Sunday, March 27, 2022

CFOW Newsletter - Focus on seven years of US support for the war in Yemen

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
March 27, 2022
 
Hello All – Friday marked the 7th anniversary of Saudi Arabia's war in Yemen. Despite intense bombing, the Saudis and their coalition partner The United Arab Emirates have been unable to defeat the Houthi rebels and their allies, who now control much of the country.  The war has become a bloody stalemate, with the United Nations declaring Yemen to be "the world's greatest humanitarian disaster."  According to one report, the UN's World Food Program estimates that half of all the country's children under 5, about 2.3 million kids, are at risk of acute malnutrition, with 400,000 at risk of dying.
 
As the world witnesses the massive outpouring of support for the Ukraine victims of Russian aggression, the failure to attend to the needs of the victims of Saudi aggression stands in sharp contrast. An attempt by the United Nations to raise $4.2 billion for the people of Yemen has failed, with only $1.3 billion in contributions received so far. Moreover, Russia's war in Ukraine is already causing the price of grain to soar, and Yemen depends on Russia and Ukraine for much of its wheat.  The United Nations estimated last fall that the Yemen death toll would top 377,000 people by the end of 2021.
 
In this context, the Biden administration's continued support for the Saudi war against Yemen is simply obscene.  The United States continues to supply spare parts for Saudi/UAE coalition war planes, along with maintenance and a steady flow of armaments. Without this support, the Saudis couldn't continue their murderous aerial attacks. As Kathy Kelly states,
 
Instead of condemning atrocities committed by the Saudi/UAE invasion, bombing and blockade of Yemen, the United States is cozying up to the leaders of these countries. As sanctions against Russia disrupt global oil sales, the United States is entering talks to become increasingly reliant on Saudi and UAE oil production. And Saudi Arabia and the UAE don't want to increase their oil production without a U.S. agreement to help them increase their attacks against Yemen.
 
The cynicism of the Biden administration, prattling on about Russian atrocities while given aid and comfort to Saudi atrocities on Yemen, is beyond hypocritical.  The media coverage of the war in Ukraine has shown us what suffering looks like from the point of view of those being bombed.  We can only conclude that, because of the geopolitics of Ukraine and Yemen, some victims of war and terror are more worthy than others for our thoughts and prayers.
 
Last Friday, Rep. Primila Jayapal, chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, along with Sen. Bernie Sanders and other progressive legislators, issued a statement "calling for an immediate end to American involvement in the Saudi-led coalition's brutal military campaign," They will soon introduce a War Powers Resolution demanding an end to US participation in Saudi Arabia's horrible war.  Please call our congressional representatives, Jamaal Bowman [(202) 225-2464] and Mondaire Jones [(202) 225-6506] and ask them to support legislation to end US complicity in this war.  Thanks.
 
Some useful reading about the Yemen War
 
The People of Yemen Suffer Atrocities, Too
By Kathy Kelly, Ban Killer Drones [March 22, 2022] ]Link].
 
US should use its leverage to end the war in Yemen
By William D. Hartung and Annelle Sheline, Stripes [March 24, 2022] [Link].
 
As U.S. Focuses on Ukraine, Yemen Starves
By Shuaib Almosawa, The Intercept [March 16 2022] [Link].
 
Progressives Demand End to US Involvement on 7th Anniversary of Saudi-Led War on Yemen
By Kenny Stancil, Common Dreams [March 25, 2022] [Link].
 
Seven years on, and the war in Yemen has not achieved its goals
By Saeed Al-Shehabi, Middle East Monitor [March 22, 2022] [Link].
 
Beauty as Fuel for Change 2022
CFOW has a new initiative: the Beauty as Fuel for Change. Our founding statement says" At this time when our #Democracy is at a crossroads, CFOW embarks on a new initiative for 2022. As Community leaders of this initiative, Concerned Families of Westchester stalwarts hope to inspire an exploration of expressive, creative visioning. We want to plant seeds of positive representations, to interrupt the negative, divisive patterns we live with today. A project to change the conversation, with creative expression that is hopeful and helpful and inspires us to create a better world! This is a vehicle for positive imaginings & a way to reach out beyond borders to build bridges between activists in all arenas and to let us unleash the power of creativity in our human community! Color Your Imagination! CFOW is asking people of all ages to show, in all manner of Art imaginable, what our beautiful future looks like. Show us your vision of a truly working Democracy, a more perfect union! Join the peaceful visionaries of Concerned Families of Westchester in this project to help manifest positive change." To learn more, go to our Facebook Group. To contact the project organizers, email BeautyAsFuel@gmail.com.
 
Keeping our Elections Safe and Secure
For several years, CFOW stalwarts and many others have worked to protect our elections by exposing the fault of certain voting machines and trying to keep dangerous machines from being used in NYS/Westchester.  A "touchscreen hybrid machine," one of the easily hackable machines, is about to be certified for use in NY.  In Albany, Assembly member Amy Paulin and others are attempting to get legislation through the Election Law Committee, and to a floor vote, that would ban such machines from use.  So far, the following members of the Assembly have signed on this legislation:  
 
Abinanti, Anderson, Barrett, Bichotte, Brabenec, Burdick, Burgos, Carroll, Colton, Clark, Cook, De La Rosa, DeStefano, Dickens, Dinowitz, Durso, Englebright, Epstein, Fahy, Forrest, Galef, Gallagher, Gottfried, Hermelyn, Jackson, Jacobson, Kelles, Lupardo, Mamdani, McDonald, McDonough, Mikulic (multisponsor), Norris, Pichardo, Rajkumar, Reyes, Rivera J, Rosenthal L, Sayegh, Simon, Simpson, Tague, Taylor, Thiele, Woerner, Zinerman.
 
To help keep "touchscreen hybrid machines" out of NYS, please write to thank your Assembly representative if they are sponsors of the legislation, or use/modify this letter/template if your Assembly representative is not yet a co-sponsor, urging to become one.  Thanks!
 
Sign here!
About half a million people have joined the Dalai Lama and other Nobel Peace Prize Laureates in signing this powerful (and timely) open letter against war and nuclear weapons. To join them, sign here.
 
CFOW Nuts & Bolts
Please consider getting involved with Concerned Families of Westchester.  Weather permitting, 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 will be held on Monday, April 4th 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 for the link. 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!
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
CFOW Weekly Reader
 
Featured Essays
The Worldwide Oligarchy
By Sen. Bernie Sanders [March 25, 2022]
---- If you watch the corporate media, you'll often hear the word 'oligarch' preceded by the word 'Russian.' But oligarchs aren't uniquely a Russian phenomenon or a foreign concept. No. The United States has its own oligarchy. Today, in the United States, the two wealthiest people own more wealth than the bottom 42 percent of our population – more than 130 million Americans. And the top one percent now owns more wealth than the bottom 92 percent. During the last 50 years there has been a massive transfer of wealth in our country, but it's going in the wrong direction. … Clearly, while we face oligarchy, COVID, attacks on democracy, climate change, the horrific war in Ukraine and other challenges it is easy to understand why many may fall into cynicism and hopelessness. This is a state of mind, however, that we must overcome – not only for ourselves, but for our kids and future generations. The stakes are just too high, and despair is not an option. We must come together and fight back. What history has always taught us is that real change never takes place from the top on down. It always occurs from the bottom on up. That is the history of the labor movement, the civil rights movement, the women's movement, the environmental movement and the gay rights movement. That is the history of every effort that has brought about transformational change in our society. That is the struggle we must intensify today. [Read More]
 
Chomsky: Let's Focus on Preventing Nuclear War, Rather Than Debating "Just War"
An interview by C.J. Polychroniou, Truthout [March 24, 2022]
Q. - Does he want to occupy all of Ukraine? Is he trying to rebuild the Russian empire? Is this why peace negotiations have stalled?
Noam Chomsky: There is very little credible information about the negotiations. Some of the information leaking out sounds mildly optimistic. There is good reason to suppose that if the U.S. were to agree to participate seriously, with a constructive program, the possibilities for an end to the horror would be enhanced. What a constructive program would be, at least in general outline, is no secret. The primary element is commitment to neutrality for Ukraine: no membership in a hostile military alliance, no hosting of weapons aimed at Russia (even those misleadingly called "defensive"), no military maneuvers with hostile military forces. … Neutralization of Ukraine is the main element of a constructive program, but there is more. There should be moves towards some kind of federal arrangement for Ukraine involving a degree of autonomy for the Donbass region, along the general lines of what remains of Minsk II. Again, that would be nothing new in world affairs. No two cases are identical, and no real example is anywhere near perfect, but federal structures exist in Switzerland and Belgium, among other cases — even the U.S. to an extent. Serious diplomatic efforts might find a solution to this problem, or at least contain the flames. [Read More]
 
The Racism and Incoherence of the World's Asylum Systems
By Naureen Khan, The Nation [March 24, 2022]
---- In the early days of the Russian invasion, the European Union took an extraordinary action: It granted the hundreds of thousands—soon to be millions—of Ukrainian refugees the automatic right to live, work, and move freely within the bloc for at least a year. The unanimous decision by all 27 member states to invoke the Temporary Protection Directive—created over 20 years ago in the wake of the Yugoslav Wars but never before deployed—gave Ukrainians access to social services like housing, education, and health care without their having to go through the laborious nation-by-nation asylum process. The institutional support is a sliver of solace for the 3 million Ukrainians who have escaped Russian bombardment and had their lives shattered by war. … But the swift aid rendered to them also brings into sharp relief the hell that non-white asylum seekers have endured when they have tried to escape equally harrowing circumstances. When Syrian, Afghan, Iraqi, and other refugees came to European shores seeking safety, border guards sometimes violently pushed them back, while conservative politicians and parts of the population treated them with suspicion and contempt. They were often pushed back from borders by violent force and met with xenophobic contempt. In the United States, seeking asylum at the southern border remains nearly impossible for Central Americans and others as the Biden administration continues the mass expulsions begun by its predecessor. The vastly different receptions speak to the racism and incoherence at the heart of the world's asylum systems. [Read More] Also useful on the "double-standards" of the world's immigration/refugee policies, read "We must turn solidarity with Ukraine into the new normal for all refugees{ by Nicolas Haeringer, Waging Nonviolence [March 22, 2022]  [Link]. A short video from AJ+ sums it up [Link].
 
The Russia-Ukraine War
(Video) Don't Turn Ukraine into Another Afghanistan: Anatol Lieven Urges Peace Talks, Not a Prolonged War
From Democracy Now! [March 24, 2022]
---- NATO, the G7 and the European Council held unprecedented emergency meetings in Brussels Thursday as the Russian invasion of Ukraine enters its second month. NATO has announced plans to send even more troops to Eastern Europe, where its troop presence has already doubled from last month to 40,000. We speak with Anatol Lieven, senior fellow at the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, who says that as the war becomes a prolonged stalemate, the U.S. and other countries should be doing everything possible to facilitate an end to the fighting. "There is something deeply immoral in trying to wage a war of this kind at the expense of other people if a reasonable peace settlement is on the cards," says Lieven. [See the Program]
 
(Video) Yanis Varoufakis: The West Is "Playing with Fire" If It Pushes Regime Change in Nuclear-Armed Russia
From Democracy Now! [March 25, 2022]
---- A month after the Russian invasion of Ukraine, more than 3.6 million Ukrainians have left the country as refugees, and the war risks becoming "an Afghanistan-like quagmire," warns Greek lawmaker Yanis Varoufakis, founder of the Progressive International with U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders. He says the West's sweeping sanctions on Russia and bottomless military aid to Ukraine risk escalating the conflict and foreclosing chances of a peaceful resolution. "What is exactly the aim? Is it regime change in Russia?" asks Varoufakis. "Well, whenever the United States tried regime change, it didn't turn out very well and has never been tried with a nuclear power. This is like playing with fire." See the Program]
 
The Smaller Bombs That Could Turn Ukraine Into a Nuclear War Zone
March 21, 2022]
---- In destructive power, the behemoths of the Cold War dwarfed the American atomic bomb that destroyed Hiroshima. Washington's biggest test blast was 1,000 times as large. Moscow's was 3,000 times. On both sides, the idea was to deter strikes with threats of vast retaliation — with mutual assured destruction, or MAD. The psychological bar was so high that nuclear strikes came to be seen as unthinkable. Today, both Russia and the United States have nuclear arms that are much less destructive — their power just fractions of the Hiroshima bomb's force, their use perhaps less frightening and more thinkable. Concern about these smaller arms has soared as Vladimir V. Putin, in the Ukraine war, has warned of his nuclear might, has put his atomic forces on alert and has had his military carry out risky attacks on nuclear power plants. The fear is that if Mr. Putin feels cornered in the conflict, he might choose to detonate one of his lesser nuclear arms — breaking the taboo set 76 years ago after Hiroshima and Nagasaki. [Read More]
 
War & Peace
This Is What It's Like to Witness a Nuclear Explosion
[FB - Rod Buntzen is the author of "My Armageddon Experience: A Nuclear Weapons Test Memoir."]
----In the early days of his war against Ukraine, President Vladimir Putin told the world that he had ordered his nation's nuclear forces to a higher state of readiness. Ever since, pundits, generals and politicians have speculated about what would happen if the Russian military used a nuclear weapon. What would NATO do? Should the United States respond with its own nuclear weapons? These speculations all sound hollow to me. Unconvincing words without feeling. In 1958, as a young scientist for the U.S. Navy, I witnessed the detonation of an 8.9-megaton thermonuclear weapon as it sat on a barge in Eniwetok Atoll, in the Marshall Islands. I watched from across the lagoon at the beach on Parry Island, where my group prepared instrumentation to measure the atmospheric radiation. Sixty-three years later, what I saw remains etched in my mind, which is why I'm so alarmed that the use of nuclear weapons can be discussed so cavalierly in 2022. Although the potential horror of nuclear weapons remains frozen in films from Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the public today has little understanding of the stakes of the Cold War and what might be expected now if the war in Ukraine intentionally or accidentally spins out of control. [Read More]
 
Before US Enters New Cold War, Let's Remember the Costs of the Last One
By William Hartung, et al., Tom Dispatch [March 22, 2022]
---- A growing chorus of pundits and policymakers has suggested that Russia's invasion of Ukraine marks the beginning of a new Cold War. If so, that means trillions of additional dollars for the Pentagon in the years to come coupled with a more aggressive military posture in every corner of the world. The first Cold War, of course, reached far beyond Europe, as Washington promoted right-wing authoritarian regimes and insurgencies globally at the cost of millions of lives. Before this country succumbs to calls for a return to Cold War-style Pentagon spending, it's important to note that the United States is already spending substantially more than it did at the height of the Korean and Vietnam Wars or, in fact, any other moment in that first Cold War. … Beyond the danger of breaking the budget and siphoning off resources urgently needed to address pressing challenges like pandemics, climate change, and racial and economic injustice, a new Cold War could have devastating consequences. Under such a rubric, the U.S. would undoubtedly launch yet more military initiatives, while embracing unsavory allies in the name of fending off Russian and Chinese influence. Here's the irony: going back to Cold War levels of Pentagon funding would mean reducing, not increasing spending. Of course, that's anything but what the advocates of such military outlays had in mind, even before the present crisis. [Read More]  Bill Hartung spoke about the costs of "a new cold war" on Democracy Now! this week: [Link].
 
The Climate Crisis
In a World on Fire, Stop Burning Things
By
---- On the last day of February, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change issued its most dire report yet. The Secretary-General of the United Nations, António Guterres, had, he said, "seen many scientific reports in my time, but nothing like this." Setting aside diplomatic language, he described the document as "an atlas of human suffering and a damning indictment of failed climate leadership," and added that "the world's biggest polluters are guilty of arson of our only home." Then, just a few hours later, at the opening of a rare emergency special session of the U.N. General Assembly, he catalogued the horrors of Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine, and declared, "Enough is enough." … So let's reframe the fight. Along with discussing carbon fees and green-energy tax credits, amid the momentary focus on disabling Russian banks and flattening the ruble, there's a basic, underlying reality: the era of large-scale combustion has to come to a rapid close. If we understand that as the goal, we might be able to keep score, and be able to finally get somewhere. [Read More]
 
American Exceptionalism is the Wrong Lens for our Massive Carbon Dioxide Emissions
By Aviva Chomsky, Tom Dispatch [March 25, 2022]
---- Three years after the end of World War II, diplomat George Kennan outlined the challenges the country faced this way:
 
"We have about 50% of the world's wealth, but only 6.3% of its population. In this situation, we cannot fail to be the object of envy and resentment. Our real task in the coming period is to devise a pattern of relationships which will permit us to maintain this position of disparity without positive detriment to our national security."
 
That, in a nutshell, was the postwar version of U.S. exceptionalism and Washington was then planning to manage the world in such a way as to maintain that remarkably grotesque disparity. The only obstacle Kennan saw was poor people demanding a share of the wealth. Today, as humanity confronts a looming climate catastrophe, what's needed is a new political-economic project. Its aim would be to replace such exceptionalism and the hoarding of the earth's resources with what's been called "a good life for all within planetary boundaries." Back in 1948, few if any here were thinking about the environmental effects of the over-consumption of available resources. … Today, the situation has shifted — at least a bit. With approximately 4% of the world's population, the United States still holds about 30% of its wealth, while its commitment to over-consumption and maintaining global dominance remains remarkably unshaken.  [Read More]
 

Sunday, March 20, 2022

CFOW Newsletter - We say "No" to a "No Fly Zone"

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
March 20, 2022
 
Hello All – How can we help the people of Ukraine?  Their suffering is horrible.  Ukraine's leaders ask the United States and NATO to establish a "no fly zone" to stop the bombing.  Many people in the United States support this idea. We say no.
 
A "no fly zone" is not a magic formula using magic words. It is a deadly military operation. It would be a major escalation of the war, bringing NATO into direct conflict with Russia. And it would not stop Russian artillery or cruise missiles, now the main source of Ukrainian civilian casualties. In the real world, establishing a "no fly zone" means destroying the enemy's anti-aircraft artillery and radar.  A "no fly zone" is not possible if planes that enforce it can be easily shot down. Many Russian air defenses capable of shooting down planes over Ukraine are located in Russia.  If US or NATO planes were to attack military targets in Russia, this would quickly escalate the war, possibly resulting in a nuclear war. The end of human civilization.
 
Amidst the clamor for a "no fly zone," many experts and veteran military people have been raising warnings of caution. On March 10th 78 foreign policy experts sent an open letter to the Biden administration warning that such a "reckless" policy would risk bringing the United States into a "shooting war with Russian forces" as they ramp up their assault on their neighbor. "A no-fly zone would expand the war, not stop it," the statement said.  One of the organizers of the statement, Stephen Wertheim, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, spoke at length about these dangers on Democracy Now!  A similar warning came from Veterans for Peace; and Rep. Ilhan Omar made an impassioned speech in the House of Representatives in solidarity with the people of Ukraine, while also warning about the dangers that a "no fly zone" would entail. [link].
 
The way to bring peace to Ukraine is not by expanding or further militarizing the war, but by working for a cease fire and supporting negotiations.  This is the cruel truth of this war.
 
Some useful reading on the Russia-Ukraine war
 
(Video) The Best Way to Help Ukraine Is Diplomacy, Not War & Increased Militarization
From Democracy Now! [March 17, 2022]
---- President Biden announced $800 million in new military aid for Ukraine on Wednesday, just days after Congress cleared a $1.5 trillion spending bill that included nearly $14 billion for Ukrainian humanitarian aid and security assistance. Experts warn that sending more lethal weapons could escalate war and result in more losses for Ukraine. "The cost on civilian lives is horrific," says Phyllis Bennis, a fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies, who says increasing military aid in Ukraine could thwart peace talks between Russia and Ukraine — which appeared to be making progress in the past few days. Her latest piece is headlined "The Best Way to Help Ukraine Is Diplomacy, Not War." [See the Program]
 
How Ukraine Is Clarifying the Costs of America's Middle East Alliances
By Sarah Leah Whitson and Tawakkol Karman, Democracy in Exile [March 17, 2022]
---- Russia's invasion of Ukraine should be a defining moment for the global struggle for democracy and the rule of law. Instead, it has starkly revealed how U.S. support for authoritarian governments like those in Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, and an apartheid government in Israel, have undermined international laws meant to shield the world from the belligerency of a leader like Vladimir Putin. The war has also exposed the illusory benefits of America's support for these unsavory allies and partners in the Middle East, especially Saudi Arabia and the UAE, as they seek to force nefarious concessions from the Biden administration during an international crisis. [Read More]
 
Chomsky: Peace Talks in Ukraine "Will Get Nowhere" If US Keeps Refusing to Join
An interview by C.J. Polychroniou, Truthout [March 14, 2022]
C.J. Polychroniou:  What do you think of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky's response to Vladimir Putin's four core demands, which were (a) cease military action, (b) acknowledge Crimea as Russian territory, (c) amend the Ukrainian constitution to enshrine neutrality, and (d) recognize the separatist republics in eastern Ukraine?
 
Noam Chomsky: Before responding, I would like to stress the crucial issue that must be in the forefront of all discussions of this terrible tragedy: We must find a way to bring this war to an end before it escalates, possibly to utter devastation of Ukraine and unimaginable catastrophe beyond. The only way is a negotiated settlement. Like it or not, this must provide some kind of escape hatch for Putin, or the worst will happen. Not victory, but an escape hatch. These concerns must be uppermost in our minds. I don't think that Zelensky should have simply accepted Putin's demands. I think his public response on March 7 was judicious and appropriate. In these remarks, Zelensky recognized that joining NATO is not an option for Ukraine. He also insisted, rightly, that the opinions of people in the Donbas region, now occupied by Russia, should be a critical factor in determining some form of settlement. He is, in short, reiterating what would very likely have been a path for preventing this tragedy — though we cannot know, because the U.S. refused to try. [And much more.] [Read More]
 
Also of interest – "Stop the Fighting in Ukraine: Now is the time to begin the search for a lasting peace," by Michael T. Klare, The Nation [March 17, 2022] [Link]; "Will the United States Empower Zelenskyy to Negotiate an End to the War?" by Ryan Grim, The Intercept [March 15 2022] [Link];  "Is Putin heading toward a partition of Ukraine?" by Zoltan Grossman, Znet [March 17, 2022] [Link]; and "Ukrainians took to the streets to avert a nuclear disaster. Will Americans do the same?" by Paul Gunter and Linda Pentz Gunter, Waging Nonviolence [March 9, 2022] [Link].
 
News Notes
Today is the 19th anniversary of the US attack/invasion of Iraq. It's a useful date to remember, amidst all the mainstream media moralizing about Russia and international law, human rights violations, and war crimes.  For an interesting take on then and now, read "Iraq War Lesson: the seduction may be sweet but the hangover is hell Peter Van Buren, Responsible Statecraft [March 18, 2022] [Link].
 
And Tuesday, March 22nd, is World Water Day, co-sponsored by the Westchester chapter of the United Nations Association.  Among the speakers will be CFOW's Marcia Brewster. To join the Zoom program (7 pm), register at this link.
 
Recommended by Nada Khader at WESPAC is Jordan Copeland's video presentation on the history of Black people in Edgemont, in Greenburgh, a scene of recent racial conflicts.  To watch the program, go here, and use the password GS?tf$s0.
 
Finally, CFOW friend Vanessa Agudelo is running for NYS Assembly in District 95, which runs from Ossining to north of West Point, along the Hudson River.  We first met Vanessa in the fight to stop the Algonquin pipeline, which carries high-pressure fracked gas next to Indian Point.  She then became the youngest person ever to be elected to the Peekskill City Council, and most recently has been the Westchester organizer for the New York Immigration Coalition.  To learn more about her and her campaign (and to donate!), here is her website
 
CFOW Nuts & Bolts
Please consider getting involved with Concerned Families of Westchester.  Weather/covid permitting, 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 will be held on Monday, April 4th 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 for the link. 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!
Did comedian Volodymyr Zelensky come out of nowhere to become Ukraine's president in 2019?  Not exactly.  Before the war, before his shakedown by President Trump, Zelensky practiced for his role as the Winston Churchill of Ukraine by playing a president in the hit Ukrainian comedy "Servant of the People." [h/t AD] Now it has come to Netflix; see the trailer here.  Also putting Ukraine on the pop culture map is the punk group Beton, with their cover of a Clash favorite, now retitled "Kyiv Calling." Enjoy!
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
CFOW Weekly Reader
 
Featured Essays
(Video) Global South Faces Brunt of Soaring Food Prices Amid War in Ukraine, World's "Breadbasket"
From Democracy Now! [March 18, 2022]
---- The United Nations is warning Russia's invasion of Ukraine could lead to a "hurricane of hunger and a meltdown of the global food system" that would be especially devastating for the Global South. Wheat and fertilizer prices have soared since the war began three weeks ago. Global food prices could jump by as much as 22% this year as Russia's invasion of Ukraine disrupts exports from two of the world's largest producers of wheat and fertilizer. Rising fuel prices will also contribute to higher food prices. To talk more about how Russia's war in Ukraine is leading to a global food crisis, we are joined by Raj Patel, author of "Stuffed and Starved" and a research professor at the University of Texas at Austin, who explains how farmers and working-class people around the world will face the brunt of the impact of growing food prices. He notes the coronavirus, climate change, conflict and capitalism are working to compound one another and underscore the necessity to transition to sustainable, agroecological farming. [See the Program] For more information on this topic, read "Ukraine War Threatens to Cause a Global Food Crisis," New York Times [March 20, 2022] [Link].
 
How Much Less Newsworthy Are Civilians in Other Conflicts?
By Julie Hollar, FAIR [Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting] [March 18, 2022]
---- As US news media covered the first shocking weeks of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, some media observers have noted their impressions of how coverage differed from wars past, particularly in terms of a new focus on the impact on civilians. To quantify and deepen these observations, FAIR studied the first week of coverage of the Ukraine war (2/24–3/2/22) on ABC World News Tonight, CBS Evening News and NBC Nightly News. We used the Nexis news database to count both sources (whose voices get to be heard?) and segments (what angles are covered?) about Ukraine during the study period. Comparing this coverage to that of other conflicts reveals both a familiar reliance on US officials to frame events, as well as a newfound ability to cover the impact on civilians—when those civilians are white and under attack by an official US enemy, rather than by the US itself. … Making the impact on civilians the focus of the story, and featuring their experiences, encourages sympathy for those civilians and condemnation of war. But this demonstration of news media's ability to center the civilian impact, including civilian casualties, in Ukraine is all the more damning of their coverage of wars in which the US and its allies have been the aggressors—or in which the victims have not been white. [Read More]
 
War & Peace
For Washington, War Never Ends
By Diana Johnstone, Consortium News [March 16, 2022]
---- It goes on and on. The "war to end war" of 1914-1918 led to the war of 1939-1945, known as World War II. And that one has never ended either, mainly because for Washington, it was the Good War, the war that made The American Century: why not the American Millennium? The conflict in Ukraine may be the spark that sets off what we already call World War III. But this is not a new war. It is the same old war, an extension of the one we call World War II, which was not the same war for all those who took part. The Russian war and the American war were very, very different. … In short, after 1945, for Russia, World War II was over. For the United States, it was not. What we call the Cold War was its voluntary continuation by leaders in Washington. It was perpetuated by the theory that Russia's defensive "Iron Curtain" constituted a military threat to the rest of Europe. … Gorbachev dreamed of "our common European home" living some sort of social democracy. In the 1990s, Russia asked only to be part of the West. What happened next proved that the whole "communist scare" justifying the Cold War was false. A pretext. A fake designed to perpetuate military Keynesianism and America's special war to maintain its own economic and ideological hegemony. There was no longer any Soviet Union. There was no more Soviet communism. There was no Soviet bloc, no Warsaw Pact. NATO had no more reason to exist. But in 1999, NATO celebrated its 50th anniversary by bombing Yugoslavia and thereby transforming itself from a defensive to an aggressive military alliance.  [Read More]
 
(Video) A Tale of Two Wars: Biden Decries Russian Atrocities in Ukraine While Backing Saudi/UAE War in Yemen
From Democracy Now! [March 16, 2022]
---- As the U.S. and U.K. push for Saudi Arabia to increase oil production to offset a rise in global energy prices amid sanctions on Russia, the kingdom on Saturday announced it had executed 81 people — the country's largest mass execution in decades. Sarah Leah Whitson, executive director of Democracy for the Arab World Now, says the muted criticism of Saudi abuses reveals a double standard when it comes to how Western countries deal with the absolute monarchy, which has been waging a brutal assault on neighboring Yemen for almost seven years with U.S. support. If the U.S. wants the world to oppose Russia's brutal war in Ukraine, "then it's got to stop supporting the war in Yemen," says Whitson, who adds that disparate coverage of the wars in Ukraine and Yemen point to "inherent racism" in Western media. [See the Program]
 
The Climate Crisis
Three years after the first global school strike, signs of the youth climate movement's success are everywhere
By Nick Engelfried, Waging Nonviolence [March 17, 2022]
---- Three years ago this week — on March 15, 2019 — an estimated 1.4 million young people and supporters in 128 countries skipped school or work for what was then the largest youth-led day of climate protests in history. That record was soon eclipsed by even larger demonstrations later that year, with 1.8 million joining a May 24 day of action, and 7.6 million protesting for the climate over the course of Sept. 20 and the week that followed. The school strikes for climate movement, launched by 15-year-old Greta Thunberg of Sweden in late 2018, had reinvigorated the global climate movement and brought public participation to levels never seen before. By early 2019, thousands of young people were already skipping school to protest for the climate each week in Europe, but the school strikes had only just begun to catch on in the United States. March 15 of that year was arguably when Thunberg's campaign truly became a global phenomenon, with large demonstrations in cities all over the world. The youth-led strikes went on to revolutionize and grow the climate movement, helping to popularize concepts like the Green New Deal and grab the attention of policymakers and the media. Three years on, it's a good time to assess what this flood of activism accomplished and how the youth climate movement has adapted to the challenges of the early 2020s. [Read More]
 
Israel/Palestine
West's response to Russian invasion demolishes excuses for rejecting BDS against Apartheid Israel
---- Palestinians are watching with empathy the suffering of millions of Ukrainians facing war, particularly the over two million refugees seeking safety in neighboring countries. In harmony with the absolute majority of humanity living in the Global South, the Palestinian BDS National Committee, the largest coalition in Palestinian society that leads the global BDS movement, opposes war, whether it is Russia's illegal aggression in Ukraine today, which violates the UN Charter regardless of persistent NATO provocations, or the many patently illegal and immoral US- or NATO- led wars of the past decades which have devastated whole nations and killed millions. We see in the West's warm reception of Ukraine's white refugees an example for how all refugees escaping the ravages of war, economic devastation, or climate injustice should be treated by the West, particularly when these calamities are primarily caused by Western imperialism. This warmth, however, stands in sharp contrast with how these same countries have treated Brown and Black refugees arriving at their shores and borders, with racism, walls, "push-backs," forced family separations, even drownings – the same bigotry that non-white refugees from Ukraine have experienced. This Western double standard is painful, enraging, and humiliating for people in the Global South, including for Palestinians. After all, Israel's decades-old regime of military occupation, settler-colonialism and apartheid is not only "Made in the West," but is still armed, funded and shielded from accountability by that same deeply colonial and racist West, in particular the US, UK and EU. [Link]
 
Our History
We Can Thank the Wobblies for the Biggest Labor Story of the Year [Starbucks workers]
By Malcolm Harris, The Nation [March 17, 2022]
---- When the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW, whose members are often dubbed "Wobblies") launched a campaign to unionize Starbucks baristas in 2004, the idea was so quixotic it seemed more like performance art designed to comment on the labor movement itself than an earnest attempt to organize shops. Unionizing Starbucks baristas was like unionizing the Death Star storm troopers: both impossible and pointless. Now, as I write in the spring of 2022, workers at over 100 locations nationwide have petitioned for recognition and the Starbucks Workers United campaign is the labor story of this young year. What changed? … The Wobblies formed an unusual union, one based in the fundamental fellowship of all workers rather than the narrow advantages of certain craftsmen. The IWW asked workers to join the "one big union," even if they were not citizens, "skilled," English-speaking, white, or male. Any worker can join, even dues-paying members of other unions. [Read More]  Also of interest is "US unions see unusually promising moment amid wave of victories" by Steven Greenhouse, The Guardian [March 16, 2022] [Link].
 

Monday, March 14, 2022

CFOW Newsletter - Focus on the Russia-Ukraine war - Prospects for war and peace

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
March 14, 2022
 
Hello All – Russia's war against Ukraine now seems to be a war without end, as Russia appears to be determined to conquer Ukraine, and Ukraine appears to be capable of continued resistance. Assessments of how the war could play out – in what ways could the fighting stop – offer little hope that this will happen soon.  What can/should advocates for peace do now?
 
Without taking our eye off the primary fact of Russian aggression,our energies have to be directed towards influencing the thinking and actions of our neighbors and our own government. What, if anything, can the Bidden administration due to enhance the prospects for peace?
 
Twenty years ago, when CFOW formed in response to the Bush war against Afghanistan, our focus was on minimizing civilian casualties.  The same should be true now.  Two ways in which our government's actions can reduce civilian suffering are to make it easier for Ukrainian war refugees to arrive and settle in the USA, and to craft sanctions against Russia so that the hardships of the civilian population – much of which opposes this war – are minimized.
 
A second focus of our messaging and activities is to strongly oppose the expansion of the war.  For example, though the Biden administration has spoken out clearly against the imposition of a "No Fly Zone" against Russia in Ukraine, this slogan has strong support in the USA and in the NATO countries.  There is general agreement among those who study such things that a No Fly Zone would first require the destruction of Russian air defenses, something that would immediately and sharply raise the danger level of the war.  The demand for such protection on the part of the Ukrainians is understandable, but it can't be done. The same goes for other bright ideas to "win the war" by expanding it.
 
Another focus of our messaging is to advocate for immediate negotiations – with or without a ceasefire.  While this seems like a no-brainer, neither the Biden people nor Congress nor the mainstream media are making this a public priority.  Instead, the messaging from the political elite is "Russia is to blame."  While this is certainly true, and scores re-election points for all who say it, blaming Russia doesn't move us an inch towards ending the suffering of those caught up in this inferno. Sooner or later, this conflict will be ended by negotiations – why wait?
 
Finally, we need to keep repeating basic information about the dangers the conflict poses for a nuclear war between Russia and the USA. (See here and here.) For most Americans today, the era of nuclear testing, "duck and cover," Mutual Assured Destruction, and the Cuban missile crisis are remote history, no longer a threat. But over the last decades both the USA and Russia have developed smaller nuclear weapons, more tempting to use on a battlefield in a tight spot, but judged by experts as likely to be the first step in an escalation of violence ending in a serious (and terminal) nuclear war.  Accidents have happened, and will happen again; it is urgent that we end this war and return to negotiations as soon as possible.
 
Some useful reading on the Russia/Ukraine war
 
Noam Chomsky: US Military Escalation Against Russia Would Have No Victors
An interview by C.J. Polychroniou, Truthout [March 1, 2022]
---- The options that remain after the invasion are grim. The least bad is support for the diplomatic options that still exist, in the hope of reaching an outcome not too far from what was very likely achievable a few days ago: Austrian-style neutralization of Ukraine, some version of Minsk II federalism within.  Much harder to reach now.  And — necessarily — with an escape hatch for Putin, or outcomes will be still more dire for Ukraine and everyone else, perhaps almost unimaginably so. Very remote from justice. But when has justice prevailed in international affairs? Is it necessary to review the appalling record once again? [Read More]
 
(Video) Will Ukraine become Russia's 'forever war'?
From Aljazeera, with Anatole Lieven [March 10, 2022] [24 minutes]
---- Anatol Lieven wrote a book in 1999 warning that, "Any attempt by … Russia or the West to take Ukraine fully into an alliance with either of them would disastrously split Ukraine." As the war with Ukraine enters its second week, Lieven says that the only solution in sight is for Ukraine to declare itself a neutral country, preventing it from joining any Western-led or Russian-led alliances. Barring a deal of that nature, Russia and Ukraine could find themselves in a long-term quagmire. [See the Program]
 
How to End the War in Ukraine
By Fred Kaplan, Slate [March 9, 2022]
---- One thing is increasingly clear about the war in Ukraine: It will end badly for everyone, regardless of who wins. If Russia captures Kyiv and installs a puppet president, he will face a massive, well-funded insurgency, which could last for years and kill still more Russian troops. If Ukraine keeps successfully resisting the invaders, Vladimir Putin will step up the bombing, massacring hundreds more civilians and forcing hundreds of thousands more to flee as refugees. For several days, "peace talks" have taken place on the Ukraine-Belarus border, where Moscow's delegates propose unacceptable terms and Kyiv's delegates reject them. But some sort of negotiated settlement that stops the fighting is the only hope either country has for avoiding further tragedy. What would be reasonable terms for an armistice?  [Read More]
 
(Video) Ukraine is Paying the Price for the U.S. "Recklessly" Pushing NATO Expansion, with Andrew Bacevich
From Democracy Now! [March 11, 2022]
---- What role did the United States play in creating conditions for Russia's invasion of Ukraine, and what will it take to end the war? The U.S. invasion of Iraq, which saw no repercussions for the Bush administration despite breaching international humanitarian law, coupled with Cold War-era policies and NATO's eastward expansion, incited Putin's aggressions towards Ukraine, says retired colonel Andrew Bacevich, president and co-founder of the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft. "American decision makers acted impetuously, and indeed recklessly, and now we're facing the consequences," says Bacevich. [See the Program]
 
CFOW Nuts & Bolts
Please consider getting involved with Concerned Families of Westchester.  Weather/covid permitting, 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 will be held on Monday, April 4th 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 for the link. 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!
Helping me through this Newsletter are some new numbers from the New Orleans blues ensemble, Tuba Skinny.  I think you will like this one from Jelly Roll Morton, and here they are, from the same session, with "Ain't Nobpdy's Business." There's lots more from Tuba Skinny on You Tube.  Enjoy!
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
CFOW Weekly Reader
 
Featured Essays
Toxic Nostalgia, From Putin to Trump to the Trucker Convoys
By Naomi Klein, The Intercept [March 1, 2022]
---- Nostalgia for empire is what seems to drive Vladimir Putin — that and a desire to overcome the shame of punishing economic shock therapy imposed on Russia at the end of the Cold War. Nostalgia for American "greatness" is part of what drives the movement Donald Trump still leads — that and a desire to overcome the shame of having to face the villainy of white supremacy that shaped the founding of the United States and mutilates it still. … This is not the warm and cozy nostalgia of fuzzily remembered childhood pleasures; it's an enraged and annihilating nostalgia that clings to false memories of past glories against all mitigating evidence. All these nostalgia-based movements and figures share a longing for something else, something which may seem unrelated but is not. A nostalgia for a time when fossil fuels could be extracted from the earth without uneasy thoughts of mass extinction, or children demanding their right to a future. [Read More]
 
We Live in a World of Displacement
By Nick Turse, The Nation [March 7, 2022]
---- The number of people forcibly displaced by war, persecution, general violence, or human-rights violations last year swelled to a staggering 84 million, according to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. If they formed their own country, it would be the 17th largest in the world, slightly bigger than Iran or Germany. Add in those driven across borders by economic desperation and the number balloons past 1 billion, placing it among the three largest nations on Earth. This "nation" of the dispossessed is only expected to grow, according to a new report by the Danish Refugee Council (DRC), an aid organization focused on displacement. Their forecast, which covers 26 high-risk countries, predicts that the number of displaced people will increase by almost three million this year and nearly four million in 2023. This means that, in the decade between 2014 and 2023, the displaced population on this planet will have almost doubled, growing by more than 35 million people. And that doesn't even count most of the 7 million-plus likely to be displaced by Russia's recent invasion of Ukraine. [Read More]
 
"They Want War": An Open Letter to Visual Artists and Critics
---- During wartime, aesthetics is often set aside in favor of sheer survival. That's understandable. But wars are waged with ideas and images almost as much as bombs and bullets, which is why Putin has shut down all independent media, banned public protest, and propagated the naked lie that Russia is not fighting a war at all! And it's why the Ukrainian president has used every possible image and anecdote – and American public relations firms — to paint a picture of heroic resistance against a much larger and more powerful invading force. … So, my friends, here are the two questions I most want us to address in our next meeting: 1) How can we best deploy art to challenge Russian violence and irredentism, while at the same time attacking U.S. and NATO imperialism? 2) How can artists and critics challenge the madness of exterminism: the grotesque illogic of nuclear war and the equally mad rush toward climate catastrophe? We can begin to consider these questions by examining some specific works of art from the past. [Read More]
 
The Climate Crisis
The Ukraine war is a decision point — banks should stop funding the fossil fuel industry forever
Svitlana Romanko and Bill McKibben, LA Times [March 9, 2022]
---- We are worlds apart now, one of us terrorized amid the wreckage of invaded Ukraine and the other entirely safe in the United States. But because we've been engaged in the same global fight against fossil fuels for decades, we are well-situated to see some of the key drivers behind this wretched moment, and hence some of the solutions. Above all, it's obvious that the world's banks have amorally worked to build Russia's oil and gas industry, the industry that funds the Russian army, and the industry that Vladimir Putin has used as a cudgel for decades to keep Europe cowering. And that's why we cheered so loudly Tuesday when President Biden — as part of his ban on Russian oil — told American banks to make no new investments in Putin's oil. … The sooner we replace oil, gas and coal with cheap, safe renewable energy, the sooner we can all live in peace. If you think the links between American banks, oil and Russia's war-making aren't deep and profound, think again. [Read More]  Also of interest are (Video) "Defund Putin's War Machine: Ukrainian Environmentalist Calls For Global Halt to Fossil Fuel Funding," from Democracy Now! [March 11, 2022] [Link]; and "Heat Pumps for Peace and Freedom," by Bill McKibben [LInk].
 
The State of the Union
Blue Lies Matter
By Nia T. Evans, Boston Review [February 16, 2022]
---- The truth is that police do lie, all the time, about issues big and small. Police lie about their interactions, actions, and responses to people. They lie to their supervisors and on police reports to protect themselves and each other. They lie to prosecutors, juries, judges, and the public about perceived threats—the dangers posed by motorists, for example, and the use of force necessary to deter them. Indeed, police lie and fabricate evidence under oath so often that they have their own term for it: "testilying." … The problem is not individual or sporadic but structural and endemic. Police don't just lie because they can; they lie because it's part of the job, and because they are structurally shielded from the consequences. Police perjury is a core function of policing, critical to both the viability of the institution and maintaining control over the public's understanding of who should be feared and who should be protected. [Read More]
 
Israel/Palestine
The Israeli Kettle and the Russian Pot
By Gideon Levy, Haaretz [Israel] [February 27, 2022]
---- Israel has no right to criticize Russia. A country that has more than once acted exactly like Russia, going wild, has no right to criticize aggression and invasion. A country that had imposed violent occupation for more than 50 years cannot criticize a three-day occupation. Russia's justification for an invasion, the propaganda and the lies, seem taken from Israel's playbook every time it invaded Gaza or Lebanon. Israel always feels threatened, just like Russia, and both deny the national rights of the people it occupies. The Ukrainians are not a people, and neither are the Palestinians. Israel has an ancestral right to the West Bank, and Russia has a similar right to Ukraine – and in the eyes of both, this means the mendacious right to sovereignty. The demonization is also similar: The Ukrainians are Nazis, the Palestinians are terrorists; these are both propaganda lies. [Read More]
 
Our History
The forgotten socialist roots of International Women's Day
By Gillian Brockell, Washington Post [March 8, 2022] [Apologies, a week late!]
---- International Women's Day is here again, and with it the opportunity to highlight women's contributions to history, society and politics — and, of course, to sell stuff. But how did the day get started? Some point to Russian communist roots; others claim an American origin story. The truth is that it's neither and both. International Women's Day began with a Russian-born Jewish woman in New York City, before traveling to the Soviet Union and back again. … Theresa Serber Malkiel was born in 1874 in the Russian Empire, in an area now in western Ukraine. She came from a middle-class family and received a good education, but her Jewish family was increasingly persecuted and emigrated to the United States in 1891, when she was 17.  Like many Jewish and Italian immigrant women at the time, Malkiel soon joined the labor movement and then started a union for female cloak-makers, co-founding a socialist newspaper, the New York Call. It was in this context that she proposed the first National Woman's Day in 1909. According to Rutgers University historian Temma Kaplan, events were held across New York, where thousands gathered to hear speeches and poems, sing socialist anthems and push for the right to vote. [Read More]  Also of interest, about the status of women around the world: "International Women's Day: evolution and challenges," by Hatice Nur Keskin, Middle East Monitor [March 7, 2022] [Link].