ISSUE:
#. 58. Nov. 4, 2002
THIS WEEK:
THE SECRET RESOURCE WARS BEHIND THE "WAR ON TERROR"--
OIL WARS: PETRO-OLIGARCHS PLOT IRAQ CARVE-UP!
DRUG WARS: AFGHAN OPIUM LORDS BACK IN THE SADDLE!
WATER WARS: ISRAEL AND LEBANON ON THE BRINK!
ALSO:
PENTAGON TO STEP UP "BLACK OPS"
HEZBOLLAH: TERRORISTS OR PATRIOTS?
IRAQ SANCTIONS AS WEAPON OF MASS DESTRUCTION?
CURRENT HOMELAND SECURITY COLOR ADVISORY CODE: YELLOW
By Bill Weinberg
with David Bloom, Special Correspondent
THE PALESTINE FRONT
1. Israel Bars New Palestinian Wells in West Bank
2. Israel Wages "War of Thirst"
3. Gaza Strip Running Out of Water
4. Israel Stealing Palestinian Sand from Gaza
5. Amnesty International Accuses Israel of War Crimes
6. Israeli Women Support Palestinian Suit Against Sharon
7. Hezbollah Militant Held In "Balloon Attack" Plot
8. Israeli Bedouin Soldier Charged With Spying For Hezbollah
9. Imprisoned "Refusenik" Yigal Bronner Seeks Support
THE LEBANON FRONT
1. Israel-Lebanon Water War Looms
2. Lebanon Farmers Pine for Hashish
3. Prison for Lebanese Lesbians?
4. Anti-Syrian Protests Re-Emerge in Beirut
5. Security Forces Close Christian Opposition TV
6. Lebanese Relatives to Syria: We Want Our Sons Back
7. Bomb Blast at Suburban Beirut McDonald's
8. Hezbollah and IDF Play Capture the Flag
9. Armitage, Condi: We're Going After Hezbollah
10. Hezbollah Could Strike in US, Says US
11. Hezbollah's Aim: Destroy the "Zionist Entity"
12. Hezbollah Beats Up UNIFIL Troops
13. Israel to Take Out Hezbollah During Iraq Attack?
14. Al-Qaeda in Lebanon?
THE IRAQ FRONT
1. New Battle Group to Persian Gulf
2. US Pilots Practice Bombing Raids in Southern Iraq
3. Iraq War Drive: Shadow Play Against OPEC?
4. Jeremy Rifkin: It's the Oil, Stupid!
5. Felix Rohatyn: It's the Oil, Stupid!
6. Joint US-Israeli Mission to Neutralize Iraq's Missiles?
7. Israel Deploys Anti-Missile Batteries at Nuke Plant
8. Spanish Diplomat Quits in Protest of War Drive
9. Stevie Wonder Speaks Out Against War
10. "Economic Sanctions as a Weapon of Mass Destruction"?
11. Newsweek: Saddam Skimming from Oil-For-Food Program
12. Iran: Saddam Burns Southern Marshlands
ELSEWHERE IN THE MIDDLE EAST
1. Syrian Kurds Demand Rights
2. King Fahd: Pray for Rain
3. Hookah Crackdown in Egypt
4. Archeologists Track Ancient Dope Trade
THE HORN OF AFRICA
1. Pentagon Plans Military HQ on the Horn
THE AFGHANISTAN FRONT
1. Taliban Plan Big Comeback
2. Afghan Women Under Attack--Again
3. Afghanistan Again Leads World in Opium Production
4. Bumper Cannabis Crop in Mazar-i-Sharif
5. Kandahar Drug Czar Pledges Zero Tolerance
6. 30 Nations Pledge Crackdown on Afghan Drug Routes
7. Legalization for Kazakhstan?
THE NEW GREAT GAME
1. Central Asia to Revive Soviet Water Diversion Scheme
THE WAR AT HOME
1. Passaic Jail Detainees Protest Harsh Conditions
2. NYC Network TV Censors ACLU
WATCHING THE SHADOWS
1. Whales Score Round in Federal Court
2. Pentagon Develops Beam Weapons, "Knock-Out" Gas
3. Pentagon Tested Sarin Gas in Hawaii
4. Pentagon Plans "Secret War"
5. Pentagon to Scale Back Anti-Drug Missions
THE PALESTINE FRONT
1. ISRAEL BARS NEW PALESTINIAN WELLS IN WEST BANK
On Oct. 22, Israeli Infrastructure Minister Effie Eitam, head of the
far-right National Religious Party, ordered the Water Commissioner to stop
all drilling for water by Palestinians in the West Bank, and announced a
freeze on the issue of permits for future drillings. The decision,
announced by Eitam at a Jerusalem press conference, holds severe impacts
for Palestinian agriculture, which relies mainly on water drilled from the
ground. Eitam accused the Palestinian Authority of a "water intifada"
against Israel. He said the PA was "enabling Palestinians, mainly in Areas
A and B [under Palestinian and Israeli security control, respectively], to
carry out unauthorized drillings in order to steal water from the State of
Israel."
Eitam said some 250 unauthorized water drillings for agricultural purposes
were reported this year in Palestinian-controlled areas of the West Bank.
He added that new illegal connections to water pipes, used by Palestinians
to irrigate their land, are reported every day, preventing the water from
reaching Jewish settlements. (Haaretz, Oct. 22)
Palestinian Agriculture Minister Rafiq al-Natshah said Eitam's decree was
"aimed at dehydrating the Palestinians". Al-Natshah claimed that it is
Israel which is stealing the Palestinians' water by pumping from the West
Bank's "mountain aquifer," which under international law belongs to the
Palestinians. 80% of that water is sent to Israel and only 20% to the
Palestinians. Al-Natshah said that the Palestinians' average water
consumption is 10 times below the average consumption of the Jewish
settlements. "Israel steals 80% of our rights to the water, sells it to us,
and then claims we're stealing the water," Al-Natshah said.
Responding to Eitam's accusations that Palestinians are polluting the
ground water, Al-Natshah said the source of the pollution is mainly Israeli
factories that dump wastes in the West Bank. He added that the Palestinian
Authority had approached the Israeli government and international bodies on
this issue, but received no response. (Rishon Leziyyon, Oct. 26, via BC
Monitoring)
[top]
2. ISRAEL WAGES "WAR OF THRIST"
In the Palestinian newspaper Al-Ayyam Oct. 24, commentator Muhammad
Daraghimah accused the Sharon government of waging a "war of thirst"
against the Palestinians: "The Palestinians suffer from a chronic water
shortage due to Israel's control of all their water resources and its
zealous exploitation of these resources. The 1995 interim agreement [Oslo
II] gave the Palestinians some hope that their mushrooming thirst problem
could be solved. The Israeli side, in the attached protocol on water,
recognized, in principle, the Palestinians' right to these resources.
However, it kept the door open to other options when it referred agreement
on this issue to the final-status negotiations, the fate of which is now
uncertain."
He quoted engineer Fadl Ka'wash, deputy chairman of the Palestinian Water
Authority, saying that "of the 200 requests submitted by the Palestinians
to dig wells with the objective of meeting our needs, as defined by the
agreement, the Israelis approved only 14, eleven for drinking water and
three for agricultural use." According to Ka'wash, these wells provide us
with only 22 million of the 80 million annual cubic meters cited as
accruing to the Palestinians in the interim agreement.
Daraghimah breaks down the vast disparity in Israeli and Palestinian water
use: "While the average per capita consumption of water on the Palestinian
side amounts to only 40 liters per day, the Israeli individual's share
reaches 350 liters. The average water consumption jumps to 800 liters per
person per day at settlements, where settlers enjoy the pleasure of house
gardens and swimming pools." With 177 settlements now in Palestinian
territories, Daraghimah writes that many Palestinian villages "are actually
on the verge of thirst," like the Tubas area, where the average per capita
consumption is 22 liters a day. 240 Palestinian villages, with a population
of 350,000, do not have running water. Ka'wash says: "Israel is fully
responsible for our thirst. It controls all our water resources and uses
85% of them." (BBC Monitoring, Oct. 26)
[top]
3. GAZA STRIP RUNNING OUT OF WATER
A new study by the European Union's FP5 project (the Fifth European
Community Framework Program) found that local water resources in the Gaza
Strip are gravely overtaxed. According to the study, the Palestinians pump
about 140 million cubic meters of water from more than 1,000 wells annually
from the southern coastal aquifer. Many of these wells are privately owned,
and most of them are not under any sort of supervision. The population of
the Gaza Strip, which numbers more than one million, is increasing by
70,000 people a year. The coastal aquifer will not be able to meet rising
demand. The quality of the water used by the Gaza residents has already
deteriorated and does not meet any international standard. The
concentration of chlorides (a gauge of salinity) is above 1,000 milligrams
per liter, whereas in Israel the maximum permitted amount in drinking water
is 600. The nitrate concentration (a measure of pollution originating in
sewerage and fertilizers) has been found to be more than 500 milligrams per
liter in some places. The Israeli standard is 70, and Israel is definitely
not one of the stricter countries in this regard. (Haartez, Sept. 16)
[top]
4. ISRAEL STEALING PALESTINIAN SAND FROM GAZA
A report from Gaza in the Palestinian newspaper Al-Ayam Oct. 23 ("National
Security: The occupation authorities stole some 1,000 truckloads of sand
from the beginning of September") describes how ongoing "hectic thefts of
sand" for use in Israeli construction work inside Israel threatens
Palestinian well water. Israeli settlements in Gaza are built on sand dunes
which serve as natural filters for rainwater that settles in wells. When
the sand is removed, a Palestinian security source told Al-Ayyam, these
wells become exposed to pollution, and may dry up. The source said long
flatbed trucks are being loaded up with sand day and night, taking it
inside the Green Line. The source added that a protest had been lodged with
the Israeli occupation forces to stop stealing the national natural
resources of the Palestinian people. (BBC Monitoring: Al-Ayyam, Oct. 23)
(David Bloom)
[top]
5. AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL ACCUSES ISRAEL OF WAR CRIMES
A new report by Amnesty International accuses Israeli forces of of
committing war crimes in Jenin and Nablus this spring during the West Bank
invasion. The 76-page report details unlawful killings, blocking medical
care, using people as human shields and bulldozing homes with residents
inside. It concludes: "The information in this report suggests that the
Israeli Defense Forces committed violations of international law during the
course of military operations in Jenin and Nablus, including war crimes,
for which they must be held accountable." A spokesman for the Israeli
Foreign Ministry dismissed the claims, saying "our experience has shown
that many Palestinian claims have proven to be unfounded." (NYT, Nov. 4)
[top]
6. ISRAELI WOMEN SUPPORT PALESTINIAN SUIT AGAINST SHARON
A Robert Fisk article in the Sept. 24 UK Independent describes how nine
Israeli women's groups told Palestinians in Beirut they supported their
efforts to have the Israeli Prime Minister indicted for "war crimes" for
his role in the 1982 Sabra and Shatila refugee camps massacres.
"Our hearts ache to recall the terrible massacre that took place in the
Sabra and Shatila refugee camps 20 years ago, which Israeli leaders allowed
to take place," the to survivors of the massacres reads. "We condemn the
brutal murderers of your loved ones and we condemn the leaders who must be
held accountable for these war crimes, Ariel Sharon above all." The letter,
from the Coalition of Women for A Just Peace in Israel, was sent to Beirut
via the US. The letter recalled how the Palestinians were forced to flee
their homes for Lebanese refugee camps in 1948, and said "We join you in
mourning for those who were killed and maimed [in 1982] and we condemn
those who are responsible. We hope you will accept the sincerity of our
words and allow us to stand in solidarity with you as we strive to build
peace with justice between Israel and Palestine." Mohamed abu Rudeina, who
at seven years old watched his father and other relatives killed in the
massacres, described the letter as a "moving act" which would encourage
other survivors to seek justice. Mallat described the letter as the first
gesture of support from Israelis to the massacre survivors since the death
20 years ago of Israeli anti-war protestor Emil Grunzweig.
"We regard Mr. Grunzweig as an Israeli who died for Sabra and Shatila,"
Mallat said. "Now at last, we seem to have got support from Israelis about
the terrible crimes against humanity which occurred in Beirut two decades
ago." An Israeli commission of inquiry held then-Defense Minister Sharon
"indirectly responsible" for the massacres in which up to 1,700 were killed
by Lebanese Christian Phalangist militiamen while Israeli troops ringed the
camps and did nothing. Phalangist militia leader Elie Hobeika, who said he
would testify against Sharon in a war crimes trial, was assassinated Jan.
24 in Beirut (see WW3 REPORT #53) (UK Independent Sept. 24) (David Bloom)
[top]
7. HEZBOLLAH MILITANT HELD IN "BALLOON ATTACK" PLOT
An alleged senior Hezbollah militant is on trial in a Tel Aviv court on
charges of "plotting attacks by booby-trapped motorized balloons," wrote
the respected Beirut daily An-Nahar on Nov. 2. The indictment says of Fawzi
Ayoub, 38, arrested in July: "He has confessed to smuggling in two
motorized balloons to booby-trap them for an attack on a densely populated
residential district in Jerusalem and on Kiryat Arba." Kiryat Arba is a
Jewish settlement in Hebron. When asked how he plead, Ayoub, a Canadian
citizen, asked to contact his embassy. "Hezbollah has been declining to
comment on the Ayoub affair," An-Nahar stated. (An-Nahar, Nov. 2)
The "motorized balloons" may well be paragliders. Ha'aretz reported July 17
IDF troops found two motorized paragliders during a search of a Palestinian
Authority compound in Hebron. In Gaza, a Hamas activist, Mohammed Hussein
Karsua, 28, has been indicted for attempting to build a glider last
November, allegedly to be used in attacks. But when the men tested the
glider, it didn't fly. (Haaretz, July 17) The Popular Front for the
Liberation of Palestine-General Command (PFLP-GC) mounted a successful
glider attack in 1987. In what was called "the night of the hang gliders,"
militants on motorized gliders infiltrated Israel from Lebanon, killing six
Israeli soldiers before being shot down. (BBC, May 4, 2000) (David Bloom)
[top]
8. ISRAELI BEDOUIN SOLDIER CHARGED WITH SPYING FOR HEZBOLLAH
An Israeli
Bedouin from the village of Zarzir in the Galilee, Lt. Col. Omar al-Hayb,
was charged with spying for Hezbollah in exchange for drugs. Col. al-Hayb
was the first Israeli Bedouin to volunteer for the paratrooper corps. He
served with distinction in Lebanon, was seriously wounded by a Hezbollah
bomb, losing an eye and being partially paralyzed. Left disabled, he
eventually rejoined the army to recruit Bedouin youth. Two of his brothers
are also lieutenant colonels in the army. Fifty-two members of the Hayb
clan died in action fighting for Israel. But Israeli authorities say a
dozen members of the Hayb clan were part of a Hezbollah network led by Col.
Hayb. Two members of the clan were busted in mid-September exchanging money
and information with the Hezbollah at the Israeli-Lebanon border. (UK
Guardian, Oct. 26) Al-Hayb is reported to have received $24,000 from
Hezbollah for his spying. (Ha'aretz, Oct. 24) The prosecution alleges
Hayb's information resulted in specific attacks on Israelis. A security
source said a cell phone used by Col. Hayb was found at the scene of a
cross-border shooting attack March 12 which killed six Israelis. Al-Hayb
was indicted with his brother, who compares the plight of the two to Alfred
Dreyfus, the French army officer accused of spying for Germany in 1894 in a
notorious case of anti-Semitism. (NYT, Oct. 25)
As Arabs, Bedouin are not required to serve in the IDF, but many choose to,
often as trackers. Bedouin trackers are known for phenomenal abilities to
read terrain, and are valued for their powers of observation. It was on a
scouting mission in Lebanon that Col. al-Hayb lost his eye and was
partially paralyzed. (LA Times, Oct. 25) Al-Hayb is the highest ranking
Bedouin officer in the IDF. Trackers have intimate knowledge of the
Israeli-Lebanon border area, information which would be of great use to
Hezbollah for cross-border attacks. In January, four Bedouin were killed
while serving at the Rafah IDF post in the southern Gaza Strip. (AP, Oct.
24)
Brig. Gen. (res.) Hussein al-Hayb - who started the IDF's Bedouin tracker
unit and is the suspect's older brother, expressed his displeasure,
screaming, "I'm sorry for the 37 years I gave to this country." (Ha'aretz,
Oct. 25) Since the IDF withdrawal from Lebanon two and a half years ago,
Israeli security officials have identified about ten efforts by Hezbollah
to recruit spies in Israel. Dozens of suspects have been arrested, and
some have been brought to trial. (Ha'aretz, Oct. 24) (David Bloom)
[top]
9. IMPRISONED "REFUSENIK" YIGAL BRONNER SEEKS SUPPORT
On Oct. 28, Yigal Bronner, a professor of Asian Studies at Tel-Aviv
University, was jailed by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) for refusing to
serve in the Occupied Territories--or, in his words, for refusing to
participate in "the humiliation, dispossession and starvation of an entire
people." He is currently being held in conditions that his supporters call
"illegal and unacceptably harsh, apparently intended deliberately to
humiliate and to silence him."
Bronner's statement of refusal to serve will be published by the
"refuseniks" movement in the Israeli newspaper "Ha'aretz" on Nov. 8, along
with a list of sponsors. The letter begins by quoting Bertolt Brecht:
"General, your tank is a powerful vehicle
It smashes down forests and crushes a hundred men.
But it has one defect:
It needs a driver.
"General, man is very useful.
He can fly and he can kill.
But he has one defect:
He can think."
It then states, "I do not intend to heed your call," and explains why:
"During the 1980s, Ariel Sharon erected dozens of settler colonies in the
heart of the occupied territories, a strategy whose ultimate goal was the
subjugation of the Palestinian people and the expropriation of their land.
Today, these colonies control nearly half of the occupied territories and
are strangling Palestinian cities and villages as well as obstructing--if
not altogether prohibiting--the movement of their residents. Sharon is now
prime minister, and in the past year he has been advancing towards the
definitive stage of the initiative he began twenty years ago...
"The Chief of Staff has announced that the Palestinians constitute a
cancerous threat and has commanded that chemotherapy be applied against
them. The brigadier has imposed curfews without time limits, and the
colonel has ordered the destruction of Palestinian fields. The division
commander has placed tanks on the hills between their houses, and has not
allowed ambulances to evacuate their wounded. The lieutenant colonel
announced that the open-fire regulations have been amended to an
indiscriminate order 'fire!' The tank commander, in turn, spotted a number
of people and ordered his artillery-man to launch a missile.
"I am that artillery-man. I am the small screw in the perfect war machine.
I am the last and smallest link in the chain of command. I am supposed to
simply follow orders--to reduce my existence down to stimulus and reaction,
to hear the sound of 'fire' and pull the trigger, to bring the overall plan
to completion. And I am supposed to do all this with the simplicity and
naturalness of a robot, who--at most--feels the shaking tremor of the tank
as the missile is launched towards the target.
"But...I can think. Perhaps I am not capable of much more than that. I
confess that I
am not an especially gifted or courageous soldier; I am not the best shot,
and my technical skills are minimal. I am not even very athletic, and my
uniform does not sit comfortably on my body. But I am capable of thinking.
I can see where you are leading me. I understand that we will kill,
destroy, get hurt and die, and that there is no end in sight... I am
therefore forced to disobey your call. I will not pull the trigger.
"I do not delude myself, of course. You will shoo me away. You will find
another artillery-man--one who is more obedient and talented than I. There
is no dearth of such soldiers. Your tank will continue to roll; a gadfly
like me cannot stop a rolling tank, surely not a column of tanks, and
definitely not the entire march of folly. But a gadfly can buzz, annoy,
nudge, and at times even bite...
"So general, before you shoo me away, perhaps you too should begin to think.
"Sincerely, Yigal Bronner"
The Israeli refuseniks campaign is asking supporters to endorse Prof.
Bronner's statement by sending a message to: conscienceobjector@yahoo.com
State your full name and institutional affiliation (for identification
purposes only). To be included in the Ha'aretz ad, messages must be
received by Nov. 6, 8 PM EST.
The campaign is also seeking contributions to cover the $8000 cost of the
English and Hebrew ads. Checks in dollars should be made out in the name of
Assaf Oron and sent to:
Yigal Bronner Campaign, c/o Assaf Oron
POB 95511
Seattle WA 98145-2511
Any funds raised above and beyond the cost of the ad will go to the
campaign supporting Israeli conscientious objectors.
Finally, the campaign is asking supporters to contact the Israeli Defense
Minister and IDF counsel at the addresses below to demand freedom and
humane conditions for Yigal and the other imprisoned resisters. Use the
addresses below, and please send a copy sent to: yigalbronner@yahoo.com
Mr. Shaul Mofaz
Minister of Defence,
37 Kaplan St.,
Tel-Aviv 61909,
Israel.
E-mail: mailto:sar@mod.gov.il or mailto:pniot@mod.gov.il
Fax: ++972-3-696-27-57 / ++972-3-691-69-40 / ++972-3-691-79-15
Brig. Gen. Menachem Finklestein
Chief Military Attorney
Military postal code 9605
IDF
Israel
Fax: ++972-3-569-43-70
For more information:
http://www.yesh-gvul.org/english.html
http://taayush.tripod.com
[top]
THE LEBANON FRONT
1. ISRAEL-LEBANON WATER WAR LOOMS
Israel and Lebanon seem headed back to the brink of war, with bellicose
rhetoric, threats and provocations along the border just a shot away from
actual skirmishes. At issue this time is not land, but water--specifically
a small river known as the Wazzani--a tributary of the Hasbani, which flows
south through some 30 miles of Lebanese territory before passing into
Israel and emptying into Lake Kinneret. The crisis was sparked by Lebanese
plans to increase the amount of water pumped from the river for local
municipal use for the first time since Israeli occupation forces withdrew
from southern Lebanon in 2000.
On Nov. 3, shortly after Lebanon began pumping drinking water to eight
southern villages, Israeli jets thundered overhead--a reminder of Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon's threat to destroy the Wazzani Springs pumping
station if it was determined to be depleting Israel's share of the Hasbani.
As Israeli warplanes staged mock air raids in the area, an Israeli navy
cruiser and gunboat were spotted patrolling the southern coastline in a
show of force that sent fishermen racing back to the shore. (Al-Nahar,
Lebanon, Nov. 3)
The $3.5-million Wazzani project will supply drinking water to some 60
villages being repopulated and rebuilt following the Israeli occupation. To
avoid a confrontation with Israel, Lebanese authorities backed off from
earlier plans to use the water for irrigation as well as municipal
supplies. But southern Lebanon clearly needs water for irrigation too.
Along the Wazzani, fields are largely barren, with only a few scattered
tomato vines and olive orchards. Just across the border, Israeli orchards
produce apples and apricots, and houses have lush lawns. During the Israeli
occupation, local villagers said anyone venturing near Wazzani Spring was
fired on by Israeli troops stationed on an overlooking hill. Residents had
to buy water from private wells, or haul jugs on donkeys to distant
springs. "Now, we got Wazzani Spring back," said al-Ahmad, 35, a dairy
farmer, "and no one is going to take it away from us." (Newsday, Nov. 3)
Israeli authorities have asked why the Lebanese don't pump from the Litani,
a much larger river which empties into the Mediterranean north of the
Israeli border. But local Lebanese authorities say the Litani is poisoned
by industrial effluent from inland factories. (UK Independent, Sept. 26)
The Lebanese plan--carried out by the Southern Council, a government body
responsible for infrastructure in the former Israeli occupied zone--would
divert some 3.5 million cubic meters of water a year from Lake Kinneret in
northern Israel. Experts say this will lower the lake's level by two
centimeters. (Haaretz, Sept. 11)
Israeli Prime Minister Sharon insists that Lebanon cannot change "the
status of water arrangements" unilaterally. Sharon accused that "the entire
operation is aimed at taking water from Israel." Asked by the Jerusalem
Post whether the project would be considered a casus belli by Israel, the
prime minister responded: "Israel will not allow the Hasbani to be
diverted. I want to be very clear on this. And we are ready to deal with
this issue." (Lebanon Daily Star, Sept. 27)
The Lebanese Shite militant group Hezbollah has responded in kind to
Sharon's threats. Said Hezbollah executive committee member Hashem
Safiedin: "We say to Sharon and to all the Zionists that if they even think
about using force to stop the Lebanese exploiting the waters of the
Wazzani, we will cut their hands off." (AFP, Sept. 10)
Hezbollah has dispatched armed fighters to the border, close to where
workers were installing water pipes for the project. Meanwhile, Israel's
ambassador to Washington, Danny Ayalon, met with US Secretary of State
Colin Powell to complain about the water project. "We will not allow the
diversion of the Hasbani," Ayalon told Powell. And Sharon stepped up his
warnings that the water diversion would mean war, telling military
commanders: "If that happens, we shall have to take measures."
The issue has actually led to war in the past. In 1964, Lebanon, Syria and
Jordan launched a scheme to divert the Hasbani and tributaries of the
Jordan River away from Israeli territory. Israel responded by bombing the
construction works, sparking a series of cross-border skirmishes that
eventually culminated in the 1967 Six-Day War. (Daily Star, Sept. 17)
In September, Lebanon's President Emile Lahoud urged the UN Security
Council to restrain Israel. A presidential press release quoted Lahoud
saying Lebanon was within its rights to carry out the project under
international pacts and agreements. It added that Israel's exploitation of
the Wazzani River during its 22-year occupation of the South "does not
mean, in any way, that this de facto situation should continue by force...
Israel does not want to believe that its occupation of South Lebanon is
over. Its presence in the Shabaa Farms [Israeli-held contested lands] and
its control of Lebanese waters...should be given up." (Daily Star, Sept. 13)
As Sharon went on Israel's Army Radio to accuse Lebanon of using the water
diversion as a "pretext for war," Lahoud told reporters that Israel's
threats will not "stop us from implementing international laws regarding
water and rivers flowing from our territories." (Haaretz, Sept. 15)
A US delegation headed by State Department water expert Chuck Lawson
arrived in Beirut to try to mediate the crisis in September, holding talks
with Prime Minister Rafik Hariri and Speaker Nabih Berri as well as Lahoud.
According to visiting MPs, Berri told Lawson that Lebanon was fully
entitled to use the water, and call for drawing a UN "Blue Line" to
delineate water resources in the border zone. (Daily Star, Sept. 19)
After US attempts to mediate the crisis broke down in October, Lebanese
Information Minister Ghazi Aridi accused Washington of "total bias in favor
of Israel." (Daily Star, Oct. 11)
As work was completed on the project, Israeli forces used powerful
loudspeakers to blare magnified and prolonged wolf cries along the border
with Lebanon every night in a psychological operation against workers at
the pumping station. Parachute flares illuminated the night skies for
Israeli jets to stage thunderous supersonic flights, and Apache helicopter
gunships hovered overhead. But Lebanese officials said work on the project
never stopped for a moment. (An-Nahar, Oct. 10)
Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah announced that his organization was on
the highest alert in anticipation of an Israeli attack. Nasrallah pledged
that Hezbollah would respond to any Israeli aggression "within minutes." If
Sharon decides to attack the pumping project, it will "open up the northern
front and we are prepared for that," he said. "All we need is one telephone
call" to respond to any Israeli attack, he said. (Haaretz, Oct. 16)
As Lebanon began pumping from the Wazzani Oct.16, Lahoud made a surprise
appearance at the inauguration ceremony, and personally turned on the
pumps. Dozens of red balloons were released into the air as the pumps were
turned on. "This is not the end, this is just the beginning," Berri told
the crowd, asserting Lebanon's right to its water. He again called for UN
action to determine Lebanon's water rights and said that Lebanon "will not
give up any drop of its water." (Haaretz, Oct. 17)
A group of Muslim clerics performed a ritual washing in the Wazzani River
at the ceremony. A banner, along with a sea of Lebanese flags, read: "Ariel
Sharon is thirsty for blood and we are thirsty for water." (Toronto Globe &
Mail, Oct. 16)
US Embassy officials decided to boycott the ceremony, which was attended by
representatives from the UN, the EU and various embassies. The US Embassy
explained its decision in a statement protesting Lebanon's "failure" to
inform third parties that it intended to carry out the project, calling it
a "unilateral action." ( Daily Star, Oct. 17)
An October report by the UN Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia
(ESCWA) said Lebanon had not broken any international agreements, and that
the dispute should be resolved diplomatically. "It is a duty of the
Lebanese government to supply local residents with water for domestic and
other use,'' read the report. "We consider that the Lebanese government has
not breached any international agreement and that United Nations mediation
is necessary.'' (Reuters, Oct. 16)
Meanwhile, an Israeli official in charge of the Upper Galilee water works
accused his own government of distorting the Wazzani dispute. The official,
Mickey Simhai, told Israel Radio that the Lebanese plan to siphon less from
the Hatzbani River than Israel wastes a year. "I think there is a lot of
noise being made here," he said. "I don't think we have to go to war over
this." Simhai added that the Lebanese are entitled to use the water,
particularly if they need it for drinking purposes, and that the diversion
posed no threat to Lake Kinneret. (Jerusalem Post, Sep. 21)
[top]
2. LEBANON FARMERS PINE FOR HASHISH
Walid Jumblatt, leader of Lebanon's Druze community, called for legalizing
opium cultivation for medicinal purposes. Speaking at a political rally in
the Bekaa Valley town of Saadnayel, the Druze leader said he was open to
the idea of using opium and hashish--once a mainstay of Lebanon's
economy--for "medical" purposes. "I favor reopening the debate on banned
crops," Jumblatt said before an audience that included farmers and
Agriculture Minister Ali Abdullah. The rally, organized by supporters of
Jumblatt's Progressive Socialist Party in the Bekaa, was attended by
several local politicians and members of parliament. Jumblatt also warned
that ending
subsidies on agricultural crops, as required by the World Bank, "would lead
to an
exodus from rural areas to the cities."( Daily Star, Nov. 4)
Last spring, the New York Times reported on how farmer's in Lebanon Bekaa
Valley--once the heartland of hashish and opium production--are pining for
the old days, before the Lebanese government and Syrian occupation forces
eradicated the drug crops and brought in American cattle as an economic
alternative for local farmers. Hussein Jaafar, a cannabis farmer turned
dairyman, now struggles to eke out a living from half a dozen Pennsylvania
cows--but longs again to grow cannabis. "Let them come and take their cows
back wherever they came from," said Jaafar. "I will even forgive them my
down payment. I swear if the government would let me grow just 500 square
metres of hashish, I would sell them." Another farmer pointed out that in
the days of hashish prosperity, the farmers had never heard of secondhand
clothes. "Now everybody is buying secondhand clothes," he said, "no more
Armani and Versace." (NYT, April 7, 2001)
[top]
3. PRISON FOR LEBANESE LESBIANS?
Two women were referred to a criminal judge for sentencing on charges of
theft and lesbianism by a Lebanese magistrate in September. The two women,
identified only as Haniya and Ghada, are accused of stealing clothes,
$2,000 in cash and $10,000 in jewelry. The accusations ceme from Haniya's
mother after her daughter fled home to live her lover, Ghada, "whom she
loved more than herself," the Daily Star says. Haniya denies her mother's
charges. She left a message saying she wanted to seek her own future and
not marry a poor man. Police traced the message to the couple's residence
in Zouk Mosbeh. In her testimony, Ghada said her relationship with Haniy
was one of mutual consent, and that the two lived together as a "sincere
couple." Mount Lebanon investigating magistrate Fawzi Adham requested a
three-year sentence for theft, and a one-year sentence for lesbianism.
(Daily Star, Sept. 27) (David Bloom)
[top]
4. ANTI-SYRIAN PROTESTS RE-EMERGE IN BEIRUT
Despite a ban on such demonstrations, anti-Syrian student activists,
spurred on by exiled former prime minister and army leader Gen. Michel Aoun, staged a
sit-in protest against the Syrian presence in Lebanon on Oct. 16. The
protesters hoped to draw the attention of delegates to the Francophone
Countries' Organization's meeting, or Paris-2, to be held in Lebanon on
Nov. 23. (Reuters, Oct. 16) On Oct. 30, clashes between Christian student
protesters and police resulted in the hospitalization of three students. 11
were arrested. Helmeted police sprayed students with fire hoses to keep the
demonstration from spilling into the streets from the campus of the
Lebanese University Science Faculty in Al-Fanar. A similar protest at the
St. Joseph University campus in Ashrafieh by Aoun's Free Patriotic Movement
(FPM) was cancelled due to heavy police presence. (Al Nahar, Nov. 2)
The demonstrations by FPM supporters mark the first anti-Syrian
demonstrations since Aug. 2001. At that time, President Emile Lahoud, who
largely owes his position to Syria, ordered security forces to crack down
on anti-Syrian protesters in Beirut. Students at St. Joseph were beaten and
arrested. In November, security forces showed up at the campus and tore
down pictures of the earlier beatings.
Since 2000, opposition to Syria's role in Lebanon has been growing. 25,000
Syrian troops have occupied Lebanon since the end of the Lebanese civil war
in 1991. The country's economic and political progress are hampered by
Syria's presence, the British-based financial journal Middle East Review
said in an Oct. 2 article on Lebanon's economic forecast (poor/improving,
they say).
The leader of the country's largest Christian sect, Maronite Patriarch
Nasrallah Sfeir, and Gebran Tueni, publisher of Lebanon's most respected
daily paper, An-Nahar, called on Syria to abide by the 1989 Taif accord and
pull back from the Bekaa Valley along the Syrian border, and eventually
back home to Syria. They were joined in their call by 1,400 prominent
Lebanese personalities, including Walid Jumblatt, leader of the country's
Druze, whose father Kamal was assassinated on Syrian orders in 1977. All
signed onto a letter calling for Syria to end its occupation. Several
Muslims, mostly Shi'ites, also signed the letter. Syrian troops have
largely withdrawn from Beirut, but remain in the Bekaa in eastern Lebanon.
Initially, the protests seemed to pay off. Syrian President Bashir Assad
ordered his troops to pull back from Beirut and other highly visible areas
of the country, mostly Christian enclaves. The redeployment made
international news, but tanks and troops returned to the country after the
anti-Syrian student protests in Beirut in Aug. 2001. (UK Middle East
Review, Oct. 2) (David Bloom)
[top]
5. SECURITY FORCES CLOSE CHRISTIAN OPPOSITION TV
Qornet Shehwan, a 10-member bloc of Lebanese parliament with close ties to
the Maronite church, accused the government in an Oct. 16 statement of
"attempting to finish off what remains of the democratic system" in its
closure of MTV, a mouthpiece for Christian opposition to Syria's continued
occupation of Lebanon. Authorities closed the station in September after a
court ruled MTV violated broadcast rules in its coverage of an election.
"Qornet Shehwan...holds the government responsible...and demands its
immediate resignation as a step toward forming a new one characterized by a
sense of national responsibility," the group said. Syrian troops originally
poured into the country in 1975 to spare Christian militias defeat by
Palestinian and Muslim militias, but turned on the Christian militias after
they supported Israel's 1982 invasion of Lebanon. (Reuters, Oct. 23) (David
Bloom)
[top]
6. LEBANESE RELATIVES TO SYRIA: WE WANT OUR SONS BACK
A group of 48 relatives of Lebanese prisoners they believe are detained in
Syria were rebuffed at the Syrian-Lebanese border on their way to Damascus
to meet with Syrian Interior Minister Ali Hammoud. Upon arrival at the
border, the were informed Hammoud was "out on a mission" and would not be
available "for a month." In a July 22 meeting in Damascus, the relatives
handed Hammoud a list of 174 prisoners who remained missing after Syrian
President Bashar Assad released dozens of prisoners as a goodwill gesture
in February, in the face of mounting Lebanese opposition to Syria's
presence in Lebanon. Hammoud told the relatives to come back around this
time. "In a way, what happened is a good sign; it means they do have
something to hide and were not able to face us with the facts," opined the
head of the parents' committee for the Support of Lebanese in Detention and
Exile (SOLIDE), Ghazi Aad. "We were very responsive in our talks with both
the Lebanese and the Syrian governments, but nothing happened," Aad said,
adding that "from now on, the parents would start thinking about new
methods to resolve their plight." Aad said taking the issue to local or
international courts was possible. "But the matter is first and foremost a
humanitarian issue and should not be dragged into any political quarrel,"
Aad said. Despite Syrian denials, parents say they are certain their sons
are in Syrian custody.
Samia Eid, the mother of Jihad Eid, missing since 1990, said: "It has
become crystal clear that neither the Lebanese government nor the Syrian
government wants anything to do with us." Eid said she knows that her son
is in Syria because she has seen him there in custody. "I was able to visit
my son once, in 1991," she said. "He did not see me because he was
blindfolded, but I saw him. He was there." Others say they saw their loved
ones as late as 1997. (An-Nahar, Nov. 2; Daily Star, Nov. 4) (David Bloom)
[top]
7. BOMB BLAST AT SUBURBAN BEIRUT McDONALD'S
A bomb placed under a van near a branch of US fast food chain McDonald's
exploded with no injuries on the night of Sept. 23 outside Beirut. The
blast destroyed the van but caused no damage to the restaurant in Jounieh,
15 miles north of the capital. On May 9, a bomb damaged an outlet of the
US fast food chain KFC, slightly injuring a security guard. (AFP, Sept. 23)
(David Bloom)
[top]
8. HEZBOLLAH AND IDF PLAY CAPTURE THE FLAG
During last April's Operation Defensive Shield, Hezbollah leader Sheikh
Nasrallah went to Damascus to consult with Syrian President Bashar Assad,
according to an April 18 article in Jane's Foreign Report. Nasrallah was
told he had carte blanche to attack Israeli military outposts in the
disputed Shabaa Farms region, but not to kill any civilians, and go easy
on the military casualties. Nasrallah returned thinking Assad agreed with
his assessment that Israel could not start up a second front, and thus
would not react to provocations in Shabaa Farms. Soon, the Syrian-financed
and based Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command
(PFLP-GC) came to join the fray, firing obsolete 107mm Katyusha rockets into
Israel from Hezbollah-controlled areas around the Lebanese village of
Khaim. Hours later, some small Palestinian factions from the Ain al-Hilwah
camp near Sidon headed to the south border to fire off a few rounds at
Israel. Israel's response--mobilizing some reservists and moving a couple
of artillery batteries--did not impress the "Party of God" (Hezbollah) or
Syria. Firing then shifted from Shabaa Farms to the Israeli-occupied Golan
Heights. Bunker-busting mortars never used before by Hezbollah were
introduced, as were SAM-7 missiles. On Apr. 12, it is estimated $800,000
worth of mortars, Katyushas, SAMs and Sagger anti-missiles were directed at
six Israeli outposts in the Shabaa Farms-Golan Heights sector, just to film
a Hezbollah squad reach an outpost and hoist their flag on it. In 2000,
Ha'aretz reported that bored elite IDF Golani troops at the northern border
had started to play their own version of capture the flag, sneaking across
the border into Hezbollah camps, stealing Hezbollah flags. The fun had to
stop when Israeli troops discovered Hezbollah had wised up, booby-trapping
their flags.
Iran became worried enough by the possibility of massive Israeli
retaliation it sent a minister to tell Hezbollah to chill out. The group
complied, laying off targets in the Golan Heights. Attacks on Shabaa Farms
continued, up to a dozen a day.
A Hezbollah officer was asked by Jane's: why risk retaliation in a
dangerous game that gave a boost to the Syrians but did nothing really
useful for the besieged Palestinians?
"We know the Syrians think they are using us. But it serves our interests
as well. Our cadres are genuinely furious with what the Israelis are doing.
It is also our religious indoctrination to liberate Jerusalem no matter how
unrealistic it may sound." When asked if it was also a way to keep its
restless militants occupied, the officer replied, "That too." (Jane's
Foreign Report, Apr. 18) (David Bloom)
[top]
9. ARMITAGE, CONDI: WE'RE GOING AFTER HEZBOLLAH
The German Weekly Der Speiglal reported Sept. 2 that US National Security
Advisor Condoleeza Rice wants to pursue other terrorist groups after
vanquishing al-Qaeda. "We should not leave the fight against Hezbollah and
Hamas out of our sight," said Rice. (IRNA, Sept. 2)
At a September luncheon, US Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage said
"Hezbollah made the A-team of terrorists, maybe al-Qaeda is actually the
B-team... We're going to go after them just like a high school wrestler
goes after opponents. We're going to take them down one at a time."
Hezbollah reacted angrily to Armitage's remarks. "We consider that which
has been fabricated by Armitage is no more than a stack of lies designed to
mislead and divert public opinion, in an attempt to justify the US
administration's hostile actions," said a Hezbollah statement. "These
accusations also prove the definite American bias toward the Zionist entity
and the total subjugation to its political, security and military
conditions." (Daily Star, Sept. 7)
Franco Mistretti, the Italian ambassador to Lebanon, scorned the idea that
Hezbollah is a terrorist group and a threat to Israel. "Hezbollah is
playing an important political and social role in the South and in
Parliament. It has popular support and is a respectable force from the
military point of view.... The European Union does not think that Hezbollah
is a terrorist group... We condemn any kind of terror, of course, [but] I
don't think we should consider Hezbollah a terrorist group. I don't know if
there is any evidence that they are a terrorist group. Up to now I haven't
seen any." Mistretti claimed there was no evidence to show Hezbollah
engages in terrorism. "It cannot be proved from an international point of
view," he said. "Washington says so and Israel, of course." The ambassador
also said of Israel and the Hezbollah: "I sense disproportion between the
two forces. They are not comparable. Hezbollah is a reason of annoyance.
But a real threat?" (Daily Star, Sept. 7)
Washington blames Hezbollah for the 1983 attack that killed 241 US troops
in Lebanon, the bombing of its embassy in Lebanon the same year, and the
kidnapping of US citizens during the 1975-1990 civil war. (Reuters, Sept.
6) Hezbollah has also been implicated in the deadly 1994 bombing of a
Jewish community center in Argentina.. Argentina is reportedly ready to
indict Hezbollah agents for the attack. (Forward, Oct. 4) Hezbollah has not
been suspected of attacking US interests since the 1996 attack on the
Khobar Towers in Saudi Arabia. Hezbollah is known to run floating "day
camps" for training terrorists in the Bekaa valley, some staffed with
instructors from the Iranian Revolutionary guards. Members of the Red
Brigades, the Kurdistan Worker's Party (PKK), the Irish Republican Army,
and the Basque separatist group ETA have all trained in these camps. (New
Yorker, Oct. 21) More recently, the group dismissed as "ridiculous and
baseless" the charge that it recruited Southeast Asian Muslims in a plot to
attack US and Israeli ships in Singapore (AP, June 12) Loathed by the US
defense establishment for the attacks of the '80s, the group is now seen by
many as focusing its efforts against Israel. "The question is how we treat
groups that are traditionally considered terrorist but have not lately
targeted US interests," said a Mideast-based US official. (CSM, June 14)
[top]
10. HEZBOLLAH COULD STRIKE IN U.S., SAYS U.S.
The US Justice Deptartment told the Senate Intelligence Committee on July
26 that Hezbollah has militants in the US who could strike US targets. The
Department said Hezbollah militants may have been told to evaluate
specific targets, but perhaps only to test their loyalty. Hezbollah has
never struck a target in the US, but has raised funds stateside. "To date,
it is believed that this extensive fund-raising activity itself acts as a
disincentive for operational terrorist activity in the United States,"
according to the Justice Deptartment document. (AP, Nov. 1) (David Bloom)
[top]
11. HEZBOLLAH'S AIM: DESTROY THE "ZIONIST ENTITY"
Hezbollah, a social and political organization with a wide welfare network
in "Hezbollahstan" in Lebanon's south and ten members in Parliament, is at
its heart a Shiite jihadi group, with two ultimate goals: establishing an
Islamic republic in Lebanon, and liberating Israel from the Jews. In
November 2000, five months after Israel pulled out of south Lebanon, UN
secretary-general Kofi Annan asked the Lebanese army to deploy in the south
and secure the border with Israel, with the UN to reduce half of its troop
presence by 2003. However, at Syria's behest, the Lebanese army did not go
south, and Hezbollah has continued its activities resisting Israeli
occupation--this time of a small sliver of land adjacent to the Golan
Heights called Shabaa farms. Shabaa farms is recognized by the UN, Israel,
and Washington as Syrian territory, and a matter to be settled in
Israeli-Syrian negotiations. But Lebanon and Syria say it is Lebanese, and
that therefore Hezbollah has the right to continue its resistance. In June,
it was revealed an Israeli academic had discovered maps and documents
dating from the 1920-41 French mandate supporting the claim that Shabaa
farms was Lebanese, and not Syrian. (Middle East Review, Oct. oct. 2; New
Yorker, Oct. 21, Ha'aretz, June 26) (see WW3 REPORT# 40)
However, Hezbollah chief spokesman Hassan Ezzedine told New Yorker
journalist Jeffrey Goldberg that an Israeli evacuation of Shabaa farms
would by no means stop Hezbollah. "If they go from Shabaa, we will not stop
fighting them. Our goal is to liberate the 1948 borders of Palestine."
Surviving Jews "can go back to Germany, or wherever they came from."
Pre-1948 Jews would be "allowed to live as a minority and they will be
cared for by the Muslim majority." In a conference held in Tehran last
year, Sheik Nasrallah said, "we all have an extraordinary historic
opportunity to finish off the entire cancerous Zionist project."(New
Yorker, Oct. 21) At a Nov. 1 visit to the Yarmouk refugee camp near
Damascus, Nasrallah urged continued resistance to an enthused crowd. "I say
to the Palestinians that their martyr-bombers are the makers and guarantors
of your future in Palestine," he said to a roaring cheer. "You have to step
up these attacks." (An-Nahar, Oct. TK)
Nasrallah expresses little fondness for Jews, either. Nasrallah said in a
speech: "If we searched the entire world for a person more cowardly,
despicable, weak and feeble in psyche, mind, ideology, and religion, we
would not find anyone like the Jew. Notice, I do not say the Israeli.."
Ibrahinm Mussawi, director of English-language news at Hezbollah's TV
station, al Manar, called Jews "a lesion on the forehead of history."
Hezbollah parliamentarian Hussein Hajm Hassan, who denies being
anti-Semitic, told Goldberg that Jews are a pan-national group "that
functions in a way that lets them act as parasite in the nations that have
given them shelter."(New Yorker, Oct. 21) (David Bloom)
[top]
12. HEZBOLLAH BEATS UP UNIFIL TROOPS
In a July 13 report on the United Nations Interim Force In Lebanon
(UNIFIL), UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan held Beirut responsible for
breach of UN resolutions by letting Hezbollah stage operations across the
"Blue Line" separating Lebanon from Israel. Annan also blamed Israel for
staging "unjustified" air patrols over Lebanese territory on a daily basis.
Although the UN voted unanimously to extend UNIFIL's mandate by another six
months on July 30, it cited "great concern about the serious breaches and
the air, sea and land violations of the withdrawal line." The Security
Council adopted a resolution urging the parties to put an end to those
infringements and to "abide scrupulously by their obligation to respect the
safety of the UNIFIL and other UN personnel". Four members of UNIFIL were
"severely beaten" when they tried to enter Shabaa farms area to monitor the
military situation, resulting in an apology from Hezbollah
Secretary-General Sheik Nasrallah to Annan. (JDW, Aug. 14; JDW, July 31)
(David Bloom)
[top]
13. ISRAEL TO TAKE OUT HEZBOLLAH DURING IRAQ ATTACK?
Lebanon Daily Star correspondent Nicholas Blandford, writing for Jane's
Defense Weekly, reports that Israel may use the slightest provocation from
Hezbollah to launch an attack on the group, and destroy Hezbollah's
fighting capability once and for all. Maj. Gen. Benny Gantz, head of IDF
Northern Command, recently said he is "almost certain" that Israel will
wage war against both Hezbollah and Syria. Another IDF officer told
Blandford the attack would take place "while the Americans are at work in
Iraq." He added: "Hezbollah, as well as the Palestinians, are likely to
start firing missiles at Israel anyway when the Iraq war starts, all we
have to do is respond to the provocation."
US Sen. Bob Graham, Chairman of the US Senate Intelligence Committee, has
urged the Bush administration to take out Hezbollah before taking on Iraq,
calling for air strikes against the group in the Bekaa Valley. That and
similar statements by US administration officials have increased
speculation that Washington might approve of an IDF operation against
Hezbollah, possibly in co-ordination with the US-led strike on Iraq. (JDW,
Oct. 30) (David Bloom)
[top]
14. AL-QAEDA IN LEBANON?
A Sept. 2 report in Ha'aretz by Israeli military analyst Ze'ev Schiff
claimed that up to 200 al-Qaeda operatives had been settled in Ein
al-Hilwah Palestinian refugee camp near Sidon. Schiff said he got the
information from an unnamed Israeli security source. (Ha'aretz, Sept. 5) A
Lebanese security source discounted the report, saying that only 10-15
wanted Islamic activists were operating in the camp. (Haartez, Sept. 3)
One Lebanese analyst discounted the Ha'aretz report as "yet another
desperate attempt by Israel to link Lebanon and Syria with al-Qaeda and put
them on the list of targets in the war against terrorism". (BBC, Sept. 2)
The LA Times said Sept. 15 that Arab intelligence sources report that
al-Qaeda members fleeing from Afghanistan have regrouped in the Middle
East, and are present in Iran, Syria and Lebanon. The Times said Syria has
allowed "dozens" of al-Qaeda operatives to take up residence in Ein
al-Hilwah. (LAT, Sept. 15)
Twenty-two people, including nationals from Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Yemen,
Turkey and the Palestinian territories, have been charged by a Lebanese
military prosecutor with planning to carry out attacks and forging travel
documents. Three of the 22 are in custody. The men are alleged to be
members of al-Qaeda. (AP, Oct. 11) (David Bloom)
[top]
THE IRAQ FRONT
1. NEW BATTLE GROUP TO PERSIAN GULF
An armada now leaving San Diego with more than 8,000 sailors and Marines
is heading for the Persian Gulf. While the deployment of the aircraft
carrier Constellation and five escort ships has been planned for over a
year, the flotilla has been considerably beefed up. The Constellation
battle group includes the carrier, 72 aircraft, the cruisers Bunker Hill
and Valley Forge, destroyers Higgins and Milius, and frigate Thach. Joining
the warships are aircraft and crew members from North Island Naval Air
Station and Miramar Marine Corps Air Station. The submarine Columbia from
Pearl Harbor, HI, and the support ship Rainier from Washington state will
also join up. The battle group, armed with fighter-bombers and Tomahawk
cruise missiles, could be stationed off Iraq by early December.
"Any time you deploy you have to go with the mind-set that you'll be
involved in some action," said Capt. John Miller, the Constellation's
commanding officer. This time "there is a very real possibility we'll be
involved in combat." The carrier is "ready in every regard," he said. The
Constellation will relieve the carrier Lincoln and its escort vessels.
Planes from the Lincoln group have been flying patrols over southern Iraq's
no-fly zone and intercepting ships trying to smuggle Iraqi oil. (San Diego
Union-Tribune, Nov. 1)
[top]
2. U.S. PILOTS PRACTICE BOMBING RAIDS IN SOUTHERN IRAQ
Navy warplanes patrolling the no-fly zone in southern Iraq--including the
new F/A-18E Super Hornet, deployed for the first time--are practicing mock
raids on airfields and military targets. "It gives us the opportunity to
train in the same environment that we may possibly go to war in," said Cpt.
Kevin C. Albright, commander of the Abraham Lincoln battle group. Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has also authorized US warplanes to actually
strike a wider variety of targets in southern Iraq--now including command,
control and communications systems such as radar and relay stations as well
as anti-aircraft weapons. (NYT, Nov. 3)
[top]
3. IRAQ WAR DRIVE: SHADOW PLAY AGAINST OPEC?
In October, Ahmed Chalabi, head of the London-based Iraqi National Congress
(INC), met executives of three US oil multi-nationals in Washington DC to
negotiate the post-Saddam carve-up of Iraq's massive oil reserves, the UK
Observer reported Nov. 3. Disclosure of the meetings comes just as Lord
Browne, the head of the UK petrol giant BP, warned that British oil
companies have been squeezed out of post-war Iraq even before the first
shot has been fired in any US-led land invasion. Confirming that the
meetings took place, INC spokesman Zaab Sethna said: "The oil people are
naturally nervous. We've had discussions with them, but they're not in the
habit of going around talking about them."
Next month oil executives will gather at a retreat near Sandringham in the
English countryside to discuss Iraq and the future of the oil market. The
conference, hosted by former Saudi oil minister Sheikh Yamani, will feature
a former Iraqi head of military intelligence and top British officials and
financiers. The Observer writes: "Topics for discussion include the
country's oil potential, whether it can become as big a supplier as Saudi
Arabia, and whether a post-Saddam Iraq might destroy the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries."
Disclosure of talks between the oil executives and the CIA-supported INC
will likely exacerbate friction on the UN Security Council between the US
and veto-holders Russia, France and China, who fear they will be squeezed
out of a post-Saddam oil industry in Iraq. Although Russia, France and
China have existing deals with Iraq, Chalabi has made clear that if his
faction is installed in power he will reward the US for removing Saddam
with lucrative oil contracts, telling the Washington Post recently:
"American companies will have a big shot at Iraqi oil."
Russia, which is owed billions of dollars by Iraq for past loans and arms
deals, has the biggest interest in Iraq's oil industry, including a $3.5
billion, 23-year deal to rehabilitate oilfields--particularly the 11-15
billion-barrel West Qurna field, located west of Basra near the Rumaila
field. Since the agreement was signed in March 1997, Russia's Lukoil has
developed plans to install equipment to produce 100,000 barrels per day
from West Qurna's Mishrif formation. The French giant TotalFinaElf has been
in negotiations with Iraq on development of the Nahr Umar field.
In September, Larry Lindsey, President Bush's economic adviser, said: "When
there is a regime change in Iraq, you could add three to five million
barrels [per day] of production to world supply. The successful prosecution
of the war would be good for the economy." That same month, a model for the
carve-up of Iraq's oil was presented by Ariel Cohen of the right-wing
Heritage Foundation. In "The Future of a Post-Saddam Iraq: A Blueprint for
American Involvement," Cohen called for privatization of Iraq's
nationalized oil industry, and warned that France, Russia and China were
likely to find that a new INC-led government would not honor their
contracts.
Cohen's proposal would have Iraq's oil industry split up into three large
private companies, with the areas of control following Iraq's ethnic
divisions: one company for the largely Shia south, another for the Sunni
region around Baghdad, and a third for the Kurdish north.
[top]
4. JEREMY RIFKIN: IT'S THE OIL, STUPID!
"Does the Bush administration have a hidden agenda?" asks commentator
Jeremy Rifkin in the LA Times Oct. 25. "If you want to know how utterly
estranged Europe and the United States have become, listen to the talk in
the streets over the possible US invasion of Iraq. In the US, most
Americans believe President Bush when he says we have a moral obligation to
protect the world from Saddam Hussein's pathological desire to build and
employ weapons of mass destruction. In Europe, by contrast, most people
believe that the US is planning to invade Iraq to secure its oil fields.
So, while most Americans think that we are planning an attack on Iraq to
save the world from a madman, most Europeans think that Bush is the madman,
with the evil intention of grabbing a foothold in the oil-rich Middle East
to extend the 'American empire.'"
While Rifkin says "the media on both sides of the pond are pandering to the
political sensibilities of their respective regions," he takes the US press
to task for its silence on oil as a factor in the war drive. "Do they
really believe that oil plays no role in the strategic thinking of the
inner circles at the White House? This national silence is even more
deafening when we look at the key players in this unfolding drama. Both
Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney come out of the oil industry. Their
careers have been shaped by oil interests. Their political fortunes have
been boosted by the oil lobby. Bush was the No. 1 recipient of energy
industry money, collecting more than $1.8 million in contributions, more
than any other candidate for federal office received over the last decade.
If there was any reason to be suspicious of the White House's intentions in
regard to Iraq, certainly the fact that Cheney held closed-door meetings
with the leaders of the energy industry immediately upon taking office--and
then refused to release the record of those discussions or the names and
corporate affiliations of the participants--should at least raise a few
eyebrows in the media. That's not to suggest that these private discussions
related to American security interests in Iraq and the Middle East. Rather,
what it says is that the interests of the oil companies are never far from
the thoughts of Bush and Cheney. Thus it is incredible that no one in
Congress or the media has bothered to ask: Does the desire to secure the
second-largest oil fields in the world play any strategic role in White
House thinking?"
[top]
5. FELIX ROHATYN: IT'S THE OIL, STUPID!
In the Nov. 21 New York Review of Books, financial power broker Felix
Rohatyn--former ambassador to France and chair of NYC's Municipal
Assistance Corporation--writes: "It is clear today that uncertainty over
Iraq has become an important factor in weakening an already weak economy.
This is caused by uncertainty about the war, its cost, and, more important,
the cost of its aftermath. We are uncertain about the future supply of oil
as well as future oil prices... How we deal with Iraq will have a dramatic
impact on our domestic situation. The two issues must be linked." Rohatyn
argues against "going it alone" on Iraq in favor of multilateralism. He
also calls for domestic belt-tightening (a favorite theme of his when he
was New York City's de facto Austerity Czar at the MAC after the '70s
fiscal crisis), endorsing conservation measures such as stringent SUV
mileage standards as "necessary for national security." But he makes clear
that the slumping economy reflects jitters over access to Middle East oil.
"Credit comes from the Latin credere, 'to believe.' The system is in
jeopardy when the public no longer has confidence in major corporations and
institutions. That is the case today... America's dependence on foreign
oil, and the fact that its sources are not reliable, worsens our foreign
trade deficit."
[top]
6. JOINT U.S.-ISRAELI MISSION TO NEUTRALIZE IRAQ'S MISSILES?
The Bush administration is considering an Israeli proposal to send US
special forces into Iraq's western desert to knock out missile sites in the
event of war, a US official said, speaking to the AP on condition on
anonymity Oct. 19. In a joint operation, Israel would furnish the US with
intelligence about the sites and how to disarm them early in the conflict.
Israel is said to have presented the proposal during Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon's October talks in Washington with President Bush and senior White
House, Pentagon and State Department officials. He was reportedly given
assurances the administration would make a maximum effort to neutralize any
Iraqi missile threat. Sharon vowed before his trip to Washington that
Israel "will take the proper steps to defend its citizens" if Iraq should
attack Israeli civilians. In 1991's Operation Desert Storm, Iraq hit Israel
with 39 Scud missiles, but at the behest of the US Israel did not
retaliate. Sharon did not get a response to the special forces proposal
during his three-day visit, and it is still under consideration, the
official said.
See also WW3 REPORT #56
[top]
7. ISRAEL DEPLOYS ANTI-MISSILE BATTERIES AT NUKE PLANT
Concerns about Iraqi ballistic missile attacks in the event of a US-led
invasion of Iraq have led Israeli to deploy Patriot anti-missile missile
batteries around the nuclear facilities at Dimona, in the Negev desert. In
addition to concerns about Iraqi missiles, there is concern Hezbollah could
launch attacks against the Israeli north, in order to draw Syria into the
conflict, says Jane's Missiles & Rockets. Israeli press reports put
Hezbollah's estimated rocket inventory at 8-10,000, mainly 107mm and 122mm
rockets, but also some longer-ranged 240mm rockets. (JMR, Oct. 1) (David
Bloom)
[top]
8. SPANISH DIPLOMAT QUITS IN PROTEST OF WAR DRIVE
Spain's top diplomat in Baghdad has resigned, complaining that he felt
under increasing pressure to toe a pro-Washington line. "The official
position is so markedly pro-US that, if you don't support Washington's
policy, it is as if you are working against your own government," Fernando
Valderrama, Spanish charge d'affaires, told El Pais newspaper. "The way the
situation is presented, you are asked to choose between Bush and Saddam,
and I don't side with either." The Spanish government of President Jose
Maria Aznar is one of the few on the European continent to support Bush's
war drive. (UK Observer, Oct. 20)
[top]
9. STEVIE WONDER SPEAKS OUT AGAINST WAR
Stevie Wonder is apparently unmoved by the devotion of President Bush, New
York's Daily News reported Nov. 3. Back in March, when the soul legend
played at Ford's Theater in DC, the First Fan was spotted excitedly waving
to him--until Bush apparently remembered that Stevie couldn't see him and
sheepishly lowered his hand. In spite of that adulation, Wonder has now
declared himself firmly opposed to Bush's war drive against Iraq. "I can't
believe how we can be a part of this war and destruction," he said Oct. 28
at a Beacon Theater benefit for the Artist Empowerment Coalition.
[top]
10. "ECONOMIC SANCTIONS AS A WEAPON OF MASS DESTRUCTION"?
In the November Harper's Magazine, Joy Gordon likens the sanctions against
Iraq to weapons of mass destruction. Gordon charges that through Washington
"fiat" in the UN Security Council, "the United States has consistently
thwarted Iraq from satisfying its most basic humanitarian needs, using
sanctions as nothing less than a deadly weapon... US policymakers have
effectively turned a program of international governance into a legitimized
act of mass slaughter... Since the program began, an estimated 500,000
Iraqi children under the age of five have died as a result of the
sanctions--almost three times as many as the number of Japanese killed in
the US atomic bomb attacks."
Gordon shows how Defense Department documents predicted the toll the
sanctions would have on Iraq's public health and sanitation, and she cites
an anonymous Pentagon official quoted in the June 23, 1991 Washington Post
saying: "People say, 'You didn't recognize that it was going to have an
effect on water and sewage.' Well, what were we trying to do with
sanctions--help the Iraqi people? No. What we were doing with the attacks
on the infrastructure was to accelerate the effect of the sanctions."
Gordon also shows how the Oil-for-Food program, first rejected by Iraq in
1991 and finally put in place in 1996, has been systematically undermined
by US veto power over the Security Concil's 661 Committee, charged with
evaluating Iraq's "humanitarian" imports assure that they do not have a
"dual use" that could be applied to military purposes. Up to a third of
water and sanitation-related contracts have been placed on hold in 2001,
and a quarter of electricity and educational-supply contracts. Even the
arms experts at the UN Monitoring, Verification ande Inspection Commission
(UNMOVIC) objected when the US blocked contracts for water tankers,
claiming they could be used to haul chemicals. Meanwhile, child mortality
rates in Iraq have more than doubled since the sanctions were imposed, with
chronic child malnutrition up to 25% in the south and central zones of the
country.
Gordon unfortunately falls into the same trap as most of the anti-sanctions
movement--completely exculpating Saddam Hussein of any responsibility for
the situation. While conceding that the dictator has a problem with what she
somewhat euphemistically calls "human-rights violations" against the Kurds
and Shiites (wholesale ethnic cleansing is more like it), she praises him
for running a welfare state which "invested heavily in health, education,
and social programs for two decades prior to the Persian Gulf War... The
social programs and economic development continued, and expanded, even
during Iraq's grueling and costly war with Iran from 1980 to 1988..."
First of all, it is hard to believe that "Saddam Hussein's government" did
anything "for two decades prior" to the 1991 Gulf War given that he only
came to power in 1979. But more to the point, does Gordon assume that
Saddam's supposed socialist ideals are intact--or that they were ever more
than a tactical consideration in building a power base? It doesn't seem to
occur to her that now that sanctions have made Iraq's economic pie much
smaller Saddam has decided to sacrifice the butter for guns--and is
directing scarce resources into arms, palaces and cronyism rather than
human needs.
Gordon fails to report that multi-national corporations like Halliburton
are also eating into the Oil-for-Food funds through compensation claims for
their investments damaged in Desert Storm (see WW3 REPORT
#32). Less surprisingly, she also fails
to consider the probability that Saddam's own kleptocratic regime is
skimming from the Oil-for-Food funds to line the pockets of the dictator
and his cronies.
[top]
11. NEWSWEEK: SADDAM SKIMMING FROM OIL-FOR-FOOD PROGRAM
The Nov. 11 issue of Newsweek reports on the story of Russian businessman
Gazi Luguev, who met Uday Hussein, Saddam's elder son, in Baghdad early
last year to discuss what was presented as a lucrative business
opportunity. After greeting Luguev warmly at his Baghdad palace, showing
off his collection of expensive cars, rare cognac and Cuban cigars--and
going on about his insatiable craving for Kit Kat candy bars--Uday cut to
the chase. The Iraqi regime would set up Luguev with contracts to buy
tanker-loads of oil at below-market prices. Luguev could then re-sell to
major oil companies at a higher price, and pocket the profit. Best of all,
the deals were entirely legal under the Oil-for-Food program. The money
Luguev paid to Iraq for the oil would be deposited in a UN-controlled bank
account, and used to feed starving Iraqi kids. "We need to help the
children," Luguev recalls Uday's saying with a smirk. There was just one
catch. Uday and his dictator dad wanted a cut. In exchange for arranging
the oil shipments, Iraqi officials later told him, Luguev would have to
secretly wire $60,000 to a secret account in Jordan. Luguev was informed
that everyone who bought oil from Iraq paid a similar "deposit" for each
contract. "It is our rule," he says an Iraqi official told him. Luguev
claims he wired the money and waited to hear back. But the call never came.
At first, Luguev said, Iraqi officials told him that the shipment was
delayed. When he complained, they canceled the contract entirely--but kept
his $60,000. "They think they are like God," he said a furious Luguev.
"They can do what they like." In retaliation, Luguev squealed on Iraq,
filing a formal complaint to the UN--wihch was obtained by Newsweek. (In
response, Iraq has said Luguev is "incorrect"--but offered to return his
money.)
UN officials are now investigating the charges, but Newsweek reports they
were not shocked by Luguev's charges: "For years it had been an open secret
that Saddam was plundering the Oil for Food program-netting a huge cash
windfall that the CIA believes the Iraqi dictator has used to finance his
weapons programs. US government figures estimate that Iraq has received at
least $2.3 billion in oil-contract kickbacks since 1997."
[top]
12. IRAN: SADDAM BURNS SOUTHERN MARSHLANDS
Iran has complained to Iraq about huge fires reportedly burning large areas
of marshland on the border between the two countries. A statement by the
Iranian environmental protection agency said the fires, which began over
two months ago, are were still burning now, with thick clouds of smoke
pushed across the border by a south westerly wind, and the resulting
pollution affecting people in towns and villages on the Iranian side.
Officials in southwest Iran blame the Iraqi military for starting the
fires, speculating that it may have been a pre-emptive move aimed at
driving out rebel Shiite fighters in advance of a possible US invasion. The
main Iraqi Shiite opposition group, which is based in Iran, did not endorse
this theory, but pointed out that the fires would not have been possible
had the Baghdad government not dried out much of the marshes of southeast
Iraq by huge drainage schemes in recent years. The marshes were a globally
important wetland, sustaining a huge volume of wildlife, especially birds,
as well as a unique way of life for the marsh-dwelling Shiite Arabs of the
region. The United Nations Environment Program estimates that some 90% of
the
marshes have been destroyed, calling Saddam's policy an environmental
catastrophe and a major loss to all humanity. (BBC, Oct. 30)
See also WW3 REPORT #39
[top]
ELSEWHERE IN THE MIDDLE EAST
1. SYRIAN KURDS DEMAND RIGHTS
Most of Syria's Kurdish minority live along the border with Iraq and have
watched enviously as Iraq's Kurds have established a self-governing zone
under the protection of US and British warplanes. Now that Iraq's Kurds are
gaining even more stature as potential allies in the war drive against
Saddam, the Syria's Kurds are starting to raise their own demands for
equality and language and cultural rights. Use of Kurdish in schools and
publications remains illegal in Syria, where authorities traditionally view
the 8% Kurdish minority with suspicion. "Kurds are an integral part of
Syrian society and should have the same rights as Syrian citizens," said
Marwan Zirki, head of the Syrian Kurdish Democratic Gathering, one of 14
Kurdish groups in Syria--none of which are recognized by the government.
In the last decade, thousands of Kurds have been killed as Turkey and Iraq
put down Kurdish revolts. Syrian Kurds have been spared such brutality, but
they increasingly complain of a lack of basic rights, and of official
neglect in their impoverished provinces of Hasakeh and Qamishli. The Syrian
Constitution makes no mention the country's 1.5 million Kurds. About
160,000 Kurds have been denied Syrian nationality, meaning they cannot
vote, own property, go to state schools or get government jobs. They carry
special red identity cards that identify them as "foreigners." Some 75,000
Kurds are not recognized at all and have no identity cards--which means
they cannot even be treated in state hospitals or get marriage
certificates. They are called "maktoumeen," or unregistered. The government
maintains that Kurds who fled from Turkey or Iraq are not Syrians, but that
Kurds who are citizens enjoy the same rights as other Syrians. Those who
could not prove they had lived in Syria since 1945 lost their citizenship.
Syria, Turkey and Iran all fear a war on Iraq could split the country,
leading to an independent Kurdish state in northern Iraq and new demands
for independence by Kurds throughout the region. In an unusual move, Syrian
Vice President Abdul-Halim Khaddam met with an Iraqi Kurdish delegation
recently. And when Syria's Kurdish groups recently held an unprecedented
round-table discussion of their political status, many Syrian intellectuals
participated, and authorities did not interfere. In August, President
Bashir Assad made what is believed to be the first visit to Kurdish areas
by a Syrian leader since the country's independence in 1946. Assad did not
mention the Kurds in his speech there, but spoke of "national unity" and
the "need to abide by law and order."
Abdul-Hamid Darwish, head of the Kurdish Progressive and Democratic Party in
Syria, told AP the Syrian Kurds do not seek separation from Syria. "We do
not seek the establishment of a Kurdish area," he said. "We just want to
administrate our area and to freely practice our cultural, social and
political
rights." (AP, Nov. 1)
[top]
2. KING FAHD: PRAY FOR RAIN
King Pleads for Rain Prayers in S. Arabia
Saudi Arabia's King Fahd urged the citizens of his desert kingdom to pray
for rain, his court said in a statement. "As both man and land need
rain...the king has urged everybody to perform rain prayers on Monday,"
said the statement, carried by the official Saudi Press Agency Nov. 2 The
kingdom has an annual rainfall of only 6 inches. (An-Nahar, Lebanon, Nov. 3)
[top]
3. HOOKAH CRACKDOWN IN EGYPT
An Egyptian governor banned shisha waterpipe smoking in coffee shops to
stop local employees from skipping work, Egypt's al-Wafd newspaper
reported. Gov. Adel Labib of Qena province said he had noticed people who
should have been at work were instead sitting in cafes and smoking the
popular "hubbly-bubbly" pipes. Shisha smoking is widely popular in Egypt,
with coffee shops serving a wide variety of flavored tobacco such as apple,
strawberry and rose. Cafes which violated the ban would be closed and face
a fine of $108, the paper said. Smokers would also be fined. (Reuters, Nov.
1)
[top]
4. ARCHEOLOGISTS TRACK ANCIENT DOPE TRADE
Recent news on the archeological front vividly illustrates the idiotic
futility of attempting to suppress the trade in hashish, cannabis and opium
which has persisted in the Middle East since the dawn of history.
Archeologists have determined that a thriving Bronze Age drug trade
supplied dope to ancient cultures throughout the eastern Mediterranean as
balm for the pain of childbirth and disease, proving a sophisticated
knowledge of medicines dating back thousands of years. Traces of opium have been found on ancient Mycenaean-era ceramic pots in tombs
and settlements throughout the Middle East, dating as far back as 1,400 BC,
said Joe Zias, an anthropologist at Jerusalem's Hebrew University. "We know
for sure these things were used for medical purposes," Zias said. "The
question is whether they were used for recreational purposes."
Mark Spigelman, a Zias colleague at Hebrew University, found one Bronze-Age
pot in the shape of an opium poppy in Siqqura, a Giza cemetery near the
pyramids outside Cairo, during a dig four years ago. The pot, found in an
18th-dynasty grave, was identical to other pots found in Israel and
elsewhere. "These guys were selling opium all over the Middle East,"
Spigelman said.
Based on ancient Egyptian medical writings from the third millennium BC,
researchers believe opium and hashish were used during surgery and to treat
pain. Archaeologists think the opium was eaten rather than smoked. They
also say ancient trade likely was run by respected healers rather than
violent drug lords.
At a Roman-era dig at Beit Shemesh in central Israel, Zias found another
clue--the skeleton of a 14-year-old girl who died in childbirth about 390
CE. On her stomach was a fleck of a burnt black substance. "I thought it
was incense," Zias said. But when he had it analyzed by police and chemists
at Hebrew University, it turned out to be a mixture of "hashish, dried
seeds, fruit and common reeds." (AP, Aug. 8)
Do you think the fact that the dope trade is today controlled by violent
mafias instead of peaceful healers might have a little something to do with
the fact that the stuff is illegal? Nah...
[top]
THE HORN OF AFRICA
1. PENTAGON PLANS MILITARY HQ ON THE HORN
US officials say the Pentagon plans to establish a military headquarters in
the Horn of Africa to direct US operations against al-Qaeda in the region,
ABC News reported Nov. 3. Officials say the Second Marine Division based in
Camp Lejeune, NC, has received orders to deploy several hundred
headquarters staff for a joint task force for the Horn of Africa. A strike
force of some 800 US special operations forces and Marines is already on
station in the former French colony of Djibouti for possible deployment
against al Qaeda in the region. They say no operations have been launched
so far, and the forces stationed in Djibouti are engaged mainly in training
and expanding contact with government forces in Somalia, Ethiopia, Eritrea,
Kenya and Yemen. But intelligence-gathering activities in the region could
lead to military action. "If something breaks, and you find something and
go after it, you have to have someone focused on it," a defense official
said. An amphibious assault group led by the helicopter carrier USS Nassau
is currently in the Red Sea with a contingent of some 2,200 Marines, and an
amphibious group led by the USS Belleau Wood is said to be on the way to
the region.
[top]
THE AFGHANISTAN FRONT
1. TALIBAN PLAN BIG COMEBACK
Senior Afghan officials have warned the US that Taliban forces are
regrouping just across the border in Pakistan in preparation for a new wave
of terrorist attacks aimed at destabilizing the US-installed regime of
Hamid Karzai. Pentagon and State Department officials say Afghanistan's
Kunar province, which borders Pakistan's lawless North-West Frontier
Province, has become a gateway for Taliban fighters infiltrating back into
the country. It is also said to be a base for fighters loyal to Gulbuddin
Hekmatyar, a fundamentalist warlord who has pledged to overthrow Karzai.
Pentagon officials say Hekmatyar has forged an alliance with
Taliban/al-Qaeda commanders and is providing leadership for their regrouped
forces. (NYT, Nov. 3)
[top]
2. AFGHAN WOMEN UNDER ATTACK--AGAIN
In coordinated actions Oct. 25, girls' schools in four separate villages
outside Kabul were attacked--two hit by rockets that left gaping holes in
the walls, the other two damaged by arson. At each location, a letter was
found signed by "the hero Mujahedeen of Afghanistan," urging Afghans to
rise up against US forces who have "occupied" the country and "made our
Afghan sisters their servants and slaves." The note also warned: "Stop
carrying out the plans of the Americans, or you will face further deadly
attacks." Additionally, on Sept. 25 vandals set fire to a group of tents
being used as a girls' school at Sar-i-Pul. Earlier that month, a small
bomb exploded in the changing room of a co-educational primary school in
Kandahar, injuring a teacher. (NYT, Oct. 30)
Meanwhile, the Afghan Supreme Court dismissed a female judge for not
wearing an Islamic headscarf during a meeting with President Bush and his
wife in October, Reuters reports. Marzeya Basil was among a group of 14
female government officials who attended computer and management courses in
Washington at the invitation of the US government. Pictures of Basil and
several other participants standing with Bush without headscarves were
carried by world media. The 44-year-old Basil was fired days after her
return to Kabul for not wearing her scarf during the meeting. The decision
for her removal was made by "top authorities of the Supreme Court," one
source said. Basil herself could not be reached for comment. (Reuters, Nov.
2)
[top]
3. AFGHANISTAN AGAIN LEADS WORLD IN OPIUM PRODUCTION
Opium production in Afghanistan soared to near-record levels in 2002,
placing the country back in the number-one slot for global output,
according to the latest UN study. UN officials blamed "the total collapse
of law and order" in Afghanistan during the US-led drive to oust the
Taliban regime one year ago for the resurgence in poppy production. Antonio
Maria Costa, executive director of the UN Office on Drugs & Crime, said in
Rome that Afghanistan's new leader Hamid Karzai had tried to halt opium
production, but needed more aid from the international community. "These
figures are not the manifestation of a failure of Afghan authorities," he
said. "They can only be interpreted in the context of that country's
realities of the past year." The annual survey puts Afghanistan's 2002
opium production at 3,700 tons, with an estimated value of $1.2 billion--a
huge increase over the 185 tons produced in 2000, when the Taliban regime
issued an edict banning opium cultivation. The report notes that Karzai's
program to compensate farmers for the voluntary eradication of their opium
crops was thwarted by inadequate funds, violent resistance by poppy farmers
and the refusal of many local officials to destroy the crops. The report
identifies 90% of Afghanistan's opium as originating in just five of its 32
provinces: Helmand in the south, Nangarhar in the east, Badakhshan in the
north, and Oruzgan and Kandahar in the south (in order of production).
These are all areas where Karzai's weak central government is struggling to
assert its authority. (NYT, Oct. 28)
British troops burned many opium fields in Afghanistan this year, but met
with fierce resistance from local farmers. (See WW3 REPORT #37)
Warlords resisting Karzai's central authority are believed to have turned
to the heroin trade to fund their private armies. (See WW3 REPORT #47)
[top]
4. BUMPER CANNABIS CROP IN MAZAR-I-SHARIF
Many marijuana growers who were forced out of business by a draconian
anti-cannabis edict under Afghanistan's ultra-fundamentalist Taliban regime
were able to plant again this spring--and are now reaping a bumper crop.
Fields of sturdy marijuana plants, some nearly seven feet tall, line the
main road leading west from the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif. But the
new freedom to grow may have more to do with lawlessness than a more
enlightened policy. The new regime has again ordered farmers to tear up
their cannabis crops, but growers in the village of Khana Abad, 20 miles
from Mazar, say they'll ignore the new edict. "We have to do it because of
our economic problems," said Rouzudin, a farmer who said he heard the
warnings broadcast on the radio only after investing a large sum in his
plot. Rouzudin and his fellow farmers made no effort to hide their plants,
which loom over nearby cotton bushes. The two crops are interspersed along
the road leading to Shibergan, headquarters of Gen. Abdul Rashid Dostum,
the warlord who rules the north. Farmer Majid Gul said he can get 5 million
Afghanis, or about $100, for 2.2 pounds of hashish--200 times more than he
could earn for the same amount of cotton. "When we're ready to sell, people
in big cars will come from the bazaar in town," he said. "We don't know who
they are, we just want the money." (AP, Sept. 14)
[top]
5. KANDAHAR DRUG CZAR PLEDGES ZERO TOLERANCE
Afghanistan's weak legal system means that struggling farmers--not wealthy
and well-connected traffickers--will be the main target in the country's
opium crackdown, said authorities in a major poppy-growing region. "Down
the road, the central government will prepare laws," said Khalid Pashtoon,
government spokesman for the southern province of Kandahar. "Right now, we
have to be a little cautious. We don't want to cause any trouble."
Afghanistan was long a top global opium producer. But in 2001, the Taliban
regime banned cultivation of poppies, and production fell dramatically.
Last year, however, growers around the country took advantage of the power
vacuum during the US-led war on the Taliban, and production soared. A new
UN report says the country has now regained its status as the world's top
opium producing nation.
Pashtoon said this year no compensation would be paid to farmers, but
plantations will be summarily destroyed by a newly-created anti-drug squad.
"Once the crops are visible, we will eradicate them." Kandahar agriculture
minister Said Wajdun said his under-funded department was trying to disrupt
this year's planting--but to little effect. "We placed announcements in the
paper and over the radio telling them we would destroy their crops with a
helicopter, but they don't care," Wajdun said. (AP, Oct. 30)
[top]
6. 30 NATIONS PLEDGE CRACKDOWN ON AFGHAN DRUG ROUTES
An international conference on fighting narco-trafficking in the countries
of the Great Silk Road was held n Tashkent, the capital of Uzbekistan,
organized under the auspices of the World Customs Organization (WCO).
Representatives from 30 countries attended, marking the first time that
delegates from China to Europe worked jointly and signed multilateral
documents on the issue. Officials said Afghan heroin, marijuana and opium
are being smuggled through Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, including
the Osh Knot zone, a UN project aimed at preventing drug smuggling in the
Fergana Valley, a strategic area shared by the three countries. Experts
said new routes are opening through Central Asia due to the sharp increase
in opium output in Afghanistan this year. Conference participants pledged
international coordination to break the smuggling routes. (Kyrgyz AKIpress
news agency, Oct. 31, via BBC Monitoring)
[top]
7. LEGALIZATION FOR KAZAKHSTAN?
President Nursultan Nazarbayev of Kazakhstan has instructed his Security
Council to examine the experience of countries such as The Netherlands that
have decriminalized marijuana and other drugs, as well as the prohibition
model in place in the US. Justice Minister Georgiy Kim told a news
conference after the Security Council meeting that Nazarbayev directed the
council "to study both methods in a balanced way in the light of the drug
market situation so as to see to what extent legalization of certain kinds
of drugs will be useful." (BBC, Sept. 24)
[top]
THE NEW GREAT GAME
1. CENTRAL ASIA TO REVIVE SOVIET WATER DIVERSION SCHEME
The presidents of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and
Uzbekistan have jointly pledged to revive one of the gigantic-scaled
engineering projects of the Soviet era--the diversion of the Siberian
rivers southwards to stop the drying up of the Aral Sea. The sea--actually
a closed salt lake, which straddles the frontier of Kazakhstan and
Uzbekistan--has over the past generation largely dried up, so that it is
now split completely into two. Regional leaders call it a major ecological
threat not only to Central Asia but the entire planet. "The annual take-up
into the atmosphere of
1 million tons of salt blown from the dry sea-bed could cause a disaster of
global proportions," claims Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev.
Scientists have also warned that deadly pathogens isolated on the Aral
Sea's Vozrozhdeniye Island, where the Soviets maintained their top
biological warfare lab, are in danger of spreading to the mainland as the
water around the island disappears.
Soviet agricultural planning caused the drying out of the Aral, with the
sea's feeder rivers almost entirely diverted to irrigate vast cotton
fields. The Soviet solution was to divert the north-flowing Siberian rivers
southwards--a grandiose and unprecedented engineering scheme. Soviet
generals even wanted to use nuclear weapons to do the digging. The plans
were finally shelved in 1987 under pressure from the new environmental and
"heritage" groups which emerged under the "glasnost" policy of Mikhail
Gorbachev.
When the Soviet Union collapsed, the leaders of the newly independent
Central Asian
states spoke of ending the cotton monoculture in favor of a more diverse,
self-sufficient and ecologically sound economy. But little was done, and
cotton remains the region's major cash-crop. Additionally, lack of money to
repair dams and pipes--as well as squabbles between the states about the
sharing of water resources--has meant upstream floods, wastage, and even
less water reaching the Aral.
Now the leaders plan to convene an international forum on water management
next year, and revive the Soviet river diversion scheme. But this would
require huge engineering operations on Russian territory, with financing
uncertain at best. [More significantly, Moscow may be unwilling to divert
water from Russian rivers to an Aral Sea no longer under Kremlin
control.--BW] (Jane`s Defense & Aerospace, Oct. 17)
See also:
WW3 REPORT #27
WW3 REPORT #5
[top]
THE WAR AT HOME
1. PASSAIC JAIL DETAINEES PROTEST HARSH CONDITIONS
At a noon press conference outside New York City's federal building, a
coalition of 30 immigrants' rights groups released a statement by 81 INS
detainees protesting overcrowding and harsh conditions at New Jersey's
Passaic County Jail, which holds many arrested in the post-9-11 sweeps. The
statement complains of an "infestation of roaches, lack of personal space,
poor health care" and meals that "do not meet nutritional standards." The
handwritten letter, by detainees from 42 countries, was received by the
Committee for the Release of Farouk Abdel-Muhti in September, said the
group's coordinator, David Wilson. The letter detailed unsanitary
conditions, inadequate access to water and severe overcrowding. Passaic
County Sheriff Jerry Speziale rejected the charges, telling New Jersey's
Herald News, "One can literally eat off the floor of the facility."
Mac Scott, lawyer for Farouk Abdel-Muhti, said a new effort to free the
detained Palestinian activist would be launched within a week. Abdel-Muhti
has been behind bars for more than six months for an outstanding 1995
deportation order--despite the fact that he is stateless and therefore not
deportable. No criminal charges have been filed against him. Scott said
Abdel-Muhti would be out of detention within two months after he files a
writ of habeas corpus on his behalf in federal court.
Other letters from detainees detailing problems at the jail were also
presented at the press conference. Tino Mucic, a Croatian film student at
Hunter College detained after being arrested for trespassing on a Brooklyn
property, wrote that the jail's guards "are trained to work with criminals,
not civil detainees." (NJ Herald News, Oct. 30)
As of Oct. 29, 2002, Farouk Abdel-Muhti and other INS detainees at Passaic
County Jail report that the facility has had no heat or hot water for the
past five days, and they have only thin sheets and no blankets to protect
them from the cold. The detainees are having serious health problems from
the constant low temperature in the building. The Coalition for the Human
Rights of Immigrants asks supporters to call or fax INS NJ District
Director Andrea Quarantillo (tel 973-645-4421; fax 973-297-4848) and
Passaic Warden Charles Meyers (tel 973-881-4620; fax 973-881-2485). Tell
them the jail must provide heat, hot water, adequate blankets and warm
clothing to detainees. Send copies of any letters to Coalition for the
Human Rights of Immigrants (CHRI) at fax 212-674-9139 or email
chri@itapnet.org.
[top]
2. NYC NETWORK TV CENSORS ACLU
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has created its first paid TV ad,
protesting civil rights violations since 9-11--but the spot won't be airing
on New York City network television. Created by Zimmerman & Markman of
Santa Monica, CA, the ad features a copy of the Constitution being written
over and cut up. "Look what John Ashcroft is doing to our constitution," a
voiceover states. "He's seized powers for the Bush administration no
president should ever have." While ABC, CBS and NBC affiliates in Los
Angeles, Chicago, Washington DC, San Francisco and Seattle agreed to air
the spot, those in New York refused. "We did turn down the ad, based on
station policy on issue advertising," said a representative for WNBC in New
York. "We prefer to handle certain issues in our news and public-affairs
programming." (Adweek.com, Oct. 16)
[top]
WATCHING THE SHADOWS
1. WHALES SCORE ROUND IN FEDERAL COURT
A federal judge in San Francisco issued a preliminary injunction stopping
the US Navy from deploying a new high-intensity sonar system that could
hurt or kill whales, dolphins, seals and sea turtles. Granting a request by
five environmental groups, US Judge Elizabeth LaPorte ruled that the
National Marine Fisheries Service had likely issued the Navy a permit in
violation of federal law. On July 15, the Navy received its permit to
"harass marine mammals" in tests of the low-frequency sonar designed to
detect submarines while remaining outside the range of their weapons. The
Navy was approved to deploy two ships that use the new sonar system. Judge
LaPorte found that the plaintiffs "have shown that they are likely to
prevail on establishing violations" of the Marine Mammal Protection Act
(MMPA), the Endangered Species Act (ESA), the National Environmental Policy
Act (NEPA) and the Administrative Procedure Act (APA).
The sonar system, known as Surveillance Towed Array Sensor System Low
Frequency Active (SURTASS-LFA), relies on very loud sound to detect
submarines at great distances. The environmental groups argued that the
survival of entire populations of whales and other marine mammals are
jeopardized by deployment of the sonar, which has been measured at 140
decibels 300 miles away from the sound's source. Scientists claim that
during tests off the California coast noise from a single LFA system was
detected across the breadth of the North Pacific Ocean. Joel Reynolds,
attorney for the Marine Mammals Protection Project at the Natural Resources
Defense Council (NRDC), lead plaintiff in the case, said, "Today's decision
is a crucial step to protect our oceans and, in particular, whales and
other marine mammals that depend on hearing for their very survival."
(Environment News Service, Oct. 31)
The US Navy's SURTASS-LFA website is online
See also WW3 REPORT #56
[top]
2. PENTAGON DEVELOPS BEAM WEAPONS, "KNOCK-OUT" GAS
Britain is in secret talks with the US over the development of so-called
non-lethal weapons, including lasers that blind the enemy and microwave
systems that cook the skin of human targets. The UK Observer reported Nov.
3 that US and British military leaders met at the Ministry of Defence HQ in
London to discuss the benefits of such technology as a "persuasive tool."
Documents obtained under the US Freedom of Information Act detail
discussions of potential battlefield uses of the weapons, and whether they
could be used to back up economic sanctions against target countries. The
weapons include lasers that can stun an enemy and cut through metal to
disable vehicles. Another weapon discussed uses microwave beams to heat the
water in human skin. A third category uses gases similar to those deployed
to end the terrorist siege in a Moscow theatre, which killed more than 100
hostages. (See WW3 REPORT #57)
[top]
3. PENTAGON TESTED SARIN GAS IN HAWAII
The US military secretly tested sarin nerve agent in a Hawaii forest
preserve in 1967, the Pentagon has acknowledged in the latest disclosures
about Cold War-era testing of chemical and biological weapons. In other
secret tests in Hawaii in 1966 and the Panama Canal Zone in 1963, the
Pentagon released a germ meant as a harmless stand-in for the anthrax
bacteria, the Defense Department said. A 1966 experiment in an undisclosed
"tropical jungle type environment" involved spraying tear gas on
unprotected US military volunteers. The Defense Department released
summaries of five chemical and biological weapons tests Oct. 31 as part of
an effort to make public such Cold War programs and alert veterans who may
have been exposed. The tests were part of Project 112, a military program
to test chemical and biological weapons and counter-measures against them.
A related Navy program was called Project SHAD, for Shipboard Hazard and
Defense. Some of those exposed in the tests say they now suffer health
problems, and are pressing the Veterans Affairs Department for
compensation. The Pentagon this year acknowledged for the first time that
some of the tests used real chemical and biological weapons, not just
benign stand-ins. The Defense Department has identified some 7,000 service
members involved in the tests, said Dr. Jonathan Perlin of the Veterans
Affairs Department. He said 53 veterans had filed health claims for their
exposure.
The sarin testi was code-named "Red Oak" and conducted in the Upper Waiakea
Forest Reserve on the island of Hawaii in April and May 1967. The testers
detonated sarin-filled 155 mm artillery shells to study how the nerve agent
dispersed in a tropical jungle. Other tests made public involved Bacillus
globigii bacteria, related to the Bacillus anthracis germ that causes
anthrax. In a test called "Yellow Leaf," officials detonated 20 "bomblets"
filled with BG in the Olaa Forest, also on the island of Hawaii, in April
and May of 1966. In a test called "Big Jack," US planes sprayed BG on an
area near the Fort Sherman Military Reservation in the Panama Canal Zone in
February and March 1963. (AP, Oct. 31)
[top]
4. PENTAGON PLANS "SECRET WAR"
In what may be the largest expansion of covert action by the armed forces
since the Vietnam era, the Bush administration has turned to what the
Pentagon calls the "black world" to pursue the War on Terrorism, defense
analyst William M. Arkin wrote in the LA Times Oct. 27. Arkin states that
the Pentagon is building up an "elite secret army with resources stretching
across the full spectrum of covert capabilities." Officials say the
increasingly dominant role of the military reflects both frustration with
civilian intelligence and law enforcement agencies and the desire of
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld "to gain greater overall control of
the war on terror." Outlining the new strategy, Rumsfeld said in May:
"Prevention and preemption are... the only defense against terrorism. Our
task is to find and destroy the enemy before they strike us."
Development of the Pentagon's covert counter-terror capability has its
roots in the 1979 Iran hostage crisis, which sparked creation of the Army's
Intelligence Support Activity (ISA). Established in 1981, this secret unit
fought in drug wars and counter-terror operations from the Middle East to
South America, building "a reputation for daring, flexibility and a degree
of lawlessness." In May 1982, Deputy Secretary of Defense Frank Carlucci
called the ISA "uncoordinated and uncontrolled." Though its freelance
tendencies were curbed, the ISA continued to operate, including deep-cover
mission in Bosnia and Somalia. The ISA today operates under the code-name
Gray Fox. In addition to covert operations, it provides the kind of
"close-in" signals monitoring--including interception of cell phone
conversations--that helped bring down Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar.
Gray Fox's eavesdropping planes fly without military markings. Coordinating
closely with Special Forces and the CIA, Gray Fox also places operatives
inside hostile territory. In Afghanistan, Gray Fox was part of a secret
operations groups that included the CIA's paramilitary Special Activities
Division and the Pentagon's Joint Special Operations Command. An Army
brigadier general at Bagram air base commands the Joint Interagency Task
Force, coordinating CIA, Pentagon and coalition forces in Afghanistan. A
new Campaign Support Group has been established at Ft. Bragg, NC, and a
Special Operations Joint Interagency Collaboration Center in Tampa, FLA.
The North Carolina-based Joint Special Operations Command, often referred
to as Delta Force, is still so secret that it is not officially
acknowledged to exist. Its two-star commander, Army Maj. Gen. Dell L.
Dailey, who spent much of the Afghan war in Oman, has no public biography.
Arkin writes that Dailey's assets include a fleet of aircraft specially
equipped for secret operations--conventional and covert military planes and
helicopters, and even former Soviet choppers. The bulk of those craft,
including the reconfigured Russian choppers, fly from airfields in
Uzbekistan and from two Pakistani air bases, Shahbaz and Shamsi.
Rumsfeld's influential Defense Science Board 2002 Summer Study on Special
Operations and Joint Forces in Support of Countering Terrorism says in its
classified "outbrief"--drafted to guide other Pentagon agencies--that the
War on Terrorism "requires new strategies, postures and organization." The
board recommends creation of a "Proactive, Preemptive Operations Group
(P2OG)" to coordinate CIA and Pentagon covert action. Among other things,
this body would conduct operations aimed at "stimulating reactions" among
terrorists and states possessing weapons of mass destruction--for instance,
prodding terrorist cells into action and exposing themselves to
"quick-response" attacks by US forces. Such tactics would hold
"states/sub-state actors accountable" and "signal to harboring states that
their sovereignty will be at risk," the briefing paper declares. (LAT, Oct.
27)
[top]
5. PENTAGON TO SCALE BACK ANTI-DRUG MISSIONS
Citing the need to redirect resources to the War on Terrorism, the Pentagon
is scaling back its $1-billion-a-year effort to combat international drug
trafficking. Congress ordered the Pentagon to enter the Drug War in 1988 in
response to the surging cocaine traffic from South America. "We should not
be relaxing our efforts in the war on drugs," said Rep. Porter J. Goss
(R-FLA), chairman of the House Select Committee on Intelligence. "Terrorism
is the highest priority, but drugs are still insidious.... Every time
[military officials] bleed off assets, it just opens up the drug corridors
again."
Because of such concerns, the Pentagon's plans have been cloaked in
indirect terms. This summer a memo from Deputy Defense Secretary Paul D.
Wolfowitz said the department had "carefully reviewed its existing
counter-narcotics policy" because of "the changed national security
environment, the corresponding shift in the department's budget and other
priorities, and evolving support requirements." The Pentagon will now focus
its counter-narcotics activities on programs that, among other things,
"contribute to the war on terrorism."
But even before the Sept. 11 attacks, senior officials, including Defense
Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, had questioned the Pentagon's anti-drug
mission. Before becoming secretary, Rumsfeld described military efforts to
stop drugs as "nonsense" and said during his Senate confirmation hearing in
January 2001 that drugs were "overwhelmingly a demand problem." Some
experts believe that the Defense Department may be taking advantage of the
War on Terrorism to scale back a mission they never wanted.
Early last year, top department officials asked the Pentagon comptroller to
reassess whether to continue the counter-narcotics work and other
"nontraditional" missions. Sources say the classified study recommended
paring the program. Rumsfeld has not named a permanent assistant defense
secretary for "special operations and low intensity conflict," who is
supposed to oversee the anti-drug program.
Pentagon counter-drug chief Andre Hollis stated that the DoD wants to
retain parts of the program but that all the pieces are being examined to
determine whether each "is still a priority mission.... The top priorities
now are to defend the homeland and to win the war on terrorism." Hollis
said the counter-narcotics mission has multiplied into 179 separate
sub-programs, a number he called "surreal." He said his first assignment
when he came to the job in August 2001 was to conduct a "bottom-up review"
to distinguish what the Pentagon does well in counter-narcotics from "what
we shouldn't be doing, or that didn't need to be done any more." Hollis
emphasized that the Pentagon wants to reduce the burden on special
operations forces, which are in heavy demand for terrorism-related
missions. He added that the department wants to double up on the use of
intelligence gathering equipment. If a National Guard helicopter is flying
along the California-Mexico border "looking for drug activity, there's no
reason why they can't also be looking for terrorists," he said.
In fiscal 2002, the Pentagon spent about $1 billion on drug-related
operations out of a total federal counter-narcotics outlay of $19 billion.
The Pentagon has a bigger anti-drug budget than the Coast Guard, Customs
Service or the INS. Most of the Pentagon's counter-narcotics efforts are in
the Western Hemisphere, notably the Andes, Central America and the
Caribbean. The military also trains and gathers intelligence in Southeast
Asia, notably Thailand. However, even while retrenching elsewhere, the
Pentagon intends to expand operations in Colombia. (Los Angeles Times, Oct.
20)
[top]
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