Sunday, September 26, 2021

CFOW Newsletter - Focus on "Ban Killer Drones"

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
September 25, 2021
 
On August 29th, a US drone fired a missile in Kabul that killed a suspected ISIS "terrorist" and nine members of his family.  Weeks later, the Pentagon admitted that the killings were "a tragic mistake." As U.S. citizens whose tax dollars went into buying the drone that made that attack, and the missile it fired, the blood of Zemari Ahmadi and his three children, Zamir, 20, Faisal, 16, and Farzad, 10; Ahmadi's cousin Naser, 30; the children of Ahmadi's brother Romal: Arwin, 7, Benyamin, 6, and Hayat, 2; and two 3-year-old girls, Malika and Somaya is on our hands.
 
The deaths in Kabul are ten more reasons, if more are needed, for banning killer drones, just as treaties have banned land mines, cluster bombs, and nuclear weapons as unacceptable weapons because of the civilian casualties that are certain to ensue.  The Pentagon will not provide accurate information about civilian casualties, but one responsible agency estimates that up to 48,000 Afghanistan civilians were killed by air strikes, some portion of these by drones. Drone whistle blower Daniel Hale, now serving a 45-month sentence for leaking classified documents about the drone program to The Intercept, estimates that 90 percent of the casualties in drone strikes are civilians.
 
Over the last decade, drones have become the preferred US weapon of war.  US soldiers are at little risk, and the US population and Congress give the Pentagon a blank check to fight four, five, six wars as long as US casualties low.  The Biden administration has made clear that it intends to continue using drones as the weapon-of-choice for his wars, promising to launch them from "over the horizon" to attack targets in Afghanistan and elsewhere. (Please sign a petition to President Biden demanding no more US air attacks in Afghanistan.)
 
Yesterday, CFOW stalwarts held a small rally in Hastings to demand a ban on the use of killer drones, joining actions in more than 20 communities that host drone operating or training centers, such as Creech Air Force base near Las Vegas, and bases in Syracuse and Niagara Falls, NY. "Shut Down Creech" is co-sponsored by CODEPINK, Veterans For Peace and Ban Killer Drones, and many of those participating will be post-911 veterans.  For more info about the issue and the planned actions, go to Code Pink and Ban Killer Drones, which is working for an international treaty to ban weaponized drones and military and police drone surveillance.
 
News Notes
Afghanistan is rightly called "the graveyard of Empires," as the USA has just learned to our sorrow (or the sorrow of some).  The new would-be ruler of this graveyard is China, which is attempting to form a consortium with Russia, Pakistan, and Iran to manage Afghanistan's chaos and exploit its wealth.  What is this wealth? A useful map and several charts published on Aljazeera this week show the locations of mineral resources estimated to be worth $1 trillion. According to a geologist cited in the article, "the country requires a minimum of seven to 10 years to develop large-scale mining to become a major source of revenue."  Will such a period of peace ever come to pass?  Let us hope so.
 
We recently observed the 10th anniversary of "Occupy Wall St."; and last week's Newsletter included articles debating the successes and failures of this seminal event.  This week The Nation published an interesting and insightful debate on "Was Occupy Wall Street More Anarchist or Socialist?"  I found this interesting, and perhaps you will too.
 
As the congressional (and national) debate on President Biden's "Reconciliation Bill" moves to a vote, Senator Bernie Sanders, Chair of the Senate Budget Committee, to address the crises facing working families all over this country." An excellent primer on what we need, imo.
 
CFOW Nuts & Bolts
Please consider getting involved with Concerned Families of Westchester. We meet for a protest/rally each Saturday in Hastings, at 12 noon at the VFW Plaza (Warburton and Spring St.)  A "Black Lives Matter/Say Their Names" vigil takes place every Monday from 5:30 to 6:00 pm in Yonkers at the intersection of Warburton Ave. and Odell.  If you would like to join one of our Zoom meetings, each Tuesday and Thursday at noon, please send a return email. Our newsletter is archived at https://cfow.blogspot.com/; and news of interest and coming events is posted on our CFOW Facebook page.  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!
Acknowledging the crisis of Haitian refugees at our southern border, today's first Reward is 'Freedom Bound" by Haitian singer Emeline Michel.  Free associating around "Caribbean" brought me to "Sitting in Limbo" by Jimmy Cliff, from his great film "The Harder They Come."  Enjoy!
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
CFOW Weekly Reader
 
U.S. Militarism's Toxic Impact on Climate Policy
By Medea Benjamin and Nicolas J. S. Davies, Code Pink [September 22, 2021]
---- President Biden addressed the UN General Assembly on September 21 with a warning that the climate crisis is fast approaching a "point of no return," and a promise that the United States would rally the world to action. "We will lead not just with the example of our power but, God willing, with the power of our example," he said. But the U.S. is not a leader when it comes to saving our planet. Yahoo News recently published a report titled "Why the U.S. Lags Behind Europe on Climate Goals by 10 or 15 years."  The article was a rare acknowledgment in the U.S. corporate media that the United States has not only failed to lead the world on the climate crisis, but has actually been the main culprit blocking timely collective action to head off a global existential crisis. The anniversary of September 11th and the U.S. defeat in Afghanistan should be ringing alarm bells inside the head of every American, warning us that we have allowed our government to spend trillions of dollars waging war, chasing shadows, selling arms and fueling conflict all over the world, while ignoring real existential dangers to our civilization and all of humanity. [Read More]  For more on the cost of these wars, read "Afghanistan and Beyond: End U.S. War-Making Everywhere," by Azadeh Shahshahani, In These Times [September 21, 2021].
 
Four Months Ago, Biden Said Haiti Wasn't Safe. Now He's Deporting Thousands There.
By Natasha Lennard, The Intercept [September 20 2021]
---- Just four months ago, the Department of Homeland Security designated Haiti for temporary protected status. The rare designation applies to immigrants in the United States who are temporarily unable to safely return to their home country because of conditions of extreme political upheaval, conflict, or natural disasters. The U.S. government thus asserted, in no uncertain terms, that Haiti was not a safe place. Temporary protected status was extended and expanded for Haitians just five weeks ago. Yet in the last 24 hours, 320 Haitians were placed on planes by the Biden administration and expelled back to Haiti, having been removed from the huge border camp that has amassed around a bridge in Del Rio, Texas. Six more flights are expected to land in Haiti on Tuesday, and then as many as 10 per day from Wednesday onward. Around 14,000 Haitians will be expelled from the U.S. over the coming three weeks — almost the exact number currently gathered at the Del Rio encampment. [Read More]
 
For more on the US response to Haiti's crisis (Video) "People Are Desperate": Biden Vows Mass Deportations as Thousands of Haitian Refugees Shelter in Del Rio," from Democracy Now! [September 20, 2021] [Link]; "Biden's Envoy to Haiti Resigns in Protest Over 'Inhumane' Deportations" by Kenny Stancil, Common Dreams [September 23, 2021] [Link]; and "The departing special envoy to Haiti undiplomatically tells the truth about US policy" by Amy Wilentz, The Nation [September 24, 2021]  [Link].
 
The Art and Torture of the Empire
By Hamid Dabashi, Columbia Universityi [September 23, 2021]
---- Who remembers Abu Ghraib? Why should we remember Abu Ghraib? Abu Ghraib represents an era of imperial conquest that began in 2003 in Iraq and before that in 2001 in Afghanistan. With its forces now out of Afghanistan, the United States has no reason to remember Abu Ghraib. But the world at the mercy of the whims of this dysfunctional empire does. Abu Ghraib was a prison complex that took the name of the city near Baghdad where it was built. For years, Saddam Hussein used it to unlawfully imprison, torture, maim and murder dissidents and political opponents. Then the US took it over to do more of the same.  … There remained something deeply familiar about these pictures American torturers took of their Iraqi inmates – they looked like those white racist murderers took of their victims when they lynched them, hanging them from a tree. "… There is, therefore, a direct link between the rush to aestheticise and exhibit the horrors of Abu Ghraib and the sudden disappearance of a troubling memory that should have remained indecipherable and troubling for a much longer time. But forgetfulness is precisely how this memoryless empire best survives, by least caring about the trail of terror and destruction it leaves behind as it wages its endless "war on terror"- now its paramount ideology of world domination, at a time when in that very world there is very little left to dominate.[Read More]
 
War & Peace
It's Time to Break Up the Military-Industrial Complex
By Katrina vanden Heuvel, Editor, The Nation [September 21, 2021]
---- Two days after the United States withdrew from Afghanistan, the House Armed Services Committee voted to set the Pentagon's 2022 budget. Given that U.S. officials claim to be winding down decades-long wars, even maintaining current levels of military spending would seem a mystifying choice. But the committee didn't just vote to maintain current spending levels. It voted to increase them by a whopping $24 billion. Which begs the question: Are we spending this money because we need to, even though our military budget is already higher than those of the next 11 largest countries combined? Or are there other incentives at play? Ties between the government and the private sector — what President Dwight D. Eisenhower famously called the "military-industrial complex" — form the foundations of our national defense. … With just the proposed $24 billion in new Pentagon funds, the federal government could support almost 14 million Americans behind on rent, or help rural and urban communities rebuild from Hurricane Ida, or finance nearly 8 billion covid-19 vaccination doses. … When Eisenhower first cautioned the world about the influence of the military-industrial complex, he warned of "the potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power." The past two decades of war have fueled that disastrous rise. As we wind down foreign conflicts, our country faces a choice. We can double down on the war-profit cycle — or we can cut it off, and give priority to our citizens, our economy and our integrity on the global stage. [Read More]  Also useful is "Ocasio-Cortez Slams Congress for "Senselessly" Boosting Defense Budget Each Year" by Sharon Zhang, Truthout [September 23, 2021] [Link].
 
(Video) United States of War: How AUKUS Nuclear Submarine Deal Could Inflame Tension, Provoke War with China
From Democracy Now! [September 23, 2021]
---- Criticism is growing of AUKUS, a new trilateral military partnership between Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States that the countries say is needed to counter China's growing power in the Indo-Pacific region. As part of the agreement, the U.S. has agreed to help Australia build a fleet of nuclear-powered submarines, replacing a previous deal Australia had with France. China has denounced the deal, saying the countries are "severely damaging regional peace and stability, intensifying an arms race, and damaging international nuclear non-proliferation efforts." Anthropologist David Vine, who tracks U.S. military bases overseas, says AUKUS will not only intensify regional tensions but also grow the U.S. military footprint in Australia. "There is no reason to be building new military bases in Australia or any part of the world," he says. [See the Program]
 
[FB] The media furor over "Critical Race Theory" has diminished, but interest in re-framing history and its institutional development around race and white supremacy should not.  Last week we lost philosopher/historian Charles Mills, author of The Racial Contract and other insightful writings about racism and liberalism.  In today's New York Times columnist Jamelle Bouie writes: "Throughout his long and fruitful career, Mills worked to show how, despite its pretenses to universalism, liberalism as a political tradition and philosophy has historically been strongly biased toward the material interests of white people and white polities to the detriment of nonwhite peoples and nonwhite polities." Read more about Charles Mills

Sunday, September 19, 2021

CFOW Newsletter - Focus on Biden's "Pivot to Asia" - and why the peace movement must pivot also

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
September 19, 2021
 
Hello All – Beginning with President Obama, and continuing now under President Biden, the US military-foreign policy elite has attempted to extract itself from the quicksand of the wars in the Middle East and make a "pivot to Asia."  This has been accompanied by a media and White House drumbeat of alarm over China's "aggression," and – more mutedly – over China's economic challenge to US post-Cold War hegemony in the world.  With the extraction of US troops from Afghanistan, the USA may be on the cusp of a dangerous escalation of conflict with China.  What to do?
 
It has been said that "war is God's way of teaching American's geography."  True or not, we must bite the bullet and spend some time with a map of the South China Sea.  We will note that this is in fact adjacent to China, and very far from California or Washington, DC.  Next, we should make a stop at the admirable website of the Committee for a SANE US-China Policy.  There we learn that, since January 1, 2021, there have been 40 "provocative military maneuvers and close encounters" between US and Chinese planes and ships in the South China Sea, near Taiwan, or elsewhere; of which 25 were initiated by the USA. Could something go wrong?
 
Other indicators of the intensifying US-China conflict are the add-ons to US military budget proposals that supposedly counter China.  A report from Brown University's Watson Center notes: "The China threat argument has been utilized to justify the quest for a 350 ship Navy—up from about 300 ships currently; major Air Force purchases like a new bomber and the F-35 combat aircraft; the Pentagon's $1.5 trillion, three decades-long proposed nuclear weapons upgrade plan" … and much more.
 
Yet USA collaboration with China is essential to address significant problems of mutual interest.  For example, the looming food crisis in Afghanistan requires collaboration between the USA and Afghanistan's neighbors, including China, now with significant influence in Afghanistan.  An even more pressing issue is the climate crisis, which requires collaboration and significant cooperation between the US and China if humanity is to survive.  In short, just as the Biden administration is launched on its "pivot toward China," the US peace movement needs to match this new development, learning and educating others about the nuts and bolts of war and peace in the South China Sea.
 
News Notes
This week the US military retracted its previous claims and admitted that its drone attack that killed 10 people in Kabul was "a horrible mistake," and not a "righteous" assassination of a would-be ISIS suicide bomber.  In a statement, BanKillerDrones said, ""The Pentagon's and Biden administration's efforts to cover-up the truth about the slaughter of 10 civilians in Kabul on Aug. 29, seven of them children, is simply an example of the on-going cover-up of killer drone atrocities that have been perpetrated by every U.S. administration since the first U.S. drone attack, in Afghanistan, on October 7, 2001, the day the U.S. invaded that tortured nation."  To sign a petition urging President Biden to end drone attacks on Afghanistan, go here.
 
Growing US aggressiveness towards China and Russia underscores the importance of preventing conflicts that could lead to nuclear war.  Last week Congressional Progressive Caucus Chair Pramila Jayapal led a group of 28 Democrats to push back against President Biden's intention, exemplified by his 2022 budget proposal, to build up US nuclear weapons. The build-up takes off from the already inflated budget numbers of the Trump regime, and adds billions more. We are happy to note that CD congressional representative Jamaal Bowman is one of the signatories of the Democrats' anti-nuclear effort.
 
What may be the most set of congressional votes of Joe Biden's presidency will soon take place re: the linkage of the bipartisan infrastructure bill to the much bigger budget reconciliation process.  In a nutshell, progressive Democrats in the House have committed to withholding their votes from the bipartisan bill unless and until the infrastructure bill is passed.  If large enough, this group – though now numbering only 16 – may exercise the congressional muscle needed to push through both, rather than only one, of these important pieces of legislation.  The Rivertowns should be proud to note that Reps. Jamaal Bowman and Mondaire Jones among the progressives who have bravely committed themselves to this "both or none" strategy.
 
Finally, if you – like me – are among those who find maps useful and helpful in opening the door to new ways of looking at "familiar" things, I recommend The Decolonial Atlas. The curators of the site say "It's based on the premise that cartography is not as objective as we're made to believe. The orientation of a map, its projection, the presence of political borders … are all subject to the map-maker's bias – whether deliberate or not."  Enjoy! (h/t JS)
 
CFOW Nuts & Bolts
Please consider getting involved with Concerned Families of Westchester. We meet for a protest/rally each Saturday in Hastings, at 12 noon at the VFW Plaza (Warburton and Spring St.)  A "Black Lives Matter/Say Their Names" vigil takes place every Monday from 5:30 to 6:00 pm in Yonkers at the intersection of Warburton Ave. and Odell.  If you would like to join one of our Zoom meetings, each Tuesday and Thursday at noon, please send a return email. Our newsletter is archived at https://cfow.blogspot.com/; and news of interest and coming events is posted on our CFOW Facebook page.  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!
The Newsletter's "Rewards!" are usually lighter fare, a way station for stalwart readers before diving into Serious Business.  This week, however, I offer what was to me an extraordinarily interesting video interview between Sarah Schulman, author of a new book on the history of ACT-UP, and Rebecca Vilkomerson, a leader of Jewish Voice for Peace.  The subject is how ACT-UP succeeded and failed in developing strategy and tactics for a movement composed (primarily) of hundreds of New Yorkers facing likely death due to the AIDS epidemic.  Schulman's giant archive of interviews with activists was also instrumental in developing the earlier documentary film "United in Anger: A History of ACT-UP." I learned a lot from the Schulman-Vilkomerson discussion, and I think others may also.
 
Best Wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
CFOW Weekly Reader
 
(Video) Who Rules Asia?: An Interview with Noam Chomsky
Interviewed by Jenny Li, New Bloom Magazine [June 2021]
---- We have an enormous responsibility today to prevent the kinds of conflicts that are coming, that are brewing, that are developing. And if permitted, the current course is pursued, will very likely lead to extremely dangerous situations, possibly even nuclear war. And a nuclear war between major powers is simply unthinkable. It would essentially destroy everything. It would leave the kind of world nobody would want to live in. How is it happening? Just take a look at what's happening right off the coast of China. Chinese warplanes have penetrated the air defense system of Taiwan. The United States has sent a huge naval armada, two major aircraft carrier groups into the South China Sea, an area of enormous strategic importance for China. Any of these things could blow up at any moment off the coast of China. Notice, it's not in the Caribbean Sea. It's not the Eastern Pacific, the Eastern Pacific off the coast of California. It's off the coast of China. China is ringed with nuclear bases, a circle of containment, nuclear missiles aimed at China from U.S. bases all through the Pacific. What's called "The Quad," the four major Asian U.S. allies, Japan… The United States itself is devoting enormous efforts to try to prevent China's development. It's pretty shocking to look at it. We should be cooperating. It is necessary for China and the United States, two major economies, to be cooperating on all sorts of issues, crucial issues like global warming, pandemics, nuclear weapons." [See the Program] For a transcript, go here.
 
A Legendary Abortion Rights Activist on What Comes After Texas
By Heather Souvaine Horn, The New Republic [September 8, 2021]
---- When Heather Booth helped a friend's sister obtain an abortion in 1965, she thought it would be a one-off situation. Instead, it became the start of a legendary underground operation known as the Jane Collective, or simply Jane. In the years leading up to the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision, the Jane Collective helped thousands of pregnant people in the Chicago area and beyond obtain abortions in defiance of strict statewide bans—establishing procedures to protect and support those seeking them and those providing them, and also to promote safety. Now, following Texas's law to ban abortions after six weeks (before many people know they are pregnant) and award private citizens $10,000 for suing anyone remotely involved in a procedure beyond those weeks, the right to an abortion, already something that existed more in theory than reality for much of the country, seems ever more uncertain. Many activists are turning to earlier generations for lessons on how to resist restrictions and get care to those who need it. I called up Booth to ask her about Jane's history and her perspective on the new law. [Read More]
 
(Video) "Islamophobia and the Politics of Empire": How Racism Fueled U.S. Wars Post-9/11
From Democracy Now! [September 14, 2021]
---- According to the Costs of War Project, the wars launched by the United States following 9/11 have killed an estimated 929,000 people in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq, Syria, Yemen and elsewhere. The true death toll may never be known, but the vast majority of the victims have been Muslim. "Racism is baked into the security logic of the national security state in the U.S., as well as in terms of how it operates abroad," says Islamophobia scholar Deepa Kumar, a professor of media studies at Rutgers University. "The war on terror was sold to the American public using Orientalist and racist ideas that these societies are backward." [See the Program]
 
The Climate Crisis
[FB – It's hard to overstate the importance of the Glasgow climate summit, which will start on October 31st and go through November 12th.  As the articles linked below show, the Earth is rapidly warming towards a 2 degree Celsius temperature increase, now viewed as guaranteeing catastrophe.  Two days ago, the head of the United Nations warned that the summit risked failure: "There is still a level of mistrust, between north and south, developed and developing countries, that needs to be overcome. We are on the verge of the abyss."  In the USA, the "Green New Deal" – the most hopeful climate policy now on the legislative table – is bound up with President Biden's infrastructure proposal, whose legislative success is in doubt.  We must renew our efforts to demand effective policies to prevent climate catastrophe.]
 
New Climate Analysis Shows Near Total Global Failure to Meet 1.5°C Targets
By Andrea Germanos, Common Dreams [September 15, 2021]
---- A new analysis reveals a near total global failure of governments to have climate action and targets on track for limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels. Released Wednesday by the Climate Action Tracker (CAT), the assessment rated just one nation, The Gambia, as "1.5°C Paris Agreement compatible," and found the United States' overall climate action—despite a welcome "U-turn on climate change" since the Trump administration—to be "insufficient." The analysis, which covered policies of 36 nations and the European Union, framed the widespread failings as particularly glaring given the "absolute urgency" of climate action made clear by the most recent IPCC report, a publication United Nations chief António Guterres declared "a code red for humanity." [Read More]
 
Also informative is "What's Up With COP26?" b [Link]. Famed climate scientist James Hansen warns that the worldwide decline of air pollution could increase the rate of global warming significantly. A recent international survey found that "Climate Inaction Has Left Majority of Young People Believing Humanity Is 'Doomed.'" But Friday's great action by Extinction Rebellion, protesting the continuing practice of major banks in investing in fossil fuels, shows that the fight back against the climate crisis is alive and well.
 
The State of the Union
We Are on the Precipice of a Housing Disaster
By Rev. Dr. Liz Theoharis, The Poor People's Campaign [September 17, 2021]
[FB – Once again, we need to deploy a strong "inside-outside" strategy:  intense community-based agitation for housing justice coordinated with work inside local, state, and federal legislatures to prevent homeless for millions of people.]
---- "The coronavirus pandemic could result in some 28 million Americans being evicted.… By comparison, 10 million people lost their homes in the Great Recession." These predictions come, in part, from Emily Benfer, the chair of the American Bar Association's Task Force Committee on Eviction and cocreator with the Eviction Lab at Princeton University of the Covid-19 Housing Policy Scorecard. She observes, "We have never seen this extent of eviction in such a truncated amount of time in our history." … Those facing eviction, those underpaid and excluded, and many of the 140 million people who are poor and low-income can't wait for those in power to act (if they ever do). Grassroots efforts like the National Union of the Homeless, Housing Justice for All, Cancel the Rents, Homes Guarantee, and other networks promoting rent strikes and eviction resistance will continue to organize to ensure that all Americans have a place to live, thrive, and build the sort of society we know is possible. [Read More]
 
Our History – The 10th Anniversary of "Occupy Wall St."
Life can be different: 10 years ago, Occupy Wall Street changed the world
By Rebecca Nathanson, The Guardian [September 15, 2021]
---- Occupy Wall Street politicized an entire generation – one that grew up under George W Bush in the post-9/11 years, pinning all their hopes on Barack Obama. Let down when his message of "hope and change" failed to manifest after the 2008 global financial crisis, they began to question American political and economic institutions themselves. I was one of those millennials. The movement upended my life, introducing me to new politics and people. It also upended the world, part of a string of uprisings that spread from Tunisia and Egypt to Spain and Chile to, finally, the United States. Occupy's rise in 2011 marked the re-entry of class consciousness into mainstream American politics. Occupy had two pillars: its critique of inequality, and its vision of an alternative way of organizing society. The former moved from the fringe to the center, bringing inequality into the national discourse; the latter has been largely overlooked. The movement made decisions by consensus, which was messy and slow, but it also challenged the idea that the way we live is a given. [Read More]
 
(Video) "Another World Is Possible": How Occupy Wall Street Reshaped Politics & Kicked Off New Era of Protest
From Democracy Now! [September 17, 2021]
---- On the 10th anniversary of Occupy Wall Street, we examine the legacy of the historic protests with three veterans of the movement: Nelini Stamp, now the director of strategy and partnerships at the Working Families Party; Jillian Johnson, a key organizer in Occupy Durham who now serves on the Durham City Council and is the city's mayor pro tempore; and writer and filmmaker Astra Tayor, an organizer with the Debt Collective. Occupy Wall Street "broke the spell" protecting the economic status quo and marked a major shift in protests against capitalism, Taylor says. "Occupy kind of inaugurated this social movement renaissance," she tells Democracy Now! "We've been in an age of defiant protest ever since Occupy Wall Street. [See the Program{
 
Also of interest – "Did Occupy Wall Street Make a Difference?" by Ruth Milkman, et al., The Nation [September 17, 2021] [Link]; "What Occupy Wall Street Organizers Would Do Differently. Do they still stand by the leaderless revolution?" The Nation [Link]; "The Impact of Occupy Wall Street Continues to Grow" by John Tarleton, The Indypendent [September 15, 2021] [Link]; and "Occupy Memory" by Molly Crabapple, New York Review of Books [Link].
 

Sunday, September 12, 2021

CFOW Newsletter - Focus on 9/11 and its Legacy

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
September 12, 2021
 
Hello All – Yesterday's memorial events for the victims of the 9/11 attacks stuck carefully to the events of that day alone. We mourned the deaths of those who died at the hands of the terrorists, and those first-responders who were killed attempting to save them.  But because 9/11 follows so closely on the heels of the collapse of the US project in Afghanistan, which was joined at the hip to the attacks on 9/11, we averted our eyes from the transition of the victim into the aggressor, and the waste of hundreds of thousands of lives and trillions of dollars that ensued.  What are the lessons, the legacies, of 9/11 and 20 years of war? Who will frame this narrative?
 
In addition to the tragedy and terror of 20 years of war, looking back we can see that "9/11" did enormous, perhaps irreparable, damage to our country.  In the New York Times last week, Michelle Goldberg wrote: "The attacks, and our response to them, catalyzed a period of decline that helped turn the United States into the debased, half-crazed fading power we are today." Yet in the discourse of our political and media elites over the last week, there is little indication that any "lessons" have been learned, that new targets and more victims of war will not be found.  For Concerned Families of Westchester, which marks its 20th anniversary today, there is no reason to think that the end of the war in Afghanistan will also end the need for desperate efforts on behalf of peace and justice.
 
In early 2002, CFOW began a collaboration with September 11th Families for Peaceful Tomorrows, a newly formed organization composed of people who had lost loved ones in the 9/11 attacks and rejected the use of these deaths as a justification for war.  "Not in Our Name!" was their cry. Early members were Westchester's Phyllis and Orlando Rodriguez, whose son was killed in the World Trade Center.  One of our first speakers at Dobbs' South Presbyterian Church was Peaceful Tomorrow's member Rita Lasar, (shown here with Westchester's Masuda Sultan, who lost 19 family members during the early days of the US bombing of Afghanistan.)  Rita's brother Abe was killed in the South Tower because his best friend was in a wheelchair, and they waited together to be rescued.  When President Bush used the "selfless example" of her brother Abe to justify revenge, Rita's letter protesting this – Not in his name! – was published in the New York Times; and she later joined a delegation of similarly bereaved people to Afghanistan, where they met and consoled people there who had lost loved ones to US bombs.  The courageous people who came together in February 2002 to form September 11th Families for Peaceful Tomorrows illuminated a path in those dark days that remains with us still,  invoking Martin Luther King's injunction that "wars are poor chisels for carving out peaceful tomorrows."
 
Some useful reading about September 11, 2001
 
I Lost My Father on 9/11, but I Never Wanted to Be a "Victim"
By Leila Murphy, The Nation [September 9, 2021]
 
(Video) "Turning Point": Legacy of the U.S. Response to 9/11 Is Terror, Domestic Surveillance & Drones – From Democracy Now! [September 9, 2021]
 
9/11 and the Saudi Connection
By Eric Lichtblau and James Risen, The Intercept [September 11, 2021]
 
The Accumulated Evil of the Whole: Bush and Co. made the September 11 Attacks a Pretext for War on Iraq
Informed Comment
 
(Video) "9/11's Unsettled Dust": Bush's EPA Hid Health Risks from Toxic Dust at Ground Zero & Thousands Died – From Democracy Now! [September 7, 2021]
 
News Notes
An extraordinary 10-minute video accompanies this shattering investigation by the New York Times into the drone assassination of an Afghan NGO worker and nine members of his family (mostly children) in the last days of the US occupation: "In U.S. Drone Strike, Evidence Suggests No ISIS Bomb."  As happens so often with US precision, surgical strikes via drone, their target turned out to be a civilian. [LInk].
 
In the wake of the US collapse in Afghanistan, commentary by Noam Chomsky is in high demand.  Among this week's interviews are "The US-Led "War on Terror" Has Devastated Much of the World" from Truthout;  and two videos: "American Empire After 20 Years in Afghanistan"] from Jacobin Magazine, and "Noam Chomsky weighs in on Afghanistan" from Gulf News. All are interesting, imo.
 
Finally, the stalwarts at the UK's Extinction Rebellion have just published "Global Newsletter #55 - Power to the People! Rebellion Returns!"  Needless to say, it's full of action and plans for more action. Read it here.
 
CFOW Nuts & Bolts
Please consider getting involved with Concerned Families of Westchester. We meet for a protest/rally each Saturday in Hastings, at 12 noon at the VFW Plaza (Warburton and Spring St.)  A "Black Lives Matter/Say Their Names" vigil takes place every Monday from 5:30 to 6:00 pm in Yonkers at the intersection of Warburton Ave. and Odell.  If you would like to join one of our Zoom meetings, each Tuesday and Thursday at noon, please send a return email. Our newsletter is archived at https://cfow.blogspot.com/; and news of interest and coming events is posted on our CFOW Facebook page.  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!
Most weeks, the Newsletter's "Rewards!" are a change-of-pace, some music or item of interest that is off-topic, diverting, hopefully enjoyable.  That doesn't seem right this week.  Here instead is Estonian composer Arvo Part's "Cantus in Memoriam Benjamin Britten," a short piece that, for me, captures the mourning, loss, tragedy, and waste of 9/11 and the 20 Years War that followed.
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
CFOW Weekly Reader
 
The only way to effectively counter terror is to end war
By Kathy Kelly September 10, 2021
---- The U.S. government and military exploited the grief and shock following the 9/11 attacks to raise fears, promote Islamophobia and launch forever wars which continue to this day. Under the guise of "counter-terrorism," the United States now pledges to combine drone attacks, surveillance, airstrikes and covert operations to continue waging war in Afghanistan. Terror among Afghans persists. … We should be honest. The Taliban are in power today because of a colossal mess the United States helped create. Now, we U.S. citizens must insist on paying reparations for destruction caused by 20 years of war. To be meaningful, reparations must also include dismantling the warfare systems that caused so much havoc and misery. Our wars of choice were waged against people who meant us no harm. We must choose, now, to lay aside the cruel futility of our forever wars. … We must express true sorrow, seek forgiveness, and show valor similar to that of the brave people insisting on human rights in Afghanistan today. Collectively, recognizing the terrible legacy of 9/11, we must agree: To counter terror, abolish war. [Read More]
 
The $8 Trillion Cost of Failure
By Tom Engelhardt, Tom Dispatch [September 8, 2021]
---- They weren't kidding when they called Afghanistan the "graveyard of empires." Indeed, that cemetery has just taken another imperial body. And it wasn't pretty, was it? Not that anyone should be surprised. Even after 20 years of preparation, a burial never is.  In fact, the shock and awe(fulness) in Kabul and Washington over these last weeks shouldn't have been surprising, given our history. … This is a land that's crumbling before our eyes, being (un)built month by month, year by year. Its political system is on the verge of dissolving into who knows what amid a raft of voter suppression laws, wild claims about the most recent presidential election, an assault on the Capitol itself, and conspiracy theories galore. Its political parties seem ever more hostile, disturbed, and disparate. Its economy is a gem of inequality, its infrastructure crumbling, its society seemingly coming apart at the seams. And on a planet that could be turning into a genuine graveyard of empires (and of so much else), keep in mind that, if you're losing your war with climate change, you can't withdraw from it. You can't declare defeat and go home. You're already home in the increasingly dysfunctional, increasingly (un)built US of A. [Read More]
 
September 11 and the Debacle of 'Nation-Building' in Iraq and Afghanistan
[FB – Walden Bello frames the US failures in Afghanistan and Iraq within the experiences of previous colonial efforts in The Philippines, Japan, and Vietnam.]
---- Like all other imperial powers, the US could not just wreck a society and engage in a purely military occupation of Afghanistan. Like all of them, it had to reconstruct a society, if only to reduce the costs of military occupation and give its venture a patina of legitimacy among both Afghans and Americans. And, like all, it could not help but attempt to reconstruct a society in its own image, even if the result was in reality a disfigured or distorted copy of itself. In the case of the United States, reconstructing Afghanistan and later Iraq in its own image meant trying to create an avatar of American liberal democracy. The term for this process given by American policy makers was "nation-building." However, a more accurate term to describe the American way of politically managing conquered societies is "liberal democratic reconstruction." …The ideology of liberal democratic reconstruction had been merely shelved, not buried. It received a new lease on life in the early 2000s, after the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan. There were a number of factors that went into the invasions of both countries, including vengeance for 9/11, but both countries were essentially seen as providing Washington opportunities to reshape the global political environment after the Cold War. [Read More]
 
Also of interest re: Afghanistan – Two informative videos: from Code Pink, "Afghanistan – What Next?" with Sonali Kolhatkar and Phyllis Bennis [Link]; and from Democracy Now! – "Taliban's New Acting Government Filled with Hard-Liners, No Women Is "Disappointing" as Protests Grow," with Danish Afghan journalist Nagieb Khaja  [Link].  Also informative is "The Other Afghan Women" by September 6, 2021] – about rural women - [Link].
 
The Climate Crisis
Imagine If We Had Spent the Last 20 Years Fighting Climate Change Instead of the War on Terror
By Sarah Lazare, In These Times [September 7, 2021]
---- Twenty years into a nebulous ​"War on Terror," the United States is in the grips of a full-fledged climate crisis. Hurricane Ida, whose severity is a direct result of human-made climate change, flooded cities, cut off power to hundreds of thousands, killed at least 60 people, and left elderly people dying in their homes and in squalid evacuation facilities. This followed a summer of heat waves, wildfires and droughts — all forms of extreme weather that the Global South has borne the brunt of, but are now, undeniably, the new ​"normal" in the United States. The U.S. government has turned the whole globe into a potential battlefield, chasing some ill-defined danger ​"out there," when, in reality, the danger is right here — and is partially of the U.S. government's own creation. Plotting out the connections between this open-ended war and the climate crisis is a grim exercise, but an important one. It's critical to examine how the War on Terror not only took up all of the oxygen when we should have been engaged in all-out effort to curb emissions, but also made the climate crisis far worse, by foreclosing on other potential frameworks under which the United States could relate with the rest of the world. Such bitter lessons are not academic: There is still time to stave off the worst climate scenarios, a goal that, if attained, would likely save hundreds of millions of lives, and prevent entire countries from being swallowed into the sea. [Read More]
 
Also useful/interesting on the climate crisis – "Indigenous Resistance Instrumental in Stopping High-Profile Fossil Fuel Projects, Says Report," by Nick Cunningham, DeSmog Blog [September 8, 2021] [Link]; and "A Climate Disaster Is Unfolding Before Our Eyes—And Politicians Still Refuse to Take Action" by Sonali Kolhatkar, Naked Capitalism [September 8, 2021] [Link].
 
Civil Liberties
Muslim man spent 15 years in prison after post-9/11 crackdown
From Aljazeera [September 11, 2021]
---- For Yassin M Aref, the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks is a sad reminder of 15 lost years spent in American prisons. Aref, 51, a Kurdish man and former mosque leader at the Masjid As-Salam in Albany, was arrested in 2004 on a conspiracy charge brought by the FBI in a "sting operation". He was accused of aiding "terrorism" based on "secret" evidence. … Aref was deported to the Kurdish region of northern Iraq in 2019 after his release. Aref and his wife, Zuhur, live together while their four children, two boys and two girls, are studying in the US. On July 2 he published his memories in Kurdish. The book is more than 1,000 pages and includes details of his arrest and his life in prison. Son of Mountains is his English version of the memoir that was published in the US in 2008. [Read More]
 
For more on police surveillance/trickery – "Cameras, Drones and X-Ray Vans: How 9/11 Transformed the N.Y.P.D. Forever," b[Link]; and "9/11 militarized law enforcement and made every American a suspect" by Christopher J. Coyne and Abigail R. Hall, Responsible Statecraft [September 6, 2021] [Link].
 
Our History
The 19th Century's 9/11
By Marc Steiner, The Nation [September 10, 2021]
---- Long before the 9/11 of 20 years ago, another episode of violence took place on that day in 1851. That September 11 is long forgotten, despite its being one of the country's most seminal events. Most Americans called it the Christiana Riot. To Quakers and others who opposed slavery, it was known as the Christiana Resistance. In the early 1850s, America was already at war with itself, over slavery and its expansion into new territories. Abolitionists, while representing a political minority, were highly organized, and 100,000 members of the population had become fugitives from slavery. In response, in 1850, Congress passed the Fugitive Slave Act, making it a federal crime to assist those seeking freedom. The act also ordered the US Marshals to pursue runaway slaves, monetarily incentivizing slave catchers and creating an industry of hunting down Black Americans, whether free or enslaved. The Christiana Resistance represented the first challenge to the Fugitive Slave Act, culminating in a violent confrontation between fugitive slaves and enslavers. [Read More]