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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
12/9/2016 4:54:06 PM
Eye 2

US Empire goes from protecting war criminal Cheney from prosecution to honoring him with a bust at Emancipation Hall

© Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP
As vice president, Dick Cheney was a prime architect of the worldwide torture regime implemented by the U.S. government (whichextended far beyond waterboarding), as well as the invasion and destruction of Iraq, which caused the deaths of at least 500,000 people and more likely over a million. As such, he is one of the planet's most notorious war criminals.

President Obama made the decision in early 2009 to block the Justice Department from criminally investigating and prosecuting Cheney and his fellow torturers, as well as to protect them from foreign investigations and even civil liability sought by torture victims. Obama did that notwithstanding a campaign decree that even top Bush officials are subject to the rule of law and, more importantly, notwithstanding a treaty signed in 1984 by Ronald Reagan requiring that all signatory states criminally prosecute their own torturers. Obama's immunizing Bush-era torturers converted torture from a global taboo and decades-old crime into a reasonable, debatable policy question, which is why so many GOP candidates are now openly suggesting its use.

But now, the Obama administration has moved from legally protecting Bush-era war criminals to honoring and gushing over them in public. Yesterday, the House of Representatives unveiled a marble bust of former Vice President Cheney, which — until a person of conscience vandalizes or destroys it — will reside in Emancipation Hall of the U.S. Capitol.

At the unveiling ceremony, Cheney was, in the playful words of NPR, "lightly roasted" — as though he's some sort of grumpy though beloved avuncular stand-up comic. Along with George W. Bush, one of the speakers in attendance was Vice President Joe Biden, who spoke movingly of Cheney's kind and generous soul:
As I look around this room and up on the platform, I want to say thank you for letting me crash your family reunion. I'm afraid I've blown his cover. I actually like Dick Cheney. ... I can say without fear of contradiction, there's never one single time been a harsh word, not one single time in our entire relationship.
Leading American news outlets got in on the fun, as they always do, using the joviality of the event to promote their news accounts and generate visits to their sites:

Watch former President Bush unleash the Dick Cheney jokes at Washington ceremony http://nbcnews.to/1NuVbEi


As NPR put it, "This was not an event for Cheney critics — on the war or torture or related topics." Totally: why let some unpleasant war criminality ruin a perfectly uplifting ceremony?

It is a long-standing trope among self-flattering Westerners and their allies that a key difference between "us" and "them" (Muslim radicals) is that "they"
honor and memorialize their terrorists and celebrate them as "martyrs" while we scorn and prosecute our own.

Yesterday, the U.S. government unambiguously signaled to the world that not only does it regard itself as entirely exempt from the laws of wars, the
principal Nuremberg prohibition against aggressive invasions, and global prohibitions on torture (something that has been self-evident for many years), but believes that the official perpetrators should be honored and memorialized provided they engage in these crimes on behalf of the U.S. government. That's a message that most of the U.S. media and thus large parts of the American population will not hear, but much of the world will hear it quite loudly and clearly. How could they not?
In other news, U.S. officials this week conceded that a man kept in a cage for 13 years at Guantánamo, the now 37-year-old Mustafa al-Aziz al-Shamiri, was there due to "mistaken identity." As Joe Biden said yesterday, "I actually like Dick Cheney."


(sott.net)


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
12/9/2016 5:28:25 PM
Ambulance

Aleppo: World's biggest hostage crisis comes to an end - but the fake news continues

As Syrian government forces recapture more parts of eastern Aleppo, many civilians are risking their lives to flee the besieged opposition-controlled areas, telling the world that the so-called "rebels" stop at nothing to prevent people from leaving.

The Syrian government and its Russian allies have long accused armed opposition groups in Aleppo of holding civilians hostage, whereas western governments and media have been promoting a different narrative in tune with "rebel" and "activist" sources. This narrative is now falling apart.

When government forces first managed to encircle the opposition-held districts of Aleppo in July of this year, Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu announced the opening of humanitarian corridors "to aid civilians held hostage by terrorists and for fighters wishing to lay down their arms."[1]

Bashar Jaafari, Syria's ambassador to the United Nations, said in a July 26 letter to the Security Council that "the Syrian Army informed the civilian residents of those neighborhoods that it has secured safe passages, for those who want to safely exit those areas, and that it has allocated temporary accommodation for them."

Jaafari's American counterpart Samantha Power described the letter as "chilling," commenting on Twitter that Jaafari "warns Syrians to leave eastern Aleppo and entrust their lives to a government that has bombed and starved them."[2]

Likewise, the Guardian said the announcement of humanitarian corridors "must be exposed as a cynical ruse," stating that "it is no surprise that Aleppo's population is not rushing towards these exit corridors, which have not in any case materialised on the ground."[3]

Contrary to the Guardian's claims, civilians in eastern Aleppo tried to use the exit corridors, much to the dismay of the armed opposition groups. According to the pro-opposition Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR), only "around 12 people managed to use the Bustan al-Qasr corridor before rebel groups reinforced security measures and prevented families from approaching the corridors."[4]


Comment: And that's coming from SOHR, a pro-rebel "source".


Instead of putting pressure on the "rebel groups" to allow civilians to leave, the United States and its allies supported a major offensive led and organized by terrorist organization Jabhat al-Nusra to break the siege and "put some pressure back on Russia and Iran," as one western diplomat put it.[5]

The Nusra-led July-August offensive was successful but didn't change the course of the battle for Aleppo.

A few weeks later, Nusra terrorists and their brothers-in-arms in eastern Aleppo found themselves again under siege.

Before pursuing a military solution, the Syrian government and Russia announced a unilateral cease-fire to allow civilians and surrendering fighters to leave the opposition-controlled areas.

Once again, the opposition groups in eastern Aleppo did their best to prevent this.

ITV News, reporting from government-held western Aleppo on the first day of the unilateral cease-fire, confirmed that "rebels" werefiring on checkpoints and exit corridors, making it extremely dangerous for anyone to leave eastern Aleppo. Describing the situation at one of the checkpoints, ITV News correspondent Dan Rivers said: "We were forced to run for cover as rebel sniper fire sent soldiers and onlookers scattering for their lives."[6]

As The Independent's Bethan McKernan pointed out, "several residents inside east Aleppo reported that people trying to cross into the West were shot at by mortar fire."

Despite all evidence to the contrary, antigovernment fighters and their supporters kept denying that civilians were being held hostage in eastern Aleppo. "Rebel sources and activists from the Aleppo Media Centre said reports of the opposition stopping evacuations were fabricated," McKernan noted.[7]

"All the human corridors that the regime is promoting, are all lies," antigovernment activist Bassem Ayoud told The New York Times. "What's happening is an extermination of people."[8]

These dubious claims went largely unchallenged; instead, many western journalists and analysts cheered on another "rebel" offensive intended to break the siege of eastern Aleppo.


Comment: And they're still being floated:

Turns out Russia is so busy massacring civilians in Aleppo & Idlib that it let ISIS get the better of it near Palmyra. Totally blindsidedhttps://twitter.com/SyriaDirect/status/806862509227511808




As was the case with the July-August offensive, the October-November offensive only prolonged the suffering of civilians in both eastern and western Aleppo.

Two days into the offensive, Staffan de Mistura, the United Nations special envoy to Syria, said he was "appalled and shocked by the high number of rockets indiscriminately launched by armed opposition groups on civilian suburbs of western Aleppo in the last 48 hours."

"Those who argue that this is meant to relieve the siege of eastern Aleppo should be reminded that nothing justifies the use of disproportionate and indiscriminate weapons, including heavy ones, on civilian areas and it could amount to war crimes," de Mistura said in a statement issued by his office on October 30.[9]

Despite showing a total disregard for civilian life, the jihadist-led opposition fighters were not able to break the siege this time around, suffering a devastating defeat in "the mother of all battles," as they called it.

During this time, Russia refrained from resuming airstrikes on Aleppo, sticking to the unilateral cease-fire, but only a few dozen civilians were able to leave the opposition-controlled areas. Among them was Khaled Kadoura who fled to the government side with his wife Samira and their eight-year-old son. Kadoura painted a much different picture than "rebel" and "activist" sources, telling Robert Fisk from The Independent:
"On the day this started [20 October], the armed groups in east Aleppo surrounded the people who wanted to leave with a sort of 'security circle' to prevent them going out. They even had weapons in their hands. They shot at some people - I was told six died - and they killed a pregnant woman. She was killed and there were others wounded. They accused the [Syrian] government of shelling the passageways. We waited till night to cross and we waited till after the Maghreb prayers when we knew that the armed men near the crossing point would have gone to rest. Later, they were all arrested and accused of taking bribes to allow us to cross. We had to be so careful because of mines."
After he fled with his wife and son, his 27-year old brother Hamzi was arrested by Ahrar al-Sham and sentenced to execution, Kadoura said.[10]

Despite all that, western media outlets kept echoing absurd opposition propaganda.

Summarizing the period of the unilateral cease-fire, Kareem Shaheen and Emma Graham-Harrison from the Guardian wrote: "Almost no one came through the corridors, which opposition fighters said were not actually safe."

The fact that opposition fighters were firing on the exit corridors was not mentioned in the article.

No one at the Guardian bothered to question the claims of Fastaqim spokesman Sharif al-Halabi as he told them that the opposition still had the support of most people in the besieged areas.

"Of course under bombardment people are going to be restless and complain, but the fact of the matter is the majority of those who live in the liberated areas are with the Free Syrian Army despite the siege," the Guardian quoted al-Halabi as saying.[11]

But a few weeks later, opposition lines in eastern Aleppo began collapsing, enabling tens of thousands of civilians to flee and tell the world their side of the story.

17-year-old Rasha told Agence France-Presse (AFP) that opposition fighters did not allow her to leave when she wanted to move to her parents' new home outside Aleppo.[12] "All my neighbours wanted to leave but the rebels prevented them many times," Rasha said in an interview.[13]

Another woman would speak only in confidence about the dangerous journey to the government side. She explained to the BBC thatopposition fighters tried to prevent civilians from leaving saying that they would be killed by the Syrian army if they crossed over. As if this was merely a side note, the BBC noted in passing: "Like many others, she recounted how they came underrebel fire as they tried to escape."[14]

Likewise, the Associated Press (AP) buried a remarkable eyewitness account in the last two paragraphs of its report from Jibreen, where thousands of men, women and children from eastern Aleppo have taken refuge:
"We were under pressure by all means, psychological and financial. The gunmen were trying to prevent us from leaving until the army came," said 36-year-old Amina Rwein, who fled with her husband, seven daughters and three sons.

"We came under fire from the gunmen as we were leaving and the army hit the minaret from where the sniper was shooting, and then we crossed," she said.[15]
Many people who fled eastern Aleppo told similar stories, confirming that the so-called "rebels" shot at civilians to prevent them from leaving.

"I wanted to leave with my kids 15 days ago but the rebels shot at me and said 'Hey, you bastard -- do you want to join the regime?" one man told CNN at a camp in Jibreen.

For some reason, none of this made the headlines.

Moreover, CNN and others kept promoting the same "rebel" and "activist" sources that had just been exposed as participants in a devious propaganda campaign, such as the pro-opposition Aleppo Media Center.[16]

Thanks to the support of western media, "rebel" and "activist" sources have been able to deceive the public for months while hundreds, possibly thousands, of civilians were being held hostage in eastern Aleppo.

Needless to say, not all civilians want to cross over to the government side, but it is impossible to tell how many civilians are still staying in the ever shrinking opposition-controlled areas and how many of them are being prevented from leaving.

On December 7, the United States, the United Kingdom and other NATO countries issued a statement claiming that "some 200,000 civilians, including many children, in eastern Aleppo are cut off from food and medicine supplies."[17]

Although opposition fighters already lost control of three quarters of their territory in eastern Aleppo, international humanitarian officials estimate that only around 30,000 civilians have fled to government-held areas in the past week.[18]

It is only a question of time before Syrian government forces recapture all opposition-held districts of Aleppo. Once the dust settles, it will become clear how many people were really living in eastern Aleppo under the rule of Jabhat al-Nusra, Ahrar al-Sham and other opposition groups.

Supporting these groups and helping them spread their propaganda will only prolong the suffering of civilians in Aleppo.

When opposition fighters invaded Aleppo more than four years ago after the city refused to join the uprising, a "rebel" commander told the Guardian:
"Around 70% of Aleppo city is with the regime. It has always been that way. The countryside is with us and the city is with them. We are saying that we will only be here as long as it takes to get the job done, to get rid of the Assads. After that, we will leave and they can build the city that they want."[19]
As the world's biggest hostage crisis comes to an end, the armed opposition and its supporters have to ask themselves if trying "to get rid of the Assads" was really worth all the death and destruction.
Christoph Germann is an independent analyst and researcher based in Germany, where he is currently studying political science. His work focuses on the New Great Game in Central Asia and the Caucasus region. You can visit his website here
Notes
  1. "Calls grow for Syria government to end Aleppo siege," Agence France-Presse, 29 July 2016.
  2. Andrey Ostroukh, Raja Abdulrahim and Farnaz Fassihi, "Russia, Syria Promise Exit Corridors for Rebels, Civilians in Aleppo,"The Wall Street Journal, 28 July 2016.
  3. "The Guardian view on the battle for Aleppo: stop it now," The Guardian, 29 July 2016.
  4. Ibid., Agence France-Presse.
  5. Erika Solomon, "Outside help behind rebel advances in Aleppo," Financial Times, 8 August 2016.
  6. "Gunfire intensifies in Aleppo despite ceasefire," ITV News, 20 October 2016.
  7. Bethan McKernan, "East Aleppo civilians 'shot at' by rebels to prevent them leaving during truce," The Independent, 21 October 2016.
  8. Anne Barnard, "Wary of Russian Guarantees, Residents Stay Put in War-Torn Aleppo," The New York Times, 20 October 2016.
  9. "Media statement from the Office of the United Nations Special Envoy for Syria, Mr. Staffan de Mistura," UN Department of Public Information, 30 October 2016.
  10. Robert Fisk, "'We were living a real tragedy in east Aleppo': One family's journey across the city amid the bloodshed," The Independent, 1 November 2016.
  11. Kareem Shaheen and Emma Graham-Harrison, "Russia and Assad to pound rebels as east Aleppo braces for attack," The Guardian, 5 November 2016.
  12. Maher Al-Mounes, "Aleppo family reunited after months separated by war," Agence France-Presse, 2 December 2016.
  13. "Aleppo family reunited after months separated by war," Agence France-Presse, 2 December 2016.
  14. Lyse Doucet, "Aleppo siege: 'We are crying and afraid'," BBC, 3 December 2016.
  15. "Syria: Thousands of Aleppo's Displaced Pack Market Shelter," The Associated Press, 3 December 2016.
  16. Frederik Pleitgen and Angela Dewan, "Syrian war: CNN goes inside Aleppo under airstrikes," CNN, 5 December 2016.
  17. Joint statement from the leaders of Canada, France, Germany, Italy, the United Kingdom and the United States on the situation in Aleppo, 7 December 2016.
  18. Anne Barnard, "Syrian Forces Said to Drive Deeper Into Rebel-Held Aleppo," The New York Times, 7 December 2016.
  19. Martin Chulov, "Syrian rebels fight on for Aleppo despite local wariness," The Guardian, 21 August 2012.
(sott.net)


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
12/9/2016 5:54:42 PM

Lavrov: US easing restrictions on arms to Syria won’t seriously affect situation in East Aleppo

Edited time: 9 Dec, 2016 14:07


FILE PHOTO: Tariq al-Bab and al-Sakhour neighborhoods of eastern Aleppo November 28, 2016 © Abdalrhman Ismail / Reuters

The US’ decision to ease restrictions on military aid for foreign forces and other fighters supporting the US in Syria is unlikely to affect the situation in eastern Aleppo, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said at an OSCE Ministerial Council in Hamburg.

READ MORE: Weapons can end up with terrorists now US military aid restrictions to Syria lifted – Kremlin

“I don’t think this will significantly change the situation in eastern Aleppo, because the rebels are encircled and they are unlikely to receive reinforcing,” Lavrov said.

Russia is looking for a solution that involves as few casualties as possible, Lavrov said.

“I think everyone understands that the militants in east Aleppo are agonizing. We don’t want to support those who would gladly finish off those militants at any cost without any talks. We are ready to solve these problems in a way that would spare us additional casualties and destruction,” Lavrov explained.

On Thursday, the Syrian Army put its active combat operations in eastern Aleppo on hold to evacuate some 8,000 civilians, Lavrov said earlier.

“I didn’t say that the combat actions ended. I said they were suspended for a certain period so that civilians could leave the area… After the humanitarian pause, the military operation will continue until the militants leave eastern Aleppo,” Lavrov noted on Friday, when asked about Thursday’s statement.

On Friday, the Russian Reconciliation Center in Syria reported that, in the last 24 hours, 10,724 civilians have fled areas of eastern Aleppo controlled by the militants, including 4,015 children. Meanwhile, 30 militants surrendered and were granted amnesty.

Lavrov added, that from the point of view of the developments in Syria, “resupplying the Syrian opposition [with weapons] is a big risk, as in the majority of cases the weapons that the so-called ‘moderate’ Syrian opposition receive end up in the hands of the terrorists – ISIS or Al-Nusra Front.”

On Thursday, US President Barack Obama granted a waiver of the restrictions on the delivery of military aid to “foreign forces, irregular forces, groups, or individuals,” if those forces are supporting the US’ alleged counter-terrorism efforts in Syria.

Russian presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov believes that the prospect of terrorists coming into possession of those weapons, including MANPADs (man-portable anti-air missiles), “poses a serious threat not only for the region, but the entire world.” The US’ decision will “definitely” create a risk for the Russian Air Force, Peskov said.

The decision will affect the discussions between the US and Russia on Syria, the Russian foreign minister stressed.

“This will affect our talks, as this is yet another peculiarity of US foreign policy concerning Aleppo,” Lavrov said.

Lavrov added that he is hopeful about the upcoming talks on Syria in Geneva, saying there’s a good chance that an agreement can be reached regarding eastern Aleppo, provided that experts from the US actually show up in Switzerland.

“If US experts don’t change their minds again, like they did several days ago, and don’t put any new suggestions on the table, the chance is high that we will come up with a plan on how to settle the situation in eastern Aleppo by withdrawing all militants, without any exceptions,” he said.


(RT)

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
12/9/2016 6:04:49 PM

East Aleppo civilians report torture, executions by ‘moderate opposition’ - Russian military

Edited time: 9 Dec, 2016 15:16


People, who were evacuated from the eastern districts of Aleppo, wait with their belongings in a government held area of Aleppo, Syria, in this handout picture provided by SANA on December 8, 2016 © SANA / Reuters

Civilians who fled from militants in east Aleppo say the so-called “moderate opposition” used torture and executed people, the Russian General Staff announced.

“Civilians who escaped from terrorists are reporting about new crimes committed by the so-called ‘moderate opposition’ fighters in east Aleppo. There is confirmation of the facts of abuse, torture, public executions, as well as wanton killings of the population," said the head of operations for Russia’s General Staff, Lieutenant General Sergey Rudskoy.

Officers of the Russian Center for Reconciliation in Syria are documenting all of the reported crimes, the head of the Russian General Staff added.

The militant-held territories in Aleppo have been reduced by a third over the past four days, the Russian military announced.

"Tens of tons of humanitarian aid are being delivered to the liberated districts daily, reconstruction of social infrastructure and medical help for the population are underway,” Rudskoy stressed.

Over the past 24 hours, more than 10,500 people – including 4,015 children – have been evacuated from east Aleppo, according to the latest numbers by the Russian Reconciliation Center.

Some 3,000 people have returned to their homes in the districts cleared from militants, Rudskoy went on to say. Over the past days, some 270 tons of humanitarian goods have reached the civilian population in the freed territories, including medicine, food and other basic goods, the General added, noting that over 150 field kitchens have been set up. According to Rudskoy, 52 districts in eastern Aleppo are now under control of the Syrian government forces, meaning 93 percent of the territory is cleared of the militants.

"Fifty-two neighborhoods in east Aleppo have been recaptured from militants. In the past four days alone, the area held by militants has decreased by one-third. The Syrian Army now controls 93 percent of the city's territory," he said.

In addition, some 30 militants have surrendered themselves to government forces.

“In total, 1,096 militants have left Aleppo, 953 of them were amnestied, the remaining are being checked,” Rudskoy noted.

Sappers continue to sweep mines and booby traps in the liberated territories, having already cleared an area of some 60,000 sq meters.

On Thursday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov announced that the Syrian Army had temporarily suspended military action against the militants to allow safe passage for fleeing civilians.

“Combat operations by the Syrian Army in eastern Aleppo have been suspended because the largest operation of evacuation of civilians from east Aleppo is being carried out,” Lavrov said, adding that a column of over 8,000 people was on its way out of the eastern part of the city.

Lavrov was speaking at a ministerial meeting of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) in Hamburg, Germany. On Friday, he also gave his take on the US move to ease restrictions on military aid for foreign forces and other fighters supporting the US in Syria.

Noting that the rebels are already encircled, Lavrov said: “I don’t think this [US step] will significantly change the situation in east Aleppo."


(RT)

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Myrna Ferguson

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
12/9/2016 6:45:06 PM
This item is the most discussing one I have ever read. I don't have words to describe how I feel. unreal.............

Quote:
Eye 2

US Empire goes from protecting war criminal Cheney from prosecution to honoring him with a bust at Emancipation Hall

© Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP
As vice president, Dick Cheney was a prime architect of the worldwide torture regime implemented by the U.S. government (whichextended far beyond waterboarding), as well as the invasion and destruction of Iraq, which caused the deaths of at least 500,000 people and more likely over a million. As such, he is one of the planet's most notorious war criminals.

President Obama made the decision in early 2009 to block the Justice Department from criminally investigating and prosecuting Cheney and his fellow torturers, as well as to protect them from foreign investigations and even civil liability sought by torture victims. Obama did that notwithstanding a campaign decree that even top Bush officials are subject to the rule of law and, more importantly, notwithstanding a treaty signed in 1984 by Ronald Reagan requiring that all signatory states criminally prosecute their own torturers. Obama's immunizing Bush-era torturers converted torture from a global taboo and decades-old crime into a reasonable, debatable policy question, which is why so many GOP candidates are now openly suggesting its use.

But now, the Obama administration has moved from legally protecting Bush-era war criminals to honoring and gushing over them in public. Yesterday, the House of Representatives unveiled a marble bust of former Vice President Cheney, which — until a person of conscience vandalizes or destroys it — will reside in Emancipation Hall of the U.S. Capitol.

At the unveiling ceremony, Cheney was, in the playful words of NPR, "lightly roasted" — as though he's some sort of grumpy though beloved avuncular stand-up comic. Along with George W. Bush, one of the speakers in attendance was Vice President Joe Biden, who spoke movingly of Cheney's kind and generous soul:
As I look around this room and up on the platform, I want to say thank you for letting me crash your family reunion. I'm afraid I've blown his cover. I actually like Dick Cheney. ... I can say without fear of contradiction, there's never one single time been a harsh word, not one single time in our entire relationship.
Leading American news outlets got in on the fun, as they always do, using the joviality of the event to promote their news accounts and generate visits to their sites:

Watch former President Bush unleash the Dick Cheney jokes at Washington ceremony http://nbcnews.to/1NuVbEi


As NPR put it, "This was not an event for Cheney critics — on the war or torture or related topics." Totally: why let some unpleasant war criminality ruin a perfectly uplifting ceremony?

It is a long-standing trope among self-flattering Westerners and their allies that a key difference between "us" and "them" (Muslim radicals) is that "they"
honor and memorialize their terrorists and celebrate them as "martyrs" while we scorn and prosecute our own.

Yesterday, the U.S. government unambiguously signaled to the world that not only does it regard itself as entirely exempt from the laws of wars, the
principal Nuremberg prohibition against aggressive invasions, and global prohibitions on torture (something that has been self-evident for many years), but believes that the official perpetrators should be honored and memorialized provided they engage in these crimes on behalf of the U.S. government. That's a message that most of the U.S. media and thus large parts of the American population will not hear, but much of the world will hear it quite loudly and clearly. How could they not?
In other news, U.S. officials this week conceded that a man kept in a cage for 13 years at Guantánamo, the now 37-year-old Mustafa al-Aziz al-Shamiri, was there due to "mistaken identity." As Joe Biden said yesterday, "I actually like Dick Cheney."


(sott.net)


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