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To: Land Shark who wrote (965297)9/18/2016 11:53:30 AM
From: longnshort2 Recommendations

Recommended By
Bonefish
FJB

  Respond to of 1576177
 
they only give 5% to charities you ok with that . it's a slush fund



To: Land Shark who wrote (965297)9/18/2016 2:02:20 PM
From: Broken_Clock  Respond to of 1576177
 
Fantasy picture?

Ask Syria, Honduras or Libya

Obomber's using a fake ceasefire to make his second attack in 3 days against the Syrian army.

Looks like he wants ww3 BEFORE he leaves office.

US Bombs Syrian Army Base in Deir Ezzor, Killing 83 Troops ISIS Overruns Area, Threatens Key Airport After US Blunder
by Jason Ditz, September 17, 2016

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In what could prove to be the single biggest blunder of the entire US war in Syria, US warplanes today attacked a Syrian army base in the Jebel Tharda area on Deir Ezzor Province, in the ISIS-dominated eastern portion of the country, killing at least 83 Syrian soldiers and wounding 120 others.

Pentagon officials claimed they thought the site was “an ISIS tank position,” and admitted to not giving Russia a precise location before the attacks. Russian officials slammed the US over that, saying it underscored the Pentagon’s “stubborn refusal” to coordinate actions properly.

US warplanes killing 83 Syrian troops during a ceasefire may not be the worst of the story, incredibly enough. Those troops had been defending the area from ISIS, who quickly overran what was left of the base’s defenses, and are now even closer to the Deir Ezzor airport.

The airport has been one of the last major government holdouts in the Deir Ezzor capital, and at times the Syrian warplanes flying out of the airport were the only thing keeping ISIS from overrunning the entire eastern half of the country. The US airstrikes seriously softened up the defenses in the area, and might finally do what years of ISIS offensives couldn’t, put ISIS in control of the airport.

US officials expressed “ regret” over the killing of the Syrian troops, but condemned Russia for requesting an emergency UN Security Council meeting, saying that the Russians “had blood on their hands” from the war themselves and wasn’t in a position to criticize the US botches.

According to Centcom, the Syrian troops were all “out in the open” at the base, and they also destroyed six military APCs and one tank. They reported they were “watching” the Syrian Army base for days before the attacks, figuring everyone there was ISIS.



To: Land Shark who wrote (965297)9/18/2016 2:04:29 PM
From: Broken_Clock  Respond to of 1576177
 
and when the Russians call for UN action....Obomber says "peace" is a stunt

US Envoy Slams Russian ‘Stunt’ of Calling Emergency UN Security Council Meeting

Russian Envoy Storms Out of Meeting, Condemns 'Heavy-Handed' US



To: Land Shark who wrote (965297)9/18/2016 2:06:35 PM
From: Broken_Clock  Respond to of 1576177
 
Obomber officially at war in Syria...boots on the ground

US Troops Now Embedded With Turkish Military in Northern Syria

Special Forces Intended to 'Advise and Assist' in Offensives Against ISIS



To: Land Shark who wrote (965297)9/18/2016 2:11:21 PM
From: Broken_Clock  Respond to of 1576177
 
Talk to Glenn...he'll straighten your twisted mind out. lol

+++


Clinton’s Basket of “Deplorables” [1] Submitted by Glen Ford on Wed, 09/14/2016 - 15:19



2016 presidential campaign [2]

[1]

by BAR executive editor Glen Ford Hillary Clinton should include herself in her basket of “deplorables.” She’s got “racism” and "sexism” covered through her endorsement of mass Black incarceration and welfare “reform.” Killing hundreds of thousands of Muslims in Syria surely qualifies as Islamophobia, and waging war on the world is the highest expression of xenophobia -- fear of foreigners. Put that woman in a basket!

Clinton’s Basket of “Deplorables” by BAR executive editor Glen Ford The Black Misleadership Class pretends to have no memory of the Nineties and their own complicity in the Clintons’ 'deplorable' racism and sexism.”

Speaking to a room full of rich contributors, Hillary Clinton dumped half of Donald Trump’s supporters into a “ basket of deplorables [3]... racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, Islamaphobic — you name it.” Actually, considerably more than half of Trump’s legions match up with most or all of those terms, which is why the Republicans have been the White Man’s Party [4] since the Sixties, replacing the Demo-Dixiecrats. With white supremacy as their organizing principle, Republicans have won white majorities in every national election since 1968. Clinton’s husband, Slick Willie, teamed with Al Gore and other white southern Democrats to form the Democratic Leadership Council in the 1980s to stem the attrition of whites to the Republicans by mimicking the GOP on racially coded issues like welfare and crime. The former Arkansas governor reckoned he could win the White House in 1992 at the expense of Black people, who are trapped, by the very nature of the duopoly system, in the Democratic Party.

Bill Clinton appealed to the racist and sexist elements of his constituency -- and rewarded his corporate backers -- by ejecting millions of disproportionately Black women and children from the social safety net and unleashing the greatest surge of mass Black incarceration in modern history. His wife and fellow lawyer, acting as co-president, raged against young Black “super-predators” that needed to be “brought to heel” – words she has recently been forced to regret, but not “deplore.” The Clinton’s destruction of Aid to Families with Dependent Children caused welfare rights advocate Peter Edelman to resign his subcabinet post and prompted his wife, Marian Wright Edelman, founder of the Children’s Defense Fund, to describe the Clintons as “ not friends in politics [5].” Yet, Hillary Clinton continues to feature her youthful stint as a lawyer for the Children’s Defense Fund as proof of her compassion for poor Black children, while the Black Misleadership Class pretends to have no memory of the Nineties and their own complicity in the Clintons’ “deplorable” racism and sexism.

“Clinton raged against young Black ‘super-predators’ that needed to be ‘brought to heel’ – words she has recently been forced to regret, but not ‘deplore.’”

Hillary Clinton spares half of Trump’s supporters the shame of reduction to deplorabledom in recognition that some “basket people” feel left out by “government” and “the economy” and are “just desperate for change.” However, as the candidate of the corporate status quo, Clinton offers nothing but more of the same and must therefore -- just like Trump -- run a campaign of name-calling and demonization not witnessed since the McCarthy era. Having definitively turned their party to the Right a generation ago, the Clintons now see an opportunity to use Donald Trump’s destruction of the Republican Party as-we-knew-it to forge a unitary corporate super-party encompassing all of the Democrats’ base constituencies, Democrat-friendly Wall Street and Silicon Valley plutocrats, plus those oligarchs and “national security” and “defense” circles that have traditionally been linked to the GOP. Only the rump of Trump “deplorables” would be left outside the “Big Tent,” along with a small and disorganized Left. That’s the plan.

The lines that Hillary draws around her Big Tent are rhetorical, not substantive, since she has nothing of substance to offer to any mass constituency. The duopoly system is in terminal crisis because capitalism is no longer capable of “reform”: all is crisis and chaos under the reign of hegemonic finance capital, whose captains create nothing while monetizing everything. These are the Lords of Capital that have sustained the once-and-future First Couple with $153 million in speaking fees [6] to keep the mansion lights burning in the interim between their tours in the White House. The Clinton Foundation is a creature of Slick Willie & Wife’s ongoing contract with the international ruling class.

“Only the rump of Trump ‘deplorables’ would be left outside the 'Big Tent,' along with a small and disorganized Left.”

Hillary’s global mission, like Barack Obama’s, is to crush the old order of sovereign nation states regulated by international law, and impose a U.S.-enforced corporate dominion over the planet. In that sense, the Trans Pacific Partnership and its trans-Atlantic counterpart flow from the same source as drone warfare, “humanitarian” regime change warfare, and jihadist proxy warfare, and are inseparable from economic sanctions warfare and the emerging battlefield of cyberwar.

In terms of deplorability, nothing else comes close. Hillary’s mission, as the public agent of multinational capital, is the triumph of capitalist Manifest Destiny -- a global nightmare that is antithetical to any vision of democracy held by any of the world’s peoples. Therefore, the mission is relentlessly pursued, but never articulated. Instead, defamation becomes the language of U.S. foreign policy. Russian president Vladimir Putin becomes “ Hitler [7]” in Hillary’s mouth -- an effective declaration of war or intent to assassinate. When Moammar Gaddafi was murdered by U.S.-backed jihadists in Libya, Hillary cackled, “We came, we saw, he died” – an execration beyond deplorable, by any diplomatic or civilized standard.

Last week, she met with a “bipartisan” group of “national security leaders” -- translation: imperial warmongers that serve both parties -- to call attention to the fact that most of the spooks, warmongers and global destabilizers are in her Big Tent. She immediately read Trump – who (sometimes, but not always) opposes “regime change” -- out of the foreign policy consensus. "National security experts on both sides of the aisle are chilled by what they're hearing from the Republican nominee," she said [8].

Among the “leaders” in the room was David Patraeus, the former general who advocates the U.S. openly arm the jihadists of al-Nusra, the al Qaida affiliate in Syria [9] (until they changed their name, with al Qaida’s blessing), supposedly to fight ISIS. Clinton does not find this one bit “deplorable.” She deserves a “basket” all her own, labeled “unspeakable” toxic entity.

BAR executive editor Glen Ford can be contacted at Glen.Ford@BlackAgendaReport.com [10].






To: Land Shark who wrote (965297)9/18/2016 2:17:06 PM
From: Broken_Clock1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Old Boothby

  Respond to of 1576177
 
you just racist against Muslims or also asians and Centro/S. Americans?
++


Latin America at a Cross Roads: The Right's Resurgence [1] Submitted by Danny Haiphong on Tue, 09/13/2016 - 18:37



U.S. imperialism in Latin America [2]

[1]

by Danny Haiphong President Obama would like to count the fall of left-wing governments in Brazil and Argentina, and the weakening of the socialist government in Venezuela, as part of his “legacy.” He is a master of subversion. “The resurgence of the right-wing in recent years threatens to undo the progress Latin America has made under the left's guidance.” Across the continent, “the legacy of colonialism and neo-colonialism continues to haunt Latin America.”

Latin America at a Cross Roads: The Right's Resurgence by Danny Haiphong “Latin America's oligarchy possesses as its ultimate objective the elimination of all gains that poor and working people have made since 1998.”

Latin America has been the site of the world's most radical continental movement since the fall of the Soviet Union. Venezuela's successful Bolivarian Revolution has inspired nations across South America to fight poverty and neo-colonialism. After Hugo Chavez's election in 1999, Latin American countries have pursued a model of regional independence and integration that considers the needs of workers and poor people over the interests of private capital. Venezuela, Bolivia and Ecuador are just a few nations that have drastically reduced national poverty levels since the turn of the century. However, the resurgence of the right-wing in recent years threatens to undo the progress Latin America has made under the left's guidance.

Of course, the current state of Latin America cannot be discussed outside of the context of US imperialism. For centuries, US imperialism has subverted Latin American independence through the support of brutal death squads, sanctions, and oligarchs. The experience of Venezuela is a microcosm of US imperialism's broad efforts to keep the continent in a state of dependency on the US and West. In 2002, the Central Intelligence Agency sponsored a coup in Venezuela [3] of then President Hugo Chavez. The coup was unsuccessful due to the undeniable mass support that the Bolivarian government possessed from the masses.

“The movements that brought the Bolivarian revolution electoral power in Venezuela and other allied nations have yet to wrestle control of the entire state apparatus as Cuba has done in order to keep the oligarchy at bay.”

However, post-coup Venezuela has been the target of intensified attacks by the right. This has caused Venezuela to suffer economically. Venezuela has been one of many Latin American countries where the left has lost ground of late. The US has not helped the matter by slapping sanctions against the country in 2015. The so-called "opposition" in Venezuela scored a majority in Venezuela's National Assembly in 2015 [4]. Opposition forces have since hit the streets to petition for a recall [5] of current President Nicolas Maduro. But the right's resurgence has not been confined to Venezuela. All over the continent, the legacy of colonialism and neo-colonialism continues to haunt Latin America.

In Argentina, US-based vulture hedge funds waged a viscous campaign in 2014 against the left-wing government of Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner. These hedge funds, working directly with the IMF and World Bank, demanded that Argentina's government repay debts imposed on prior administrations. The hedge funds based their demand on a US federal court ruling in their favor in 2012. The New York State court ruled that Argentina had a legal obligation to pay the debt in full with an additional interest rate of 1600 percent [6]. The ruling pressured the left-wing government to either default on the debt or reject it entirely.

President Fernandez de Kirchner chose to reject the rule of the vulture funds only to have her party lose power in the 2015 elections. Right-wing business mogul Mauricio Macri's Presidential victory marked another substantial shift to the right in Latin America. In less than a year, Macri has eliminated thousands of public sector jobs [7]. Furthermore, an illegal coup undertaken by Brazil's oligarchy this past year has only added fuel to the march of the right-wing across the continent. The new Brazilian President and his wholly corrupt lackeys have set their sights on the elimination of "Bolsa Familia," [8] the country's most notable social welfare program.

“An illegal coup undertaken by Brazil's oligarchy this past year has only added fuel to the march of the right-wing across the continent.”

Latin America's oligarchy possesses as its ultimate objective the elimination of all gains that poor and working people have made since 1998. That means the destruction of state-subsidized programs which helped Latin America reduce poverty by over sixteen percentage points [9] from 2000 to 2012.

Such progress is the primary reason for the right-wing’s discontent throughout the continent. Of course, the right-wing could not have regained political momentum on its own. The US government has played a critical role in the empowerment of the right in Latin America.

Millions of dollars each year have gone to NGOs sponsored by Washington to destabilize Latin America's left-wing movement. NGOs such as the USAID and the National Endowment for Democracy have used this money to support the organized political efforts of the right. In 2013, the US gave 60 million to the USAID and NED [10] to strengthen right-wing dissent in Cuba, Bolivia, Ecuador and Venezuela. Between 2013 and 2014, the National Endowment for Democracy delivered $14 million to opposition groups [11] in Venezuela. These US proxies backed the campaign efforts of US stooge Leopoldo Lopez that led to the defeat the Bolivarian movement in the last National Assembly elections.

Such covert sabotage, according to Wikileaks cables [12], represents the broad policy of the US government toward Latin America's left-wing movement. But as the top imperialist dog, the US has historically not limited itself to merely "soft power" tactics of destruction. US imperialism's mission to maintain neo-colonialism in Latin America has been a violent one. Chile's most brutal dictator, Augusto Pinochet, was the product of a CIA-backed coup [13]. The people of El Salvador and Nicaragua were slaughtered by CIA-sponsored "contra" forces [14] in the 1980s. And this is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to US imperialism's murderous record in Latin America.

“Cuba has built a socialist democracy where participation of every single worker in the nation is the institutional norm.”

It was from these conditions that the Bolivarian left emerged to follow Cuba's socialist example. However, unlike Cuba, the Bolivarian movement has been forced to share power with the neo-colonial elite. This has played a significant role in the current resurgence of the right. Cuba has been able to maintain full, socialist independence from the US because of its dictatorial and democratic character.

Cuba has staunchly defended the gains of its revolution from being undermined by outside forces. At the same time, Cuba has built a socialist democracy where participation of every single worker in the nation is the institutional norm. Indeed, it has taken the entire nation to ward off non-stop aggression from the United States. The Cuban Revolution's ability to increase the standard of living for all Cubans in the face of US sanctions and sabotage would have been impossible otherwise. The movements that brought the Bolivarian revolution electoral power in Venezuela and other allied nations have yet to wrestle control of the entire state apparatus as Cuba has done in order to keep the oligarchy at bay.

Working class power is the only true counterweight to the right's resurgence in Latin America. The US government remains the single largest obstacle in the way of Latin America's self determination. Activists in the United States can aid in the defense and further development of the Latin American left by fighting its government at home. With the right-wing on the march and fully funded by the US, there is no better time than now to demand the US eject itself from Latin America. US meddling in the affairs of other nations must be met with a swift "left" hook or else the political landscape all over the world will continue to move rightward.

Danny Haiphong is an Asian activist and political analyst in the Boston area. He can be reached at wakeupriseup1990@gmail.com [15]






To: Land Shark who wrote (965297)9/18/2016 2:19:24 PM
From: Broken_Clock1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Old Boothby

  Respond to of 1576177
 
HRC racism exposed

===



The Façade of “Humanitarian Intentions” in Libya: A Review of Paolo Sensini’s Book [1] Submitted by Edward Curtin on Tue, 09/13/2016 - 18:16



War Against Libya [2]

[1]

A book review by Edward Curtin “The US/NATO forces armed and supported all sorts of Islamist terrorists, including the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group, led by a close Afghan associate of Osama bin Laden,” reports Paolo Sensini’s new book, with a forward by Cynthia McKinney. Sensini explores Washington’s motives for regime change. “Gaddafi was on the point of concluding agreements that might have contributed decisively to the economic independence of the entire continent of Africa.”

The Façade of “Humanitarian Intentions” in Libya: A Review of Paolo Sensini’s Book A book review by Edward Curtin This article previously appeared in Global Research [3].

“Outright lies were told by Al Jazeera, Al Arabiya, and repeated by the western media, about Gaddafi allegedly slaughtering and raping thousands of Libyans.”

It is rare for a historian to write a history of a significant issue and bring it into the present time; even rarer when the work coincides with the reemergence of that issue on the world stage. Paolo Sensini has done just that with Sowing Chaos: Libya in the Wake of Humanitarian Intervention (Clarity Press, 2016). It is a revelatory historical analysis of the exploitation and invasion of Libya by colonial and imperialistic powers for more than a century.

It is also timely since the western powers, led by the United States, have once again invaded Libya (2011), overthrown its government, and are in the process (2016) of creating further chaos and destruction by bombing the country for the benefit of western elites under the pretext of humanitarian concern.

As with the history of many countries off the radar of western consciousness, Libyan history is a tragic tale of what happens when a country dares assert its right to independence – it is destroyed by violent attack, financial subterfuge, or both.

Although an Italian, and Italy has a long history of exploiting Libya, a close neighbor, Sensini stands with the victims of colonial and imperial savagery. Not an armchair historian, he traveled to Libya during the 2011 war to see for himself what was true. Despite his moral stand against western aggression, his historical accuracy is unerring and his sourcing impeccable. For 234 pages of text, he provides 481 endnotes, including such fine sources as Peter Dale Scott, Patrick Cockburn, Michel Chossudovsky, Pablo Escobar, and Robert Parry, to name but a few better known names.

“A tragic tale of what happens when a country dares assert its right to independence -- it is destroyed by violent attack, financial subterfuge, or both.”

His account begins with Italy’s 1911 war against Libya that “Francesco Saverio Nitti charmingly described …. as the taking of a ‘sandbox’.” The war was accompanied by a popular song, “Tripoli, bel suol d’amore” (Tripoli, beauteous land of love). Even in those days war and love were synonymous in the eyes of aggressors.

This war went on until 1932 when the Sanusis’s resistance was finally crushed by Mussolini. First Italy conquered the Ottoman Turks, who controlled western Libya (Tripolitania); then the Sanusis, a Sunni Islamic mystical militant brotherhood, who controlled eastern Libya (Cyrenaica). This Italian war of imperial aggression lasted 19 years, and, as Sensini writes, “was hardly noticed in Italy.”

I cannot help but think of the U.S. wars against Afghanistan and Iraq that are in their 15th and 13th years respectively, and counting; they are not making a ripple on the placid indifference of the American people.

Sensini presents this history clearly and succinctly. Most of the book is devoted to the period following the 1968 overthrow of King Idris by the Free Unionist Officers, led by the 27 year old captain Mu’ammar Gaddafi. This bloodless coup d’état by military officers, who had all risen from the poorer classes, was called “Operation Jerusalem” to honor the Palestinian liberation movement. The new government, The Revolutionary Command Council (RCC), had “three key themes …. ‘freedom, socialism, and unity,’ to which we can add the struggle against western influences within the Arab world, and, in particular, the struggle against Israel (whose very existence was, according to Gaddafi, a confirmation of colonialization and subjugation).”

Sensini explains the Libyan government under Gaddafi, including his world theory that was encapsulated in his “Green Book” and the birth of what was called “Jamahiriyya” (State of the Masses). Gaddafi called Libya the “Socialist People’s Libyan Arab Jamahiriyya.”

“Gaddafi described Islamists as “reactionaries in the name of Islam.”

Under Gaddafi there was dialogue between Christians and Muslims, including the establishment of diplomatic relations with the Holy See, and visits from Eastern Orthodox and Anglican religious leaders. Fundamentalist Islamic groups criticized Gaddafi as a heretic for these moves. Gaddafi described Islamists as “reactionaries in the name of Islam.” His animus toward Israel remained, however, due to the Palestinian issue. He promoted women’s rights, and in 1996 Libya “was the first country to issue an international arrest warrant with Osama bin Laden’s name on it.”

He had a lot of enemies: Israel, Islamists, al Qaeda, the western imperial countries, etc. But he had friends as well, especially among the developing countries.

A large portion of the book concerns the U.S./NATO 2011 attack on Libya and its aftermath. This attack was justified and sanctioned by UN Resolutions 1970 (2/26/11) and 1973 (3/17/11). These resolutions were prepared by the work of the International Commission on Intervention and State Sovereignty (ICISS) that in 2000-2001 produced a justification for powerful nations to intervene in the internal affairs of any nation they chose. Termed the “Responsibility to Protect” (R2P), it justified the illegal and immoral “humanitarian” attack on Libya in 2011. The ICISS, based in NYC, was founded by, among others, the Carnegie Corporation, the Simons, Rockefeller, William and Flora Hewitt, and John D. and Catherine MacArthur foundations, elite moneyed institutions devoted to American interventions throughout the world.

When the US/NATO attacked Libya, they did so despite the illegality of the intervention (an Orwellian term) under the UN Resolutions that prohibit arming of “rebels” who do not represent the legal government of a country. On March 30, 2011 the Washington Post, a staunch supporter of US aggression, reported an anonymous government source as saying that “President Obama has issued a secret funding that would authorize the CIA to carry out a clandestine effort to provide arms and other support to Libyan opposition groups.” None of the mainstream media, including the Washington Post, noted the hypocrisy of reporting illegal activities as if they were legal. The law had become irrelevant.

“In 1996 Libya “was the first country to issue an international arrest warrant with Osama bin Laden’s name on it.”

The Obama administration had become the opposite of the Kennedy administration. Whereas JFK, together with Dag Hammarskjold the assassinated U.N. Secretary General, had used the UN to defend the growing third world independence movements throughout the world, Obama has chosen to use the UN to justify his wars of aggression against them. Libya is a prime example.

Sensini shows in great detail which groups were armed, where they operated, and who they represented. The US/NATO forces armed and supported all sorts of Islamist terrorists, including the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG), led by Abu al-Laith al Libby, a close Afghan associate of Osama bin Laden, and al Qaeda’s third in command.

“These fanatical criminals (acclaimed as liberators by the mainstream media worldwide) were to form Libya’s emerging ruling class. These were people tasked to ensure a democratic future for Libya. However, the “rebel” council of Benghazi did what it does best – ensuring chaos for the country as a whole, under a phantom government and a system of local fiefdoms (each with a warlord or tribal chief). This appears to be the desired outcome all along, and not just in Libya.”

Sensini is especially strong in his critical analysis of the behavior of the corporate mass media worldwide in propagandizing public opinion for war. Outright lies -- “aligning its actions with Goebbels’ famous principle of perception management” and the Big Lie (thanks to Edward Bernays, the American father of Public Relations) -- were told by Al Jazeera, Al Arabiya, and repeated by the western media, about Gaddafi allegedly slaughtering and raping thousands of Libyans. Sensini argues persuasively that Libya was a game-changer in this regard.

Here, the mass media played the part of a military vanguard. The cart, as it were, had been put before the horse. Rather than obediently repackaging and relaying the news that had been spoon fed to them by military commanders and Secretaries of State, the media were called upon actually to provide legitimation for armed actors. The media’s function was military. The material aggression on the ground and in the sky was paralleled and anticipated by virtual and symbolic aggression. Worldwide, we have witnessed the affirmation of a Soviet approach to information, enhanced to the nth degree. It effectively produces a “deafening silence” – an information deficit. The trade unions, the parties of the left and the “love-thy-neighbor” pacifists did not rise to this challenge and demonstrate against the rape of Libya.

“When the US/NATO attacked Libya, they did so despite the illegality of the intervention under the UN Resolutions that prohibit arming of ‘rebels’ who do not represent the legal government of a country.”

The US/NATO attack on Libya, involving tens of thousands of bombing raids and cruise missile, killed thousands of innocent civilians. This was, as usual, explained away as unfortunate “collateral damage,” when it was admitted at all. The media did their part to downplay it. Sensini rightly claims that the U.S./NATO and the UN are basically uninterested in the question of the human toll. “The most widely cited press report on the effects of the NATO sorties and missile attacks on the civilian population is most surely that of The New York Times. In ‘Strikes on Libya by NATO, an Unspoken Civilian Toll,’ conveniently published after NATO’s direct intervention had ceased. The article is truly a fine example of ‘embeddedness’:”

While the overwhelming preponderance of strikes seemed to hit their targets without killing noncombatants, many factors contributed to a run of fatal mistakes. These included a technically faulty bomb, poor or dated intelligence and the near absence of experience military personnel on the ground who could direct air strikes. The alliances apparent presumption that residences thought to harbor pro Gaddafi forces were not occupied by civilians repeatedly proved mistaken, the evidence suggests, posing a reminder to advocates of air power that no war is cost or error free.

The use of words like “seemed” and “apparent,” together with the oft used technical excuse and the ex post facto reminder are classic stratagems of the New York Times’ misuse of the English language for propaganda purposes.

Justifying the killing, President Obama “explained the entire campaign away with a lie. Gaddafi, he said, was planning a massacre of his own people.”

Hilary Clinton, who was then Secretary of State, was aware from the start, as an FOIA document reveals, that the rebel militias the U.S. was arming and backing were summarily executing anyone they captured: “The State Department and Obama were fully aware that the U.S.-backed ‘rebel’ forces had no such regard for the lives of the innocent.”

Clinton also knew that France’s involvement was because of the threat Gaddafi’s single African currency plan posed to French financial interests in Francophone Africa. Her joyous ejaculation about Gaddafi’s brutal death – “We came, we saw, he died” – sick in human terms, was no doubt also an expression of relief that the interests of western elites, her backers, had been served.

It is true that Gaddafi did represent a threat to western financial interests. As Sensini writes, “Gaddafi had successfully achieved Libya’s economic independence, and was on the point of concluding agreements with the African Union that might have contributed decisively to the economic independence of the entire continent of Africa.”

“Hilary Clinton was aware from the start that the rebel militias the U.S. was arming and backing were summarily executing anyone they captured.”

Thus, following the NATO attack, Obama confiscated $30 billion from Libya’s Central Bank. Sensini references Ellen Brown, the astute founder of the Public Banking Institute in the U.S., who explains how a state owned Central Bank, as in Libya, contributes to the public’s well-being. Brown in turn refers to the comment of Erica Encina, posted on Market Oracle, which explains how Libya’s 100% state owned Central Bank allowed it to sustain its own economic destiny. Encina concludes, “Hence, taking down the Central Bank of Libya (CBL) may not appear in the speeches of Obama, Cameron and Sarkozy [and Clinton] but this is certainly at the top of the globalist agenda for absorbing Libya into its hive of compliant nations.”

In five pages Sensini tells more truth about the infamous events in Benghazi that resulted in the deaths of US Ambassador Christopher Stevens and three American colleagues than the MSM has done in five years. After the overthrow of Gaddafi, in 2012 Stevens was sharing the American “Consulate” quarters with the CIA. Benghazi was the center of Sanusi jihadi fundamentalism, those who the US/NATO had armed to attack Gaddafi’s government. These terrorists were allied with the US. “Stevens’s task in Benghazi,” writes Sensini, “now was to oversee shipments of Gaddafi’s arms to Turkish ports. The arms were then transferred to jihadi forces engaged in terrorist actions against the government of Syria under Bashar al-Assad.” Contrary to the Western media, Sensini says that Stevens and the others were killed, not by the jihadi extremists supported by the US, but by Gaddafi loyalists who had tried to kill Stevens previously. These loyalists disappeared from the Libyan and international press afterwards. “The reports now focused on al-Qaida, Islamists, terrorists and protesters. No one was to mention either Gaddafi … or his ghosts.”

The stage for a long-term Western intervention against terrorists, who were armed by the US/NATO, was now set. The insoluble disorder of a vicious circle game meant to perpetuate chaos was set in motion. Sensini’s disgust manifests itself when he says, “Given its record of lavish distribution of arms to all and sundry in Syria, the USA’s warning that, in Libya, arms might reach ‘armed groups outside the government’s control’ is beneath contempt.”

Sowing Chaos: Libya in the Wake of Humanitarian Intervention is a superb book. If you wish to understand the ongoing Libyan tragedy, and learn where responsibility lies, read it. If the tale it tells doesn’t disgust you, I’d be surprised.

In closing, I would be remiss if I didn’t mention that former Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney, a stalwart and courageous truth teller, has written a fine forward where she puts Libya and Sensini’s analysis into a larger global perspective. As usual, she pulls no punches.

Edward Curtin teaches sociology At Massachusetts of College of Liberal Arts.