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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: jackhach who wrote (508063)12/11/2003 8:37:49 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769668
 
US now on the training side of Israelis.....How to kill, occupy, suppress, without the press getting an upper hand on the truth.....
Published on Thursday, December 11, 2003 by the Christian Science
Monitor
'Made in Israel' Crackdowns in Iraq
Won't Work
by Helena Cobban

In recent weeks, many US military units in Iraq have turned from trying to
win Iraqi "hearts and minds" to a "get tough" policy that explicitly copies
many moves from the playbook used by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) in
the West Bank and Gaza. These moves include demolition of homes of
suspects, imposition of stifling movement controls and other collective
punishments on civilians, and the frequent use of excessive force.

Tactics like these are unethical under any moral code, and illegal under the
Fourth Geneva Convention. In addition, their adoption is shortsighted. In
Israel itself, many leading strategic thinkers now openly admit that the IDF's
three-year-long pursuit of these tactics has still not "convinced" the
Palestinians to end their defiance of Israel's will.

(It is also tragic that US commanders moved to these antihumanitarian and
antidemocratic measures at the same time President Bush issued his call
for the spread of democracy throughout the Arab world.)

In Israel, criticism of the country's get-tough policies toward Palestinians
has been voiced by four former heads of the country's Shin Bet security
agency - and also by Gen. Moshe Yaalon who, as sitting IDF chief of staff,
is the man in charge of implementing all the IDF's policies. In late October,
Mr. Yaalon voiced a rare public criticism of the civilian leaders whose
mandate he is sworn to follow. He told reporters that the IDF's unrelenting
use of tough tactics in the occupied territories, "increases hatred for Israel
and strengthens the terror organizations." He added, "In our tactical
decisions, we are operating contrary to our strategic interest."

In the US military, several planners and commanders have been taking
lessons in tactics from the IDF. In July, for example, Brig. Gen. Michael
Vane, a deputy chief of staff at the US Army Training and Doctrine
Command, wrote in a letter to Army Magazine that he had recently traveled
to Israel "to glean lessons learned from their counterterrorist operations in
urban areas." But so far, US commanders on the ground in Iraq seem not to
have learned of Ya'alon's important insight that decisions that seem sound
at the tactical level can add up to a setback at the broader level of national
strategy.

One US colonel overseeing movement controls around a village north of
Baghdad explained to The New York Times how he thinks the new tough
policy will work: "With a heavy dose of fear and violence, and a lot of money
for projects, I think we can convince these people that we are here to help
them."

I don't underestimate the challenge the US commanders face in Iraq. A
recent poll organized by a British company found that only 21 percent of
Iraqis said they had "quite a lot" of trust in the US and British forces there.
The rest all described their trust level as "not very much," or "none at all."
The get-tough policies are only likely to make things worse.

The US commanders in Iraq are trying to do their best in an almost
impossible situation. In March, the military was ordered by its civilian
bosses to undertake a rapid advance into Iraq with a small, mobile force -
and with the expectation that Saddam Hussein's regime would fall and the
Iraqi people would greet them with open arms. Hussein's regime fell. But the
attitudes of most Iraqis toward the US forces have been much more
complex than expected, and the force levels there have never been enough
to assure public security or the restoration of basic services.

At this point, the situation has become so tense that it is unlikely that
merely increasing the force levels could solve the problem. Anyway, the US
has no additional forces to spare, and few or no other countries look ready
to add their troops.

The only way forward, then, is for President Bush and his advisers to act
seriously on all their fine rhetoric about the need for a rapid transition to Iraqi
self-government. Can the US-dominated occupation force oversee this
transition smoothly and successfully? The evidence so far all says "no." If
not the US, who? Only the United Nations has the experience and the
legitimacy to play this absolutely vital leadership role.

Yes, a transitional UN political leadership in Iraq might still have some
reliance on US forces. But those forces would no longer be trapped in
self-defeating, made-in-Israel paradigms of using "fear and violence." They
would be working alongside Iraqis and experienced UN democracy-builders
as partners, not intimidators.

The Iraq Census Bureau says it could produce a decent national voter roll
by next September. But to have genuine elections - whether in Iraq or the
West Bank - people need freedom of movement, freedom of expression,
freedom of association. Those are freedoms we should all support. They are
quite incompatible with get-tough military occupation.

• Helena Cobban is the author of five books on international issues
including 'The Moral Architecture of World Peace: Nobel Laureates Discuss
Our Global Future'

Copyright © 2003 The Christian Science Monitor



To: jackhach who wrote (508063)12/11/2003 10:55:30 PM
From: Srexley  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769668
 
$2.65 per gallon. Cheaper than fuel in Europe. Doesn't sound like that bad of a price to me.