Gilad Atzmon
From Esther to AIPAC

Fred Gardner
It's Official!: Cannabis Reduces Pain

George Ciccariello-Maher
The Fourth World War Started in Venezuela

Rock & Rap Confidential
Do the James Brown!: "No One Could Speak More Authoritatively for Blacks"

Gillian Russom
The Court Martial of Agustín Aguayo

Michael McPhearson
My Small Act of Civil Disobedience

Kevin Zeese
The Democrats and the Peace Movement: Who Owns Whom?

Sunsara Taylor
Four Years of an Unjust War

Wendy Thompson
Re-Organizing the UAW

Kenneth Rexroth
Gibbon's "Decline and Fall"

Missy Beattie
Regarding Cheney

Don Monkerud
Jesus Turned Away at US Border

Tina Louise
Stuffed with Terror, Starved of Dreams

Poets' Basement
Richards, Landau and Davies

Website of the Weekend
John Prine: Flag Decal

 

March 2, 2007

Roger Morris
Cheney's Bagram Ghosts

Phil Gasper
Prisoners of Ideology

Mike Roselle
Buffalo Gore: The Blood-Stained Snow of Yellowstone

Robert Bryce
The Ethanol Scam

John V. Walsh
Who is He This Time?: Kerry's Strange Call to Filibuster the War

Sherwood Ross
Bush and Walter Reed Hospital: Praise the Care, Slash the Budget

China Hand
Who Let North Korea Get the Bomb?

David Rosen
To Cut or Not to Cut?: the Politics of Circumcision in America

Chris Genovali
Connecting the Dots

Peter Harley
The Wall, Apartheid and Mandela

Website of the Day
Courage to Resist

 

March 1, 2007

Laura Carlsen
Return to Sender: Migrants as Globalization's Junk Mail

Paul Craig Roberts
The Tragedy of a Dozen Evil Men

Ray McGovern
How Far is Iran from the Bomb? Who the Hell Knows?

Christopher Brauchli
Bush's Theater of the Absurd

Najum Mustaq
America's Musharraf Dilemma

Brent Bowden
The War on Terror and the Terror of War

Tina Richards
Demoralizing the Troops? The Mother of an Iraq War Vet Responds

Ethan Nadelman
Mexico and the Drug War

Mike Stark
"Tough on Crime" is the Problem, Not a Solution

Wadner Pierre / Jeb Sprague
Haiti's Poor Under a State of Siege by UN

Mike Whitney
Market Meltdown: the Dead Hand of Greenspan

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April 10, 2007

Quebec's Lessons for the US

How "Wars on Terror" Should be Fought

By R. T. NAYLOR

On March 26, 2007, in an event that went largely unnoticed (or, if noticed, generally misunderstood) by the American media, the Parti Québecois, which stood for the independence of Québec from Canada and which had for over 30 years been the most important force on the Québec political scene, was relegated to third party status in the provincial legislature. The significance went well beyond simply the reduction of the "separatist threat" and of any possible complications to the political and economic order in North America its success might have entailed. For the story of its rise, and at least temporary fall, also contains a powerful lesson for the conduct today's Terror War, when the actions of a handful of violent fanatics are seized upon by the powers that be as a pretext to advance a domestic political agenda and/or to try to discredit a legitimate political challenge ­ with unanticipated and, more often than not unwelcome, results.

After 9/11, the U.S. mobilized to meet the al-Qa'idah threat on two fronts. While the military one created the best photo ops, perhaps more important for the long haul was a set of legal initiatives to take the handcuffs off the police and intelligence agencies. These changes were necessary, the authorities grimly told the public, to help round up the sleeper cells Usama bin Laden had planted across the U.S. before their alarm clocks rang, and to find and freeze his hoards of terror dollars before they could be mobilized for a repeat performance. Unprecedented threats required tough new responses. And what threat could be more unprecedented than the magical emergence of a giant hierarchically-structured Transnational of Terror with affiliates from Afghanistan to Zanzibar and with oodles of boodle to finance terror across the globe, including a program to develop Weapons of Mass Destruction?-

However, the notion that "the world changed" on 9/11 may say more about America's ignorance of anything outside its own borders than it does about historical reality. The West's first post-modern War on Terror was actually declared some three decades before 9/11 by the government of another rather more obscure country only a short distance north. There, much as had allegedly happened to the U.S. when faced with the looming menace of al-Qa'idah, civil society had reputedly been put under siege by interlocking terror cells in a conspiracy inspired by foreign ideologues and financed partly by domestic crime, partly by secret contributions from hostile countries. The concerned government responded, much as did that of the U.S. after 9/11, by a deploying its armed forces (albeit to patrol the streets at home rather than to drop bombs on rag-heads abroad) and by invoking measures similar in spirit to the Patriot Act. These were directed not just against the perpetrators of terrorist acts but also against those who provided material support, financial or logistical, or who simply proselytized in favor.

Yet back then the problem was ultimately resolved, not by the military intervention or extraordinary legislation, but by routine police work under the terms of conventional law; while public outrage at the terrorist acts in the short run together with a profound change in underlying political and social conditions in the long run sufficed to prevent any recurrence.

Vive le Québec Libre!

On October 16, 1970, after two political kidnappings in Montréal, the late Pierre Trudeau, Prime Minister of Canada, a man renowned as a passionate defender of liberal values, proclaimed, with the near unanimous support of his Parliament, the War Measures Act. It was a piece of legislation dating from 1914, previously used only in the two world wars or their immediate aftermath, for example, to help crush the Winnipeg General Strike of 1919. In effect the entire country, which, but for a small role in Korea in the early 1950s, had been at peace for 25 years, was again officially at war. Canada, Trudeau and other senior government figures insisted, was facing an "apprehended insurrection," the product of a "seditious conspiracy." Even before the War Measures Act was invoked, the Canadian army had been sent to patrol the streets of Montréal and to guard certain political leaders in Ottawa. (Others who were denied military protection protested at the apparent belittling of their status until they, too, got to pose for their neighbors with a couple of bored soldiers on their front lawn.) After the Act went into force, normal civil rights with respect to things like political protest along with major restraints on police power were suspended.

The initiating event had been the kidnapping by a group of self-proclaimed members of the Front de libération du Québec (FLQ) of James Cross, a British diplomat, from his home on Montréal's elegant Redpath Crescent. Their most important demands for his freedom were: the release of 23 "political prisoners" (all convicted of bombings, robberies and murders) held in Québec prisons; sanctuary in either Algeria or Cuba for kidnappers and released prisoners alike; the rehiring of postal workers recently fired by the federal government; $500,000 in gold bars; and the reading over the most popular radio channel of the FLQ manifesto, a hodge-podge of crude Marxist slogans and patriotic incantations based on a rather ideosyncratic - infantile might be a better term - reading of Québec's history. The most widely read of the "radical" Québec political literature of the time either invoked a monolithic Anglophone conspiracy hypothesis to explain Quebéc's apparent misfortunes (as in Léandre Bergeron's Petit Manuel d'Histoire du Québec) or drew absurd analogies between the situation of American blacks and Canada's francophones (as in Pierre Vallière's Les nègres blancs d'Amérique).

At first, responsibility for handling the crisis rested with the government of Québec; and it, with the support of major opinion makers, was inclined to negotiate. While the matter was certainly treated as urgent, it was left to the provincial police (the Québec Sureté) to resolve. But then, convinced that the government was dragging its feet as the cops searched for the hideout, and worried that the original set of kidnappers was backing off from critical demands, another group of FLQ "members" who had been in the U.S., reversed their car and headed home, trying to pick up some weapons en route. Back in Montréal they kidnapped Pierre Laporte, Québec's Minister of Labour and Immigration and probably the most powerful political personage in the province after its Prime Minister. In response, the federal government proclaimed the War Measures Act. A few days later Laporte's strangled body was found in the trunk of an abandoned car.

The imposition of wartime emergency regulations subsequently became the stuff of political legend. To staunch federalists it was a shining example of standing firm to face down the radical tide threatening to engulf Judaeo-Christian Civilization. To separatist leaders, it was a federal conspiracy to thwart democratic mass action. Indeed some, anticipating the spirit of post-9/11 conspiracy theories, claimed that the entire crisis was concocted by the feds who had infiltrated and manipulated the FLQ to produce just such an atrocity in order to discredit legal separatists and pave the way for military rule in Québec. Although some federalist leaders were certainly delighted at what they perceived to be a golden opportunity to deliver a body blow to the separatist movement, the main instigators for the suspension of civil rights seem to have been the police forces, both the Québec Sureté and (federal) Royal Canadian Mounted Police, who were then delighted to find themselves unshackled from normal peace-time constraints.

Under the War Measures Act, the FLQ was outlawed, with even former "members" subject to arrest and imprisonment; and it became a criminal offense not just to provide it with material support, financial or otherwise, or to assist in its communications, but to speak publicly in its favor. Even landlords who allowed premises to be used for FLQ purposes could be fined and jailed. The same punishments could be meted out to members of or sympathizers with other groups who indicated approval of FLQ actions or objectives, or who simply advocated criminal activity to achieve political change, even in a private conversation. Meanwhile police could search without warrant, and arrest and hold without bail. They did so with such gusto that, in an unusual departure from the prevailing herd atmosphere, an editorial cartoon in Québec's leading English-language newspaper showed Jean Marchand, federal Minister of Transport and Pierre Trudeau's right-hand man, holding a Montréal telephone book under his arm and announcing "Nous avons maintenant des listes de suspects." ("We've now got lists of suspects.")

As always in such affairs, there was an official version (both of the nature of the threat and of the reasons why the government response took the form it did) and a later, considerably more nuanced one. As always in such affairs, too, events are explicable only with reference to the general political environment at the time.

Genesis

During the late 1960s and on into the early 1970s, western Europe, particularly Italy but also France and Germany, saw the emergence of urban radical groups who resorted to bombings and assassinations of key economic or political figures plus bank robberies, extortions and ransom kidnappings to finance their activities. These troubles had their echoes in the U.S. with the spread of both militant black civil-rights and student anti-Vietnam war groups. Canada, as usual, remained largely immune, with one exception.

It was a time of rapid growth of Québec nationalism. While in the past that sentiment had been safely diverted by ambitious politicians to be used mainly to secure their own power bases or to squeeze more money out of Ottawa, in the 1960s nationalism was combined with demands for social justice and endorsed by a burgeoning population of university students along with a trade-union movement that was flexing its muscles. Soon there were several openly-operating separatist movements. The danger to the federalist establishment increased dramatically when the principal nationalist groups successfully merged under the leadership of dissident political veterans into the Parti Québécois. It pledged to contest Québec elections, then, if it won, to hold a referendum on sovereignty. Indeed, what brought Pierre Trudeau to the leadership of the federal Liberal Party and to the Prime Ministership of Canada was his visceral opposition to Québec nationalism in all its forms and his commitment to wrestle the demon of separatism to the ground. In October, 1970 he seemed to get his chance.

Along with the peaceful, democratic nationalist movement, there had emerged a violent fringe. Throughout the 1960s Québec saw a series of bank robberies and bombings of political inspiration. Most bombs were amateurish affairs which often did not explode, produced little damage if they did, or hit minor symbols of the federal presence like post-office boxes. But a few were lethal, for example, in 1963 when one claimed the life of the night watchman at a Canadian army recruiting post. The largest blast occurred in 1968 at the (then overwhelmingly anglophone) Montréal Stock Exchange, the center, so a communiqué from the bombers read, of capitalist exploitation in Québec. About 20 people were injured, several seriously. During these years there were other incidental deaths in terrorist actions, for example, in a robbery at a firearms store. But there were no political assassinations; and kidnappings were unknown. Canadian and Québec politicians still thought nothing of wandering about unguarded. But at the end of the 1960s, things began to heat up.

That era saw particularly bitter strikes, especially in construction, into which radical separatists insinuated themselves, although, contrary to the accusations of the authorities and the bosses, they did so more as political profiteers than as instigators. With labor troubles came another wave of bombings. It was still far from the Apocalypse. From the supposed founding of the FLQ in 1962 to the crisis of October, 1970, some 200 bombs went off in Québec, of which an indeterminate number were of strictly criminal origin. By contrast in the 15 months prior to October, 1970, the U.S. saw 4,300 bombs which killed 43 and injured 384.

Then in 1969, FLQ "members" began to debate a change in tactics. Following examples in places like Uruguay and Spain, they embraced the idea of kidnapping foreign diplomats as a means both to publicize their cause and perhaps to raise money. While successful police infiltration stymied early plots, in 1970 they were ready ­ and so was the ambiance.

That year the Parti Québécois was challenging federalist parties in a provincial election campaign in which it was expected to run a solid second. In a rising panic, federalist politicians fanned public fears that the Parti Québécois was merely a front for the FLQ which in turn was portrayed a tool of Communist subversion, usually Cuban in origin. (Cuba, so the story went, was trying to open a second front against the U.S. by stirring up revolution in Québec.) Early one morning shortly before the election, reporters were invited to the headquarters of Sun Life Assurance, one of the biggest financial institutions, to watch Brinks trucks loading securities ostensibly heading to Ontario. Headlines screamed of massive amounts of capital fleeing Québec in anticipation of the upheaval that would follow a separatist victory - the incident was subsequently renowned in Québec history as the "Brinks coup." The Parti Québécois still managed to receive 23% of the vote, but only elected 7 of 104 deputies to the National Assembly, while none of its leaders won in their ridings. Although those results could be imputed at least as much to a traditional gerrymander which favored conservative rural districts over modern urban ones, anger focused almost exclusively on federalist machinations. Bombings began again, particularly when the election was followed by more nasty labor disputes.

In the increasingly tense atmosphere, a federal cabinet super-committee, at the Prime Minister's orders, deliberated under what conditions the War Measures Act might be invoked several months before the FLQ "members" who conducted the subsequent kidnappings had actually met to plan their own response to the election. Furthermore, the Québec Minister of Justice had already begun to stoke public hysteria when he proclaimed that: "We have proof that there are 3,000 terrorists in Québec, following a line set for them by foreign powers, particularly Cuba. They are financed from abroad." Soon the plot expanded to include Moscow and Algeria. The temperature rose further after French-language television interviewed in a Palestinian refugee camp in Jordan two more self-proclaimed FLQ members who declared that while their comrades back home were busy with useless bombings, they were learning the art of selective assassination of political leaders.

After the kidnappings all restraint vanished. Jean Marchand, the federal Transport Minister who served as Prime Minister Trudeau's point man in the crisis, repeated to a somber nation the frightening claim of Québec's Justice Minister, that "the FLQ has nearly 3,000 members". Of course, the minister admitted that there might be some doubt about the exactitude of the figures. But "one thing we know for sure: there is an organization with thousands of guns, rifles, machine guns, bombs and about 2,000 pounds of dynamite, enough to blow up the heart of Montreal.." Having planted firmly the image of great skyscrapers representing the commercial and financial center of the city crumbling into the dust, the minister went on to invoke the threat of sleeper cells. "They have infiltrated into all the vital strategic places in Quebec." Others would elaborate that FLQ adherents had wormed their way into the Canadian Army and Air Force, even into the Royal Canadian Mounted Police; that their actions would soon be backed by massive public demonstrations; that they had set in motion a plan for a special provisional government to take over Quebec to lead it to socialism and independence; that they were working in stages according to a formal script inspired by Mao Zedong; even that, according to a hair-raising tale told in the federal Parliament, a Québec woman had been kidnapped and murdered with the initials FLQ carved in her stomach. In some accounts, too, the amount of dynamite in FLQ hands was inflated to as much as 9,000 pounds or 18,000 sticks making it, combined, a de facto weapon of mass destruction. Indeed, there were even reputedly terrorist training-camps in the Laurentian hills northeast of Montréal, apparently so well hidden as to never attract the attention of the many thousands drawn regularly to the idyllic beauty of the area's lakes, forests and ski hills. All of this was supposedly guided by a couple of home-grown philosophers of violence whose rantings would have attracted little serious attention were it not for the government's need to point the finger at purported instigators. And it served to rationalize, not just the War Measures Act, but a special anti-terrorist force of 13,000 soldiers and cops under the command of the Director General of the Québec Sureté at a time when active underground separatists numbered perhaps 35.

As with the al-Qa'idah legend three decades later, virtually nothing in the official story turned out to have much relationship to the truth. Simply put, there was no such thing as a Front de libération du Québec. Over the 1960s a succession of groups were created spontaneously, with little connection to each except that as one was busted or just broke up, a few still-enthusiastic members might join or form another. The first such grouplet was the Comité de libération nationale, formed in 1962 by four members of the legal separatist Rassemblement pour l'indépendance nationale. At peak it had no more than 20 adherents, many of whom soon left to constitute the more impatient Réseau de résistance. The Comité never graduated much beyond writing revolutionary slogans on walls. However the Réseau initiated thefts of dynamite and bombings of federal symbols. It divided its mighty ranks of perhaps 30 members into two wings ­ a political one and a military one with the grandiose name Armée de libération du Québec. The political wing's most sophisticated terror weapon was the mimeograph machine, the key, members were convinced, to changing the false consciousness of Québec's francophone population. The military wing conducted a couple of successful raids on Québec armories. Then came its 1963 bombing of a Canadian army recruitment center in Montreal which killed the night-watchman. The police had little problem rounding up the ALQ members (full of youthful zeal but hopeless in terms of security) or retrieving most of the stolen weapons, using ordinary police methods under normal criminal law.

The ALQ was followed at various times by the Front républicain pour l'indépendence, the Partisans de l'indépendence du Québec, the Chevaliers de l'indépendence and the Armée révolutionnaire du Québec which killed the manager of a firearms store during a raid, getting its leaders sentenced to death (later commuted to life imprisonment). Most of these groups at different times referred to themselves, and came to be referred to by others, as FLQ. Thus FLQ was an increasingly popular brand-name which various grouplets could freely appropriate to give themselves an apparent coherence, scale, continuity and organizational foundation that they did not actually possess, or to give the media a way to keep things simple enough for audiences whose main interest was really how well the Montréal Canadiens were doing in the Stanley Cup playoffs. Francis Simard, one of those involved in the Laporte kidnap-murder, described the formation of his particular unit: "We became a group, but without a name or a constitution or statutes. When the time came to identify ourselves, we decided on the FLQ. ...We didn't join a group: we took the name of a movement that had become us."

Not only were there an assortment of groups, but they lacked agreement on strategy. Some deplored bombings as counter-productive: others lauded them as blows to keep the system off balance. While almost all used leftist jargon, some were simply angry anglophobes; others had a genuine commitment to social revolution. Nor were bombings the result of some coherently organized campaign. "Waves" of bombings were sometimes the work of single individuals which stopped when that person either was apprehended or just turned to other pastimes. Even the last set of bombings before October 1970, timed to coincide with a bitter construction strike, was done by one person who, along with a couple friends, called himself the Front de libération des travailleurs du Québec, although his "cell" later adopted the simple FLQ label as well. The two October kidnappings were equally the work, not of an organization with a coherent plan into which the kidnappings fitted as a tactical move, but of nine people who in turn split into two discordant groups, each of which made things up as they went along.

When those nine FLQ "members" deliberated the possibility of kidnapping diplomats, five were in favor, four opposed. The five then constituted themselves as the Liberation Cell, so called because of their intent to use their hostage, whoever he or she turned out to be, to force the release of the 23 "political prisoners." Once the majority had made their decision in principle, but with no designated target, the four in opposition decided that their role would be to find money to support the others. How they tried to do so exposed another central myth.

Far from being financed from abroad, as the Québec Justice Minister claimed to believe, FLQ actions were paid for from local resources. Nor did the "movement" have a central treasury ­ each grouplet took care of itself. Militants who had jobs contributed out of their salaries; while dynamite and guns were stolen. When their own resources were insufficient, a frequent occurrence since most members were students or unemployed, some diverted the proceeds of bank loans, while others engaged in credit-card fraud, for example, the purchase on credit of goods which were resold for cash to friends. Since this took time and energy for low returns, some turned to bank robberies. When the group of four headed off to the U.S., it was to run a scam in which they would sell American Express travelers' checks on the black market for a certain percentage of their face value, then report them stolen to get a full refund.

However, while they were there, they heard the news of the Cross kidnapping. So they turned around and headed home. Their decision to kidnap Pierre Laporte was made only after they decided that the government was stalling; and when they issued their own demands, they added the requirement that the government rehire the fired postal workers, a demand which their comrades in the Liberation cell had dropped.

In other words, even though the nine involved in the events of October, 1970 had formally met, which many FLQ "members" do not seem to have done, there had been no coordination as to targets and no agreement on objectives. In fact these were subject to radical change on an ad hoc basis - those who grabbed and murdered Pierre Laporte were precisely the ones who had originally dissented from the strategy of kidnapping. Even the financing arrangements were haphazard. Nothing better summarizes this fearful manifestation of "terrorist finance" than the fact that, after adopting the lofty name "Chénier financing cell," the four who seized Pierre Laporte managed to feed themselves and their captive and to pay for trips across the city to plant communiqués only by lifting $60 from their victim's pocket.

Denouement

The kidnapping of the British diplomat had been handled in a cool-headed way, as an important but not really exceptional police matter. The Prime Minister of Québec thought nothing of leaving for a state visit to the US. Pierre Laporte, the Minister of Labour and Immigration (or as FLQ communiqués rudely preferred, Minister of Unemployment and Assimilation) was grabbed while playing football with his nephew on his front lawn, with no police escort in sight. After the Laporte kidnapping, the roof fell in.

Senior politicians in the Trudeau government in Ottawa stressed publicly the compelling need not just to combat the FLQ but to reassert federal moral leadership in Québec. This was cheered on, perhaps even manipulated, by the government of Montréal. The mayor, Jean Drapeau, an old-fashioned machine politician with a flare for self-promotion to rival that of Rudy Giuliani, faced a municipal election in which a coalition of social-justice groups was mounting a serious challenge. Their leaders were among those that the police rounded up. With the opposition discredited and decapitated, Drapeau's party swept 92 per cent of the vote and captured every city-council seat. While doubtlessly the amateur nature of the campaign run by activist groups only recently stuck together into a quasi-political party played a role in the lop-sided victory, there can be little doubt that the politics of fear were also powerfully at work.

In the aftermath, the federal government took the opportunity to replace the War Measures Act which, by definition, could only be used in very exceptional circumstances and for limited periods, with a new, more saleable Public Order Act which permitted the government to ban the FLQ or any other association which advocated a change of government in Québec or a change in its political relationship to Canada by violent means. In effect the civil libertarian Trudeau got his wish ­ to criminalize association and exhortation if it might serve to advance the one political cause he truly detested. The War Measures Act itself was eventually repealed and replaced by the Emergency Measures Act which, while permitting much the same arbitrary actions, had the virtue of requiring any measures undertaken under it to be vetted by the Canadian bill of rights - which did not exist at the time of the October Crisis.

Yet neither the War Measures Act nor its successor(s) had anything to do with the end of violent separatism in Québec. Virtually all of those arrested en masse ­ including some of Québec's best known poets, singers and union leaders ­ were released very quickly with not much to complain about except the embarrassment and inconvenience or, at worst, an occasional whack over the head with a telephone book. In fact, being one of those arrested during the October Crisis became a badge of social distinction in Québec for decades after.

In the aftermath the FLQ itself was rolled up - by ordinary police work. James Cross was safely released. His kidnappers went into exile in Cuba before petitioning to return home where they served time. Once out of prison, instead of reverting to planting bombs, one of their leaders made a career in renovating houses, including the Montréal home of Canada's current Governor-General. Pierre Laporte's assassins, by contrast, were arrested and convicted, to general applause. By killing their hostage they had nothing left with which to bargain and had forfeited any public sympathy.

The murder of the labour minister caused support to collapse. Public revulsion also made it much easier for the police to cultivate informants and to infiltrate the remaining grouplets, which were quickly wound up. Even those "theoreticians" who had supposedly inspired and guided FLQ actions spent the rest of their public careers denouncing political violence. Perhaps the only irregular police action came a few years after the events when a leader of the earlier generation of FLQ militants was assassinated in exile in Paris. The suspicion among his sympathizers was that the murder was done by a hit squad recruited by the Security and Intelligence Branch of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police to ensure that he never carried out an alleged threat to kill the Prime Minister of Québec in revenge for the October events. However that is probably giving Canadian police forces credit for a ruthless efficiency they are unlikely to possess. That same RCMP managed a few years later to so blunder in its efforts to infiltrate the legal separatist movement as to force the federal government to strip it of its security and intelligence functions which were then vested in a new civilian agency. After many years with really nothing to do, CSIS (the Canadian Security Intelligence Service) finally found a post-9/11 raison d'être in harassing citizens of Muslim and/or Arab descent.

As to the notion that the federal government, by using the events, could also strike a blow against peaceful separatism, there was a chance to test that hypothesis during the 1976 Québec provincial elections - which the Parti Québécois won handily. Many who had been sympathetic to the cause in principle but apathetic in practice had been angered and energized by the federal actions. The very victory of a democratic separatist movement was enough to ensure that the violent separatism of the so-called Front de libération du Québec vanished from the political scene. When a bomb goes off in Montréal today, it is most likely the work of rival biker gangs.

After its 1976 victory, the Parti Québécois held power for most of the next 30 years, even though it never succeeded in winning a referendum on independence. When it was finally relegated to third party status in the March, 2007 elections, it was because the social and economic grievances which had brought it to power had, if not disappeared, at least been so reduced as to largely obviate their use as an ethno-political rallying cry. By the start of the new millenium the old disparity of incomes between anglophone and francophone in Québec had almost completely vanished ­ some data indicates that it has even reversed. The French language was fully entrenched in law, education and, more importantly, common use, including in business. And the old dominant class of "Queen and Country" anglophones had either fled to Ontario or been increasingly marginalized by a rapidly growing population of comfortably trilingual allophones.

Much the same kind of results would undoubtedly hold true throughout North Africa, the Middle East and Central Asia if nature were allowed to take its course. Egregious terrorist acts in and of themselves would lead to general revulsion. Indeed, across much of the Muslim world, 9/11 had precisely that impact - until the U.S. government decided to fritter away its moral capital by a set of special atrocities of its own. And any victory by peaceful Islamist movements, particularly if allowed to address legitimate social grievances, would do far more to discredit violent political Islam than bunker-busting bombs or mass incarcerations based on race and religion ­ whose only long term effect is to legitimize and strengthen what they seek to crush and destroy. Alas, the U.S. government, along with its "allies" abroad, including, remarkably enough, the current Canadian one, has a rather different view.

R.T. Naylor is the author of highly original and radical work on Money, Myth and Misinformation, now assembled in Satanic Purses, being published by McGill-Queen's University Press, from which this essay has been excerpted. Naylor is professor of Economics at McGill. He can be reached at thomas.naylor@mcgill.ca

 

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