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 [
---- 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