Monday, December 30, 2019

CFOW Newsletter - Focus on Ending the Afghanistan War

CFOW Newsletter
December 30, 2019
 
Hello All – Eighteen years after the US invasion of Afghanistan, there may be hope for an end to the fighting.  On Sunday the Taliban Council agreed to a 10-day nationwide ceasefire, raising that possibility that a peace agreement with the United States could be signed. Progress in the peace negotiations comes just weeks after the publication in the Washington Post of thousands of pages of secret US government reports on the war revealed that for many years US military officials have known that the US was losing the war, information that was kept from Congress and the public. Widely compared to the Pentagon Papers of the Vietnam War, the "Afghanistan Papers" utterly discredit the 18-year US project in Afghanistan. Together, these two factors – the Papers and the peace negotiations – may be the breakthrough to peace that we have been waiting/working for.
 
Shortly after the Washington Post published the Afghanistan Papers, US Rep. and our congressman Eliot Engel announced that his Foreign Affairs Committee would hold hearings on the Afghanistan Papers in January. These hearings could be comparable to the historic Vietnam War hearings held by Senator William Fulbright in 1966; or they could be a superficial rehash of what we already know all too well.  There is much about the war we do not know, and which the government officials responsible for the Afghanistan Papers do know and have not told us.  Simply in terms of basic information, the Trump people have been refusing to report on battlefield casualties or missions, civilian casualties, desertions of Afghan soldiers, and similar basics in war reporting.  Of particular interest would be information on US bombing and drone strikes, which appear to be increasing; and to know how many civilians have been killed in the process.  The Afghanistan Papers' main revelations were the interviews the Inspector's staff held with high-ranking military officials, most of whom reported the war was going badly.  Rep. Engel could invite these and other officials to testify about whether their views were expressed up the military chain of command, and who kept this information secret from Congress and the public.  And much more.  And so now and in the coming weeks CFOW will encourage Rep. Engel's constituents to demand that he hold extensive and in-depth hearings on the Afghanistan War, focusing on how the war was prolonged and how peace can be achieved. To start off, please call Rep. Engel at 202-225-2464 to inquire when the Afghanistan Papers hearing will be held, and to express your concern that hearings cover the full extent of the war – from President Bush through President Obama and now to President Trump.  Thanks!
 
Some useful/illuminating reading about the Afghanistan Papers
We Have Just Been Handed the Pentagon Papers of Our Generation
By Danny Sjursen, The Nation [December 13, 2019]
---- Earlier this week, we learned that our leaders also knew the war was a fiasco, doomed to fail. But, unlike many of us, they chose not to speak out. Instead, as The Washington Post revealed in a series of stunning articles based on what it has labeled the Afghanistan Papers—a trove of previously classified documents that it is calling a "secret history of the war"—dozens of consecutive generals and senior US officials had repeatedly lied about, omitted, and obfuscated the facts to give an illusion of progress in that war. … The Afghanistan Papers don't try to answer these bigger questions, and perhaps they can't, but their significance is nonetheless profound. At 2,000 pages, they are nothing less than the Pentagon Papers of my generation. … In a real republic, these papers would be explosive, triggering investigations, denunciations, and serious policy conversations. The Senate would hold a lengthy inquest, such as the Fulbright hearings on Vietnam or the Church Committee on CIA abuses, in addition to producing substantive reports similar to the 9/11 commission or the McCain/Feinstein CIA torture report. But I'm skeptical. If this Afghan disclosure doesn't generate thorough investigation and accountability, can the concerned citizenry ever again count on Congress? Probably not. [Read More]
 
News Notes
Yesterday's CFOW holiday party was, as always, lots of fun and a happy reunion.  To see some pictures of the stalwarts in song, go here and here.
 
The new issue of the socialist magazine Jacobin has a nice interview with CFOW friend, Peekskill City Council member, and DSA activist Vanessa Agudelo: "We're Creating a Society That's Better for All of Us Together." [Link]
 
The United States of Incarceration.  Read a New York Times story about the 5 million children who have a parent in prison.  And this Twitter video about jailed immigrants was posted on our Facebook page yesterday; horrible. The Intercept has an interesting review about the history of "illegal" immigration – "Immigration Detention Is Part of Mass Incarceration: The Case for Abolishing ICE and Everything Else" [Link].
 
One of the forces distorting our democracy is the inability of millions of people to vote.  Part of this is due to the purging of voter rolls.  While dead people and people who have left town should be removed from voter lists, in too many places the process is used to remove thousands of actual voters – especially low-income people – from the registration lists. The New York Times recently reported  on the purges on Georgia, and CNN recently reported on the purge in Wisconsin.  The Brennan Center for Justice released a study Thursday showing that 17 million Americans were dropped from voter rolls between 2016 and 2018—almost four million more than the number purged between 2006 and 2008. [Link].
 
Senator Bernie Sanders (Vermont) and Rep. Rashida Tlaib (Minn) published a hard-hitting holiday statement last week, "Trump's holiday menu: handouts for billionaires, hunger for the poor."  Noting that 100 of the Fortune 500 companies pay no taxes, the statement focuses Trump's cuts in food stamps, housing and childcare cuts, and other attacks on the supposed "safety-net" for low-income people in Vermont and Minneapolis. Billions are taken from the poor, while the rich get tax cuts for Christmas.  Read more here. For some shocking (really?) details about the tax cuts, go here.
 
Continuing with the same theme, income inequality increased substantially in 2019, as "the world's 500 richest people gained $1.2 trillion in wealth in 2019," and "In the U.S., the richest 0.1% control a bigger share of the pie than at any time since 1929." [Link] According to an analysis in Bloomberg, the net worth of the world's richest 500 people increased by 25 percent last year, and the S&P stock market average gained 29 percent. (Thus, a stock portfolio of $1 million would increase in value by $290,000 over the last year.)  This does not happen by blind luck:  An illuminating article in today's New York Times shows "How Big Companies Won New Tax Breaks From the Trump Administration" following the tax law revisions of 2017. To keep up with this topic, I recommend https://inequality.org/, a project of The Institute for Policy Studies.
 
Finally, Democracy Now! spent the hour last Thursday with Michael Moore, talking about impeachment and prospects (not good, say Michael) for the future.  See the program here.
 
CFOW Nuts & Bolts
Please consider getting involved with Concerned Families of Westchester.  We meet for a protest/rally each Saturday in Hastings, from 12 to 1 p.m., at the VFW Plaza (Warburton and Spring St.)  Our leaflet and posters for our rallies are usually about war or the climate crisis, but issues such as racial justice or Trump's immigration policies are often targeted, depending on current events. Also, we (usually) have a general meeting on the first Saturday afternoon of each month. Our weekly newsletter is archived at https://cfow.blogspot.com/; and news of interest and coming events is posted on our CFOW Facebook page.  And if you would like to support our work by making a contribution, please send your check to CFOW, PO Box 364, Hastings-on-Hudson, NY 10706.  Thanks!
 
Rewards!
Yesterday's CFOW holiday party featured some group singing, led by Jenny Murphy and Joe Kaminsky.  As a Bostonian, my favorite tune of the afternoon was "Charlie on the MTA," written to support a leftish mayoral campaign in 1949, but made famous by the Kingston Trio in 1959. As with so much of mainstream Americana, the slightest inquiry reveals the hidden hand of peaceniks and progressives, in this case, the authors of the song, Jacqueline Steiner and Bess Lomax Hawes, true stalwarts. Enjoy!
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
SOME INTERESTING/ILLUMINATING FEATURED ESSAYS
 
At Christmas, Let's Remember the Children Who Live in Fear of Our Killer Drones.
By Elise Swain and Jon Schwartz, The Intercept [December 25, 2019]
---- The movie "Love Actually" has some good advice: At Christmas, you tell the truth. It's the perfect day to be honest about what you've done in the past year, what that says about who you are, and what it means about where you're heading. So, let's tell the truth about America. The truth is that, through a worldwide drone war we commenced two decades ago, we've invented a new form of terror for millions of people across the world. The truth is that we continued to escalate this war in 2019, yet there's no way to say exactly how much, because the U.S. government refuses to tell its citizens the basic facts about it. The truth is that the best sources of information on this war are two underfunded outfits — the Bureau of Investigative Journalism and Airwars — that aren't even based in the United States. The truth is that these journalists can't be sure which airstrikes are being carried out by drones and which by conventional manned aircraft. The truth is that our drone war is like some undersea leviathan, the nature and size of which we can only guess at when parts of it briefly surface. The truth that is our fleet of killer drones is likely aloft on Christmas Day, right now, circling endlessly as intelligence analysts decide whether to pronounce a death sentence on people thousands of miles away. The truth is that, as we open presents, these death machines might as well — for all the space they occupy in our consciousness — not exist at all. The truth is that there have been six Democratic presidential debates this year, and during these six debates, the number of times our worldwide drone war was debated is zero. [Read More]
 
Bernie Is the Candidate Who Can Beat Trump. Here's Why.
By Meagan Day and Matt Karp, Jacobin Magazine [December 2019]
---- In the race for the Democratic nomination, one figure towers above the field: the large, misshapen form of President Donald Trump. … Across the primary campaign, Bernie Sanders and many of his supporters have argued that it is not enough to defeat Trump: we need to organize to transform the abysmal economic conditions that produced Trump, too. This is all very true. But in the meantime, there are elections to win. America simply cannot afford another Trump victory at the polls, or another four years of rapacious right-wing government. To prevent this nightmare, we must convince anxious voters that Sanders can and will throttle Trump in a general election. … The truth is that Democrats genuinely like Bernie: he has the highest favorability rating in the primary field, and among Democratic voters who prioritize "issues" — that is, what a president might actually try to do in office — Sanders leads the pack. Yet among the Democrats most concerned with beating Trump, Sanders currently trails. A hostile party establishment and an unfriendly media appear to have convinced many voters that Sanders is "too extreme" or "too far left" to win a general election. … But this primary season, anxious Democrats should trust their guts. It turns out that the candidate they like best, Bernie Sanders, is also the candidate with the best chance to knock Trump out of the White House. [Read More]  For another optimistic analysis of the Sanders polling data, go here.
 
The Climate Crisis Escalated in 2019. So Did the Climate Justice Movement.
By Sharon Zhang, Truthout [December 29, 2019]
---- 2019 is slated to be the second-warmest year on record, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. This means that, come year's end, all of the top 10 warmest recorded years will have happened in the last two decades. The climate is worsening as we speak, and the years we have left to prevent even more catastrophic change are flying by. But there is something that sets this year apart, and it's not just because of the ever-worsening climate disasters. 2019 marked a renaissance for the climate movement. For the first time, the climate crisis became a top issue for registered Democrats, likely in part due to the newly widespread discussion of the Green New Deal (which every major news outlet covered in some way), and the hard work of climate activists. … As we approach a vital election year, this list is a reminder of how far we came on climate in 2019 — and how far we have to go. [Read More] Also very interesting imo is this article from Waging Nonviolence put up last April: "Why desperation could be the key to tackling climate change" by Cam Fenton [Link].
 
A Year in Review: Will 2020 Be a Game Changer in Palestine?
By Ramzy Beroud, Middle East Monitor [December 27, 2019]
---- This has been a defining year for Palestine and Israel. Despite the usual political stagnation of the Palestinian leadership, two factors contributed to making 2019 particularly eventful and, looking ahead, consequential as well: The unprecedented political power struggle in Israel, and the total US retreat from its own self-proclaimed role as an "honest peace broker". Since his first day in office, US President Donald Trump has made no secret of his desire to embrace fully the right-wing agenda of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Although the process started earlier, 2019 has witnessed the complete collapse of traditional US foreign policy which was, for nearly three decades, predicated on the principle of a negotiated political solution. … In some ways, 2019 did indeed prove to be a game-changer in Palestine and Israel. It is the year when the Israeli government managed to achieve total and unconditional US support, while the Palestinian leadership was left largely isolated and incapable of formulating an alternative agenda. However, while Israel persists in its prolonged political crisis and as the international community is still unable or, perhaps, unwilling, to play a more fundamental role in ending the Israeli occupation of Palestine, 2020 promises to be equally tumultuous and challenging. [Read More]
 
Americans are ready for a different approach to nuclear weapons
By Lawrence Wittner December 23, 2019
---- Although today's public protests against nuclear weapons can't compare to the major antinuclear upheavals of past decades, there are clear indications that most Americans reject the Trump administration's nuclear weapons policies. Since entering office in 2017, the Trump administration has withdrawn the United States from the nuclear agreement with Iran, scrapped the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty with Russia, and apparently abandoned plans to renew the New START Treaty with Russia.  After an overwhelming majority of the world's nations agreed on a landmark UN Treaty on the Prohibitions of Nuclear Weapons in July 2017, the Trump administration quickly announced that it would never sign the treaty.  The only nuclear arms control measure that the Trump administration has pursued ― an agreement by North Korea to abandon its nuclear weapons program ― appears to have collapsed, at least in part because the Trump administration badly mishandled the negotiations. Moreover, the Trump administration has not only failed to follow the nuclear arms control and disarmament policies of its Democratic and Republican predecessors, but has plunged into a renewed nuclear arms race with other nations by championing a $1.7 trillion program to refurbish the entire U.S. nuclear weapons complex.  Perhaps most alarming, it has again and again publicly threatened to initiate a nuclear war. These policies are quite out of line with U.S. public opinion. [Read More]
 
Our History
The Confederation as the Commune of Communes
By Debbie Bookchin and Sixtine van Outryve, Roar Magazine [December 2019]
---- In 1936, at the apex of the Spanish Revolution, hundreds of Spanish villages, towns, neighborhoods and factories had organized themselves into collectives in which local residents made decisions about labor and the distribution of resources. For a splendid few months, these workers' and peasant assemblies and their committees took charge of nearly one third of Spain. They help to organize every aspect of political and social life: agricultural production, local administration, munitions and how to feed their people. While each community had a great degree of autonomy, they also cooperated informally, sometimes holding general assemblies that covered more than 1,000 families across 15,000 square kilometers. Like the French revolutionaries of the sectional assemblies of 1793 and the Paris Commune of 1871, which called for a nationwide Commune of Communes, the fiercely democratic anarchists of Spain understood that to maintain their autonomy, any decision-making body had to be directly accountable to the communities from which they derived their power. These popular assemblies and their empowerment of ordinary people were coordinated through an important process: confederation, also known as confederalism. By coordinating collective will through a confederal council, the confederation allows for the organization of political life over a large territory and a large population in a directly democratic way. [Read More]
 

Monday, December 23, 2019

CFOW Newsletter - Focus on Impeachment at Half-Time

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
December 23, 2019
 
Hello All – It's half-time at the Impeachment Super Bowl.  How are we doing?  While we can't undo what's been done, let's look at the scorecard and ask if there are any lessons to be learned.  First, thinking back to the beginning of 2019, when the Democrats gained control of the House of Representatives, the Party leadership made the fateful decision to focus on investigating Trump and his crimes/misdeeds, rather than developing a bold legislative program as was suggested by advocates of the Green New Deal. Though Nancy Pelosi feared that impeachment would divide the Party, with most of the Party's eggs in the investigation basket, growing anger at Trump within the mainstream media and among the Democrats' suburban base became an unstoppable demand for impeachment when the Whistleblower's letter about the July 25th phone call between Trump and the President of Ukraine became public.
 
Despite the many reservations – how could the Republican-controlled Senate be persuaded to convict Trump? --  at the outset there were reasons to be hopeful. Trump's personal popularity was low. The Mueller Report was damning.  Many Republican congressional representatives were choosing not to run for re-election.  Much of the mainstream media was in lockstep with the idea that Trump was a traitor. A collapse of the stock market was a reasonable fear/hope.  Public opinion polls showed that half the country favored impeachment and removal. And it was likely that Trump would do some indictable and/or disgusting things under the pressure of inquiry and judgment. Reasons to hope.
 
We need not review the last six months to see that each of these hopes/possibilities (and many more) failed to bear fruit.  While analysts offered a dozen Constitutional bases for Trump's impeachment, the Democrats narrowed the "high crimes and misdemeanors" in play to his phone call with the President of Ukraine, and then to the withholding of military aid to Ukraine. While this narrowing of the Articles of Impeachment may have been necessary for Democratic Party unity, the resulting impeachment process has not eroded Trump's support in either Congress or among his political base.  It's still hard to see how Trump's trial in the Senate will remove him.  Thus the Democrats will have secured an historic symbolic condemnation of Trump, but at the expense of much time lost and many opportunities for building a progressive program for 2020 foregone.
 
Will the second half of the Impeachment Super Bowl be different?  Will anything galvanize the   tsunami of activism that seems to be required to prevent a second term for King Trump?  It's hard to see the current leadership of the Democratic Party recognizing our problem, let alone correcting it.  We the People are on our own.  How can we bring the political focus of our national debates back to the real needs of real people, to a program for peace and climate sustainability and economic well being that will defeat the Trump Agenda?      
 
Impeachment: thinking outside the box
The Radical Underuse of Impeachment
By David Swanson, Counterpunch [December 20, 2019]
---- Trump has publicly threatened nuclear war on two countries, waged and escalated numerous illegal wars, and dramatically increased the drone murder program. He's abused the pardon power and the power to declare emergencies. He's promoted racism and hatred. He's separated children from their families. He's illegally torn up treaties and proliferated weapons technology to brutal dictatorships. He's intentionally exacerbated climate collapse. Congress has ignored indisputable public acts, and impeached Trump for demanding information about a political opponent while delaying a gift of money to Ukraine to buy U.S. weapons. … Launching the endless wars, imprisoning without trial, torturing, mass warrentless spying, secret laws, signing statements, domestic use of the military, and dozens of other outrages just don't measure up to bribing Ukraine for dirt on Joe Biden (who himself publicly brags about bribing Ukraine for other purposes). Or so Congress would have us believe. Impeachment has not been overused. It has been underused and misused. It and we are the worse off for it. [Read More]
 
The Democratic Leadership's Strategy on Impeachment Is Doomed and Dangerous
By Aaron Maté, The Nation [December 19, 2019]
---- It would be easier to feel optimistic if Democratic leaders were mounting any sort of political agenda or movement that could win over voters that they lost in 2016. But that is not the case. … Trump has betrayed the voters who were led to believe he would "drain the swamp." His tax scam continues to favor the wealthy, real wages continue to stagnate, shuttered factories haven't returned, and skyrocketing health care costs are wreaking havoc—to take one example, half of people with diabetes are skipping their insulin. Far from ending "endless wars," he has expanded them, even in Syria after announcing a withdrawal. Contrary to his vow to "stop racing to topple foreign regimes," Trump has imposed murderous sanctions on Iran, Venezuela, Cuba, Nicaragua, and Syria in a brazen effort to starve besieged populations into submission. Meanwhile, Trump and the GOP continue to wage their class war on the most vulnerable: … None of this is anywhere near the top of the Democratic leadership's agenda. Instead, from the failed Trump-Russia conspiracy theory to its Ukrainegate sequel, the Democratic leadership's resounding message to voters is that, in Pelosi's words, "all roads lead to Putin."  .  [Read More]
 
News Notes
Prior to last week's presidential debate, a writer in The Nation observed that the previous five debates had had not one question about poverty in the USA. That silence rings loud when there are 131 million people – or 42 percent of "We the People" – living "below poverty" or "near poverty" in the richest country in the history of the world. Needless to say, keeping the state of the poor – and thus the needed for profound change – Off the Agenda of what this election is all about works to the advantage of centrists and timid reformists, and to the disadvantage of candidates Sanders and Warren, who say that this State of the Nation cannot continue.  Alan Minsky, author of The Nation piece noted above, was on Democracy Now! (min 47:00) the day after the debate to observe that, once again, the presidential debate had not had one question about poverty.
 
As someone who has been recently treated for cancer, I found the Democracy Now! program today especially interesting, as it features Dr. Azra Raza, author of a new book called The First Cell, who describes how and why the "slash-poison-burn" approach to cancer has failed.
 
For more than five years the UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) has been warning the world that Gaza could become uninhabitable by 2020 if the blockade does not end. Well, 2020 starts next week, and Israel's illegal blockade of Gaza continues. Basic human rights of Palestinians in Gaza are violated daily by the Israeli-imposed blockade, including the right to adequate housing, the right to education, the right to healthcare, the right to clean water and food, and in particular the right to freedom of movement. In recent years, citizen organizations like the Freedom Flotilla have attempted to break the blockade, and in May the next Freedom Flotilla will sail for Gaza. To learn how you/we can support this righteous cause, go here.
 
Buried in the recently passed $738 billion military policy bill was the establishment of a Space Force, a sixth branch of the US armed forces. So now we will move towards what Trump calls "the American dominance in space."  To learn why this is a very bad idea, and why more than three-fourths of the Democrats voted for it, go here.
 
Finally, each year at this time Nation writer Katha Pollitt publicizes info on a dozen worthy causes that deserve the attention of those seeking to make the world better.  And if you would like to support the work of CFOW, please send your check to PO Box 364, Hastings-on-Hudson, NY 10706.  Thanks!
 
CFOW Nuts & Bolts
Please consider getting involved with Concerned Families of Westchester.  We meet for a protest/rally each Saturday in Hastings, from 12 to 1 p.m., at the VFW Plaza (Warburton and Spring St.)  Our leaflet and posters for our rallies are usually about war or the climate crisis, but issues such as racial justice or Trump's immigration policies are often targeted, depending on current events. We (usually) meet on the first Saturday of each month, at 1:30 pm at the James Harmon Community Center (Hastings) [Note the change.] Our weekly newsletter is archived at https://cfow.blogspot.com/; and news of interest and coming events is posted on our CFOW Facebook page.  And if you would like to support our work by making a contribution, please send your check to CFOW, PO Box 364, Hastings-on-Hudson, NY 10706.  Thanks!
 
Rewards!
This week we have a Seasonal Reward for stalwart readers: the full-length film "What Would Jesus Buy?" featuring Reverend Billy.  Enjoy!!
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
SOME USEFUL/INTERESTING ESSAYS
 
The Real Lesson of Afghanistan Is That Regime Change Does Not Work
By Medea Benjamin and Nicolas J.S. Davies, Code Pink & ZNet [December  20, 2019]
---- The trove of U.S. "Lessons Learned" documents on Afghanistan published by the Washington Post portrays, in excruciating detail, the anatomy of a failed policy, scandalously hidden from the public for 18 years. The "Lessons Learned" papers, however, are based on the premise that the U.S. and its allies will keep intervening militarily in other countries, and that they must therefore learn the lessons of Afghanistan to avoid making the same mistakes in future military occupations. This premise misses the obvious lesson that Washington insiders refuse to learn: the underlying fault is not in how the U.S. tries and fails to reconstruct societies destroyed by its "regime changes," but in the fundamental illegitimacy of regime change itself. … In 2019, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists kept the hands of its Doomsday clock at two minutes to midnight, symbolizing that we are as close to self-destruction as we have ever been. Its 2019 statement cited the double danger of climate change and nuclear war: "Humanity now faces two simultaneous existential threats, either of which would be cause for extreme concern and immediate attention." So it is a matter of survival for the U.S. to cooperate with the rest of the world to achieve major breakthroughs on both these fronts. [Read More]
 
Rich Nations, After Driving Climate Disaster, Block All Progress at U.N. Talks
By Kate Aronoff, The Intercept [December 18 2019]
---- Days before talks began, a report from the U.N. Environment Program noted the gap between countries' existing commitments under the Paris Agreement ("Intended Nationally Determined Contributions," or INDCs) and what it will take to stay within the "well below 2 degrees" Celsius threshold of warming its signatories committed to.  Existing INDCs will shoot temperatures up by 3.3 degrees, leaving major coastal cities and some whole nations underwater and collapsing crop yields worldwide. To get back on track for 1.5 degrees, per demands from the "global south," global emissions need to decline 7.6 percent each year between 2020 and 2030, 150 times greater than the largest single emissions drop in world history: the collapse of the Soviet Union. Every year. For a decade. "Common but differentiated" — per the UNFCCC — has generally been interpreted to mean this burden should be shared somewhat equitably. [Read More]
 
Why Jeremy Corbyn lost
By Louis Proyect [December 17, 2019]
---- In reviewing articles about Brexit and Jeremy Corbyn over the past two days, I was struck by the similarities between British and American politics. With all proportions guarded, Corbyn and Boris Johnson are the counterparts of Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump. Since I regard the Labour Party as qualitatively different from the Democratic Party in class terms, I was much more open to Corbyn's electoral ambitions than I am to Sanders's. The Labour Party is still a working-class party. Or at least it was until Tony Blair got a hold of it. If it was still in New Labour's clutches, there would be not a dime's worth of differences between the DP and Labour. Starting with New Labour, you can say that—dialectically speaking—it was responsible for the emergence of Corbynism in the same way that Clinton/Obama were responsible for the Sandernistas. By the same token, New Labour's neglect of working-class interests helped fuel the Brexit campaign and Johnson's election in the same way that the post-LBJ Democratic Party paved the way for Donald Trump. Beneath all these political convulsions was the economic transformation of the UK and the USA. [Read More]
 
Our History
The Radical James Baldwin
By Laura Tanenbaum, Jacobin Magazine [December 2019]
[FB – This is a review of James Baldwin: Living in Fire, by Bill Mullen (Pluto, 2019).]
---- After returning to the United States in 1957, Baldwin achieved prominence as a journalistic chronicler of the Civil Rights Movement and an advocate for its aims. He wrote an important early profile of Martin Luther King in Vogue and spoke throughout the South at rallies for the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), donating his speaking fees to the movement. During this period he also moved away from the elements of Cold War liberalism that had shaped some of his earlier writing: the FBI first put Baldwin squarely in its sights when he signed on to the Fair Play for Cuba Committee and used his platform to push for urgent causes, such as the imprisonment of Carl Braden, a left-wing organizer jailed for refusing to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee, and a new trail for the "Harlem Six," a group of young men sentenced to life in prison after being beaten and tortured into confessions while in police custody. The evolution of Baldwin's political thought and writing during this stretch belies the familiar narrative of a hopeful movement toward desegregation followed by disillusionment: Baldwin saw things through an anti-colonial lens early on, shaped by an interest in the nonaligned movement and the years he spent witnessing the impact of the Algerian War on France during his formative years there. When he condemned the Vietnam War, he did so in terms similar to Martin Luther King's "Beyond Vietnam" speech: as a participant in Bertrand Russell's tribunal which sought to document and condemn war crimes. [Read More]
 
Now We Can Begin: Crystal Eastman's revolution.
By Vivian Gornick, The Nation [December 16, 2019]
[FB – This is a review of Crystal Eastman: A Revolutionary Life, by Amy Aronson (2019). Vivian Gornick is the author of many interesting books: my favorite is The Romance of American Communism, portraits of some interesting radicals from back in the day.]
---- In the first decades of the 20th century, there were gathered in Greenwich Village a few hundred women and men of radical temperament—artists, intellectuals, activists—bent on making a revolution in cultural consciousness. European modernism had crossed the Atlantic, and a great refusal to conform to the dictates of a worn-out American bourgeoisie was filling the air, one that made art and transgression and politics seem (as they always do in times of social rebellion) interchangeable. What was wanted, as one of them put it, was a "regeneration of the just-before-dawn of a new day in American art and literature and living-of-life as well as in politics." They were organizing in the name of experience, direct experience. To know oneself through unmarried sex, transgressive opinion, eccentric dress—these became the startling conventions of downtown radicalism in the years surrounding World War I. Among the women and men then flocking to the Village were many whose names are now inscribed in the cultural histories of the time: Edna St. Vincent Millay, Eugene O'Neill, Margaret Sanger, John Reed, Randolph Bourne, Max Eastman, and his sister, Crystal. Actually, it was Crystal who got there first. [Read More]
 
 

Sunday, December 15, 2019

CFOW Newsletter - Focus on the Afghanistan Papers

Concerned Families of Westchester
December 15, 2019
 
Hello All – This week The Washington Post published the results of its investigation into how, over the last decade, the Pentagon understood the war in Afghanistan: Were we winning or losing?  How can we measure progress?  What should we keep doing and what should we change?  The takeaway from The Post's publication of 600+ documents and some cogent analysis is that the war in Afghanistan has had no coherent strategy, has achieved none of its self-described "metrics," and that the Pentagon has hidden their failure from the public (and the Congress?) with an avalanche of lies.  Many have compared The Post's reporting to the "Pentagon Papers" of the Vietnam War, which also reflected the military's conclusion that it was not winning that war and did not see any way that it could do so.
 
A good introduction to the "Afghanistan Papers" – how they originated and how the Post got them – can be seen in this video.  Several good analyses of the Papers can be read in the articles linked below.  I think the immediate question is whether the Papers will have any effect on public opinion, media coverage and analysis going forward, debate in Congress, and of course the war itself. New York's Senator Kirsten Sen. Gillibrand, a member of the Armed Services Committee, has called for the Committee to hold hearings on the disaster portrayed in the Afghanistan Papers.  Rep. Eliot Engel could/should do the same thing at the House Foreign Affairs Committee; and if you are in CD16, please give him a call - (202) 225-2464.
 
One difference between the Pentagon Papers (1971) and the Afghanistan Papers is that the former were published during a time when the antiwar movement was strong and many members of Congress were calling for the war to end.  And with no draft today, few beyond military families care about the wars and are aware of what's happening.  Perhaps another difference is that the Pentagon Papers detailed the assessments and decisions made about the war primarily during the presidencies of JFK and LBJ; and in that innocent time a great many people were dismayed that they had been lied to about the war by the liberals who they had worked so hard to elect.  And, of course, another main difference between then and now is that today's media environment, though in many ways far more capable of gathering facts and reporting them in real time, is completely bogged down with their 24/7 addiction to the antics of President Trump.  I believe it will take a mighty effort from an aroused public to get even a few minutes of Congress' attention for the stupid and horrible bloodbath in Afghanistan.
 
Nevertheless, I encourage everyone to pay attention to the Papers, to what they show us about how the Pentagon and the White House run a needless war, and how little we can count on our mainstream media to give us an honest picture of how we are spending a trillion dollars and killing tens of thousands of people, including 2,400 of our own soldiers.  Though History doesn't "repeat" itself, between the Pentagon Papers and the Afghanistan Papers, I think we have more than enough evidence to say No to War when the next one comes over the horizon.
 
Some useful/illuminating reading about the Afghanistan Papers
We Have Just Been Handed the Pentagon Papers of Our Generation
By Danny Sjursen, The Nation [December 13, 2019]
---- Earlier this week, we learned that our leaders also knew the war was a fiasco, doomed to fail. But, unlike many of us, they chose not to speak out. Instead, as The Washington Post revealed in a series of stunning articles based on what it has labeled the Afghanistan Papers—a trove of previously classified documents that it is calling a "secret history of the war"—dozens of consecutive generals and senior US officials had repeatedly lied about, omitted, and obfuscated the facts to give an illusion of progress in that war. … The Afghanistan Papers don't try to answer these bigger questions, and perhaps they can't, but their significance is nonetheless profound. At 2,000 pages, they are nothing less than the Pentagon Papers of my generation. … In a real republic, these papers would be explosive, triggering investigations, denunciations, and serious policy conversations. The Senate would hold a lengthy inquest, such as the Fulbright hearings on Vietnam or the Church Committee on CIA abuses, in addition to producing substantive reports similar to the 9/11 commission or the McCain/Feinstein CIA torture report. But I'm skeptical. If this Afghan disclosure doesn't generate thorough investigation and accountability, can the concerned citizenry ever again count on Congress? Probably not. [Read More]
 
Also useful on the Afghanistan Papers – "We didn't need the documents: America's Trillion $ Failure in the Afghanistan war has been obvious all along," by Juan Cole, Informed Comment [December 12, 2019] [Link]; "Where Is the Outrage Over the War in Afghanistan?" by Jeet Heer, The Nation [December 13, 2019] [Link]; and "The Perils of Embedded Journalism: 'Afghan Papers' Wouldn't Be Needed If We Had a Real Independent News Media," by Dave Lindorff, Counterpunch [December 13, 2019] [Link].  To learn how civilians in Afghanistan are faring during this war, go here.
 
News Notes
Moments after Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg was named Time magazine's Person of the Year, she give this speech deploring the missing sense of urgency in the UN/COP25's climate summit in Madrid.  And with UK climate activist George Monbiot, she made an excellent short video (please share) about some of the natural solutions to our climate crisis.
 
As was expected, the COP25 in Madrid achieved little. The progressive news program Democracy Now! broadcast from Madrid all last week; and perhaps the best summary of what happened at COP25 can be found in the programs that bookended the climate debates: (Video) "The U.S. Has Almost No Official Presence at COP25 But Is Still 'Obstructing Any Progress'" [Link] from Tuesday and (Video) "COP25: Developing Countries Charge Ahead with Bold Climate Plans as Rich Countries Drag Their Feet" [Link] from Friday.
 
Finally, Israel will now head for a third election, following the failure of either of the two leading candidates to find enough allies to form a cabinet.  It is hard to see how Prime Minister Netanyahu can emerge from the third election with sufficient support to form a new government; and failing that, it is hard to see how he can avoid conviction in some/all of the criminal cases now pending against him. Thinking towards the day when Netanyahu, after so many years, will no longer be Israel's prime minister, Haaretz correspondent Gideon Levy dares to imagine "Life After Netanyahu."
 
After the Brexit election, what's next for the UK?
Last week's disastrous election in the UK – a win for Brexit and Tory PM Boris Johnson – puts a question mark next to all future efforts to elect a socialist agenda in the "advanced" countries of the northern hemisphere. To start our mental gears going, let's begin with two hopeful assessments: "What do we do now?" from the excellent UK publication Red Pepper; and – from representatives of many migrant communities in the UK (before the election) –  "We stand with Jeremy Corbyn - just as he always stood with us." The Nation's UK correspondent D.D. Guttenplan has a more downbeat assessment, which you can read here.  Labour Party alleged antisemitism – a fabricated issue that was featured prominently in the UK and USA media – is discussed in a useful article by a writer for the (US) Electronic Intifada, "Don't let the smears that sank Corbyn tank Bernie Sanders." Finally, you can read an interesting assessment of how the economic changes sweeping Europe and the USA worked to detach traditional working-class Labour supporters from the Party and its election pledges and socialist manifesto/platform.
 
CFOW Nuts & Bolts
Please consider getting involved with Concerned Families of Westchester.  We meet for a protest/rally each Saturday in Hastings, from 12 to 1 p.m., at the VFW Plaza (Warburton and Spring St.)  Our leaflet and posters for our rallies are usually about war or the climate crisis, but issues such as racial justice or Trump's immigration policies are often targeted, depending on current events. Also, we (usually) have a general meeting on the first Saturday afternoon of each month. Our weekly newsletter is archived at https://cfow.blogspot.com/; and news of interest and coming events is posted on our CFOW Facebook page.  And if you would like to support our work by making a contribution, please send your check to CFOW, PO Box 364, Hastings-on-Hudson, NY 10706.  Thanks!
 
Rewards!
Pianist Yuja Wang returns to the Newsletter with a great performance of Prokofiev's Piano Sonata No. 7 ("Stalingrad"), which was composed during the winter of 1942/43, when the great battle took place.  Wang plays only the third/final movement of this piece. Curious, I looked for the whole of "Stalingrad," and found this terrific video production using German and Soviet footage from back in the day.  (In general, the Germans wear the helmets and the Soviets wear the fur hats.) I think the final scene may be/represents the encirclement of the Germans by a Soviet offensive that ended the battle and – many believe – defeated the Nazis in World War II.
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
SOME INTERESTING/INFORMATIVE READING
 
The Inspector General's Report on 2016 FBI Spying Reveals a Scandal of Historic Magnitude: Not Only for the FBI but Also the U.S. Media
By Glenn Greenwald, The Intercept [December 12, 2019]
---- Just as was true when the Mueller investigation closed without a single American being charged with criminally conspiring with Russia over the 2016 election, Wednesday's issuance of the long-waited report from the Department of Justice's Inspector General reveals that years of major claims and narratives from the U.S. media were utter frauds. Before evaluating the media component of this scandal, the FBI's gross abuse of its power – its serial deceit – is so grave and manifest that it requires little effort to demonstrate it. In sum, the IG Report documents multiple instances in which the FBI – in order to convince a FISA court to allow it spy on former Trump campaign operative Carter Page during the 2016 election – manipulated documents, concealed crucial exonerating evidence, and touted what it knew were unreliable if not outright false claims. … But the revelations of the IG Report are not merely a massive FBI scandal. They are also a massive media scandal, because they reveal that so much of what the U.S. media has authoritatively claimed about all of these matters for more than two years is completely false. [Read More]  For another look at this debacle, read "We Just Got a Rare Look at National Security Surveillance. It Was Ugly," by Charlie Savage, New York Times [December 11, 2019]
 
Beyond Changing Light Bulbs: 21 Ways You Can Stop the Climate Crisis
By Rivera Sun, Counterpunch [December 13, 2019]
---- We can all pitch in to help save humanity and the planet. And I don't mean just by planting trees or changing light bulbs. Climate action movements are exploding in numbers, actions, and impact.  Groups like Youth Climate Strikes, Extinction Rebellion, #ShutDownDC, the Sunrise Movement, and more are changing the game.  Join in if you haven't already. As Extinction Rebellion reminds us: there's room for everybody in an effort this enormous. We all make change in different ways, and we're all needed to make all the changes we need. Resistance is not futile. As the editor of Nonviolence News, I collect stories of climate action and climate wins. In the past month alone, the millions of people worldwide rising up in nonviolent action have propelled a number of major victories. … Is it any wonder Collins Dictionary made "climate strike" the Word of the Year? Beyond planting trees and changing light bulbs, here's a list of things you can do about the climate crisis: [Read More]
 
The Popular Assemblies at the Heart of the Chilean Uprising
By Bree Busk, Roar [December 11, 2019]
[FB – With the end of the Soviet-oriented communist parties in the 1990s, the modes of peoples' uprising/protests today are often largely "leaderless," that is, without a unified structure or Central Committee.  In the case of Chile, it is the rising up of hundreds of community or workplace organizations that are leading the charge.  Is the absence of a centralized structure or leadership a benefit to the uprising or a drawback? Here is another case that demands our attention and thinking, imo.]
---- More than fifty days have passed since the Chilean uprising burst into existence. For those living it on the ground, it feels like much longer. The movement has already gone through several upheavals, alternately evolving and disintegrating in response to the changing terrain of struggle. The Piñera administration and its sympathizers have called — without success — for a return to normality. In response, the people have unequivocally stated that "normality" was the problem. Throughout the capital city of Santiago, graffiti reads: "I prefer the chaos." In a time when even the most peaceful of marches are broken up with tear gas and water cannons, protesters have learned to take care of each other, forming a rough new community in the face of repression. This recently discovered practice of solidarity has taken many forms, from volunteer medical brigades to people's kitchens to better-coordinated acts of property destruction. …In the intimacy of the capital's many residential neighborhoods, the people who first left their homes to join in the cacerolazos (public noise demonstrations) have since found other reasons to gather: raising their own popular assemblies and town halls as a first step towards imagining a new Chile, one built around the well-being of its people rather than the profits of a few. The Chilean uprising, still proudly leaderless, has provided a path to social activism for those who had previously stood on the sidelines. [Read More]
 
Those Torture Drawings in the New York Times
By John Kiriakou, Consortium News [December 12, 2019]
[FB – John Kiriaku, a former CIA counterterrorism officer, was jailed by the Obama administration under the Espionage Act (World War I) and spent 23 months in prison for his attempts to oppose the Bush administration's torture program. He was also the person who captured the Guantanamo prisoner whose drawings about torture were recently published by the New York Times.]
---- The New York Times last week published shocking drawings by Guantanamo prisoner Abu Zubaydah showing in graphic detail the types of tortures he endured at the hands of CIA officers and contractors at secret prisons around the world.  The drawings were sickening.  With a child's simplicity, they showed the irrational cruelty of the CIA's torture program, which weakened our country, violated domestic and international law and ended up saying so much more about us, as Americans, than it did about the terrorists who wished us harm. The Times did its duty of reminding us what monsters the CIA produced in the early years of its so-called war on terror, people introduced to most Americans in the Senate's torture report.  … And in the photos of Abu Zubaydah's drawing that the Times ran, the CIA dutifully blacked out even the stick-figure sketches of the actual torturers, those CIA officers who sold their souls to break the law, all in honor of that false god called "national security." With that said, the Times article, although revelatory in terms of Abu Zubaydah's personal story, was woefully inadequate.  It never mentioned, for example, how the Obama administration did literally nothing to make any of this right. Remember former President Barack Obama's decision to hold no one accountable for the torture program and instead "look forward, not backward?"  That didn't serve justice.  It just protected the torturers and the criminals who supported them. Remember the promise to close Guantanamo?  It never happened. [Read More]