Pacific Free Press was launched in March 2007 by Dutch-Canadian Richard
Kastelein of V.O.F. Expathos, in the Netherlands along with Chris Cook- CFUV radio journalist and Editor in Chief of Pacific Free Press. Cook is based in , Victoria, British Columbia.
The mission of Pacific Free Press is simple: to dig out nuggets of truth from
the slag-heap of lies, ignorance and witless diversion that has buried
public discourse today. Pacific Free Press provides a new venue for
disseminating hard news and insightful, fact-based analysis of the
harsh realities too often ignored or distorted by the mainstream press.
When a Bush-backed "regime change" is in high gear, you can bet that war crimes are not far behind.
And so it has proved in Somalia, where a senior European Union security official has told the organization that the American-trained and American-funded Ethiopian invaders and their Somali allies "may have committed war crimes and that donor countries could be considered complicit if they do nothing to stop them," the Independent reports.
The official's message to the EU's Somalia delegation detailed:
"the
exact statutes that were violated. They included intentionally
directing attacks against civilians and ordering the displacement of
civilians for reasons related to the conflict," the Independent notes.
"'In regard to the abovementioned potential violations of international
law there arise urgent questions of responsibility and potential
complicity in the commission of war crimes by the European Commission
and its partners,' the e-mail said. The European Commission has been a
major financial backer of the Somali government and the African Union
peacekeeping mission, which is currently made up of only Ugandan
troops...The United States is also a major financial supporter of the
Somali government and the peacekeepers, pledging more than $120
million."
That figure dwarfs the $20 million that the EU is
laying out for bankrolling the new government installed by Bush and the
Ethiopian dictatorship. And of course, the $120 million for
"peacekeeping" doled out by Washington does not include the untold
millions in secret dosh to supply the Ethiopian military with training,
equipment and intelligence support. Nor does it cover the cost of the
U.S. Special Ops forces that have been operating in Somalia and
surrounding states in the wake of the invasion. Nor the cost of the
many bombing raids that Bush has ordered in support of the Ethiopian
dictatorship's assault, raids which have killed scores of civilians in
supposed attempts to assassinate alleged al Qaeda allies from thousands
of feet in the air.
Nor does this $120 million "peacekeeping"
largess cover the cost of the rendition operation that the Bush gang
has been running, grabbing Somalians fleeing for their lives from
Bush's regime change operation and "rendering" them back to Ethiopia's
notorious dungeons, where they are beaten, starved and abused while
CIA and FBI officials drop by the hellholes for "interrogation
sessions" with the captives, as the Associated Press reported this week
in an almost universally ignored in-depth investigation: U.S. Agents
Visit Secret Ethiopian Jails:
CIA and FBI agents hunting for
al-Qaida militants in the Horn of Africa have been interrogating
terrorism suspects from 19 countries held at secret prisons in
Ethiopia, which is notorious for torture and abuse, according to an
investigation by The Associated Press.
Human rights groups,
lawyers and several Western diplomats assert hundreds of prisoners, who
include women and children, have been transferred secretly and
illegally in recent months from Kenya and Somalia to Ethiopia, where
they are kept without charge or access to lawyers and families
One
Western diplomat in Nairobi, who agreed to speak to AP only if not
quoted to avoid angering U.S. officials, said he sees the United States
as playing a guiding role in the operation. John Sifton, a Human
Rights Watch expert on counter-terrorism, went further. He said in an
e-mail that the United States has acted as "ringleader" in what he
labeled a "decentralized, outsourced Guantanamo."
We wrote
here recently about a U.S. citizen who was "rendered" to the Ethiopians
for the crime of refusing to confess to American agents that he was an
al Qaeda agent. Amir Mohamed Meshal, 24, remains in Ethiopian custody,
while Bush officials claim they are powerless to get him out. It
appears they have no leverage at all with the Ethiopian government,
despite providing the dictatorship with milllions in military aid,
shielding it from international heat over its draconian abuses and
even allowing it to score $20 million in military equipment from North
Korea, despite the Bush Administration's supposedly "zero-tolerance"
sanctions against the Korean regime, as the New York Times reports. (It
seems killing darkie Muslims in Africa takes priority over nuclear
non-proliferation for the Bushists.) No, the Bush Administration has
no influence whatsoever over Ethiopia; there's just no way in hell they
could convince Addis Ababa to hand over an American citizen with no
criminal charges against him.
So while Bush's "War on Terror"
proxies go about the Master's business by shooting and forcibly
uprooting civilians, the mass exodous of refugees continues, with more
than 124,000 people fleeing Mogadishu alone since February, the UN High
Commissioner for Refugees reports. Some 11,000 have been forced from
their homes since the beginning of this month. These are refugees not
from the invasion itself which was another quickie "mission
accomplished" job but from the "peace" that Bush and his proxies have
visited upon the land, an occupation that is bidding fair to become a
smaller-scale version of the four-alarm FUBAR that Bush has wrought in
Iraq.
The attack overturned Somalia's "Islamic Courts"
government, which had brought a measure of security and stability to
the ravaged nation after 15 years of murderous anarchy. But because the
Horn of Africa is considered a linchpin of the Bush gang's "New
American Century" plans for military and economic domination of the
region's oil supplies and distribution, Somalia became a target of "the
path of action," the Mussolinian tag that Bush has given to America's
official national security strategy.
Also -- and this is perhaps
the most important thing for the lily-livered bullies of the Bush
Faction -- Somalia was "doable." This, as you recall, was the battle
cry of chickenhawk Paul Wolfowitz immediately after the 9/11 attacks,
when he urged his master to hit Iraq right away. As Bob Woodward
relates in his hagiographic Bush at War (Woodward had not yet bitten
the royal hand that fed him), Wolfowitz told the Bush inner circle that
while "attacking Afghanistan would be uncertain Iraq was a brittle
oppressive regime that might break easily. It was doable." That is to
say, Howlin' Wolf, George the Deserter and Dick "Other Priorities"
Cheney all knew that Iraq was a broken-backed country that was no
threat to anyone and could not strike back, as a state, with a standing
army, if attacked. You could go to war against Iraq -- even fight a
long "counterinsurgency" struggle if you had to -- and still keep the
malls full, the corporate welfare flowing, the rubes gulled with
reality shows and propaganda pageants, and "the base" stoked with
bloody-eyed hatred of "Islmaofascists" and their "dhimmicrat" allies,
etc. etc. Like Iraq, Somalia was "doable;" so it's been "done."
But
also like Iraq, the aftermath of this latest Terror War rape is
unlikely to follow the Bushist script. As we noted last week, yet
another whirlwind of blowback will be reaped from these rotten seeds.
Yet another generation will be raised in violence and despair, will be
taught by the "guiding lights of world civilization" that the true
meaning of life is the power that flows from the barrel of a gun, from
a bomb, from the blood of innocent people. This is the lesson that the
"War on Terror" is teaching and confirming around the world, day after
day after day. This is the real "New American Century" that Bush and
his cohorts and his simpering apologists are trying to construct.