Daily Report
Iraq: Samarra's al-Askari dome destroyed
From a late-breaking AP account, Feb. 22. A day after the bombing of a Shiite market in Baghdad's Dora district, killing 22, comes the destruction of one of Shia's most sacred shrines in Samarra. Somebody is apparently hell-bent on plunging Iraq into civil war at any cost...and perhaps igniting sectarian warfare throughout the Islamic world.
Nigeria: more religious violence
Still hailing the cartoon protests as heroic anti-imperialism? From AP, Feb. 21:
Christian and Muslim mobs rampaged through two Nigerian cities Tuesday, killing at least 24 people in violence that followed deadly protests against caricatures of the Prophet Mohammed during the weekend.
Afghanistan: violence inaugurates NATO expansion
This brief analysis of the challenges facing the expanded NATO mandate in Afghanistan sheds light on the real politics of the "cartoon jihad"—obviously, the Danish cartoons have been seized upon as a symbol and crystalization of a much wider set of greivances, which may vary from country to country but generally have to do with a sense of national humiliation. Afghans have bitter memories of the Soviet occupation, and even if they are happy to see the Taliban gone they are going to resent the increased NATO presence. The inter-related challenges NATO faces include popular unrest, Taliban insurgency (especially in the south), continued internecine warlord violence (especially in the north), and the potential for internationalization of the conflict, with US ally Pakistan ironically serving as a Taliban guerilla staging ground and Iran viewing the Western troop presence on its eastern border uneasily. From the (State Department-funded) Radio Free Afghanistan, Feb. 13:
Afghanistan: "Kalashnikov matriarch" holds out
Afghanistan's only female warlord, her existence heretofore a rumor, has been contacted by journalists in the remote Darisujan Valley of northern Baghlan province. From The Telegraph, Feb. 18:
Iraq: US threatens to pull support; "resistance" blows up beauty parlors
This would be funny if it weren't so tragic. Having played the divide-and-conquer game of pitting Iraq's ethnic and religious groups against each other, treating the nascent state as a pie to be divided up by sectarian factions, the US and Britain now realize it could collapse into civil war and lecture about the importance of "national unity" and "nonsectarianism." Meanwhile, the heroic Iraqi resistance continues its glorious crusade against...liquor stores and beauty parlors. From AP, Feb. 21:
"Rendition" victim: case dismissed
Ah, yes. "National security." That magical incantation by which all standards of transparency and humanitarian law can be summarily dismissed. This time applied in the case of Maher Arar, a Canadian citizen who was "renditioned" by US authorities to Syria to be tortured—the same Syria, incidentally, which the US is seeking to destabilize (and will doubtless use its grisly human rights record as propaganda ammo in the service of this effort)! The irony is starting to make us a little dizzy these days... From the Canadian Press, Feb. 17:
Poland blasts Tehran's Holocaust "fact-finding" trip
Boy, things are really getting out of hand. Here's how the European double standard on free speech paradoxically legitimizes and strengthens Holocaust revisionism. Europe defends Islamophobia in the name of freedom of expression, while denying that same freedom to the anti-Semites. In juvenile retaliation, Iran demands access to Auschwitz to conduct lugubrious pseudo-scientific "experiments" of the kind the professional deniers ("revisionists") have already surreptitously carried out, and which they love to cite with great glee. How comforting that this once-marginal crowd is now emulated by a regionally powerful government with a seat at the United Nations. From Italy's AKI, Feb. 20:
Lipstadt defends Irving
Hooray! We have had our problems with Holocaust historian Deborah Lipstadt before—last year we had to call her out for defending the dangerous notion of what her critics call "Jewish exclusivism" as genocide victims. But in the current poisonous atmosphere, she has been one of the few voices to defend free speech without double standards or equivocation—and this includes free speech for her most bitter enemy, the notorious Holocaust denier David Irving. From the Globe & Mail, Feb. 20, emphasis added:

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