TWO THREADS IN ONE: Russian spy and Lebanese politician killed.

  • Wanna Join? New users you can now register lightning fast using your Facebook or Twitter accounts.
May 13, 2002
49,944
47,801
113
44
Seattle
www.socialistworld.net
#21
JoMoDo said:
@ 2-0

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/12/i...43600&partner=rssnyt&emc=rss&pagewanted=print
this demonstrates Syria's involvment in the PM's assisnation the Feb before last...
thus building a just cause for linking Syria
Yeah, I'm going to listen to the heavily pro-zionist nytimes

http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID=7730
http://colorado.indymedia.org/newswire/display/2797/index.php
http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=1654
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2005/apr2005/colu-a09.shtml

plus, lol at calling Israel a facist state
Israeli rule over Palestinians is essentially fascist, yes this is true. They are trying to destroy the Palestinians as a people with a specific ethnic identity. There is a word for this and that word is Genocide.

Fascism: is a radical political ideology that combines elements of corporatism, authoritarianism, nationalism, militarism, anti-liberalism and anti-communism.

Further:

A recent definition is that by former Columbia University Professor Robert O. Paxton:

* "Fascism may be defined as a form of political behavior marked by obsessive preoccupation with community decline, humiliation, or victim-hood and by compensatory cults of unity, energy, and purity, in which a mass-based party of committed nationalist militants, working in uneasy but effective collaboration with traditional elites, abandons democratic liberties and pursues with redemptive violence and without ethical or legal restraints goals of internal cleansing and external expansion."[5]

Paxton further defines fascism's essence as:

* "1. a sense of overwhelming crisis beyond reach of traditional solutions; 2. belief one’s group is the victim, justifying any action without legal or moral limits; 3. need for authority by a natural leader above the law, relying on the superiority of his instincts; 4. right of the chosen people to dominate others without legal or moral restraint; 5. fear of foreign `contamination."[6]

Sounds like Israel to me.

you should check out some of her neighbors, (i.e. Iran, Syria, Pakistan, for starters)
I am not speaking about any other country besides Israel. Your attempt to shift my attention elsewhere has failed.
 
Jul 10, 2002
2,180
18
0
45
#26
2-0-Sixx said:
Yeah, I'm going to listen to the heavily pro-zionist nytimes
like none of them links are biased/anti-isreal

but here you go,
a quote
'Pierre Gemayel, an outspoken opponent of Hezbollah, was the fifth anti-Syrian figure killed in the past two years and the first member of the Saniora government to be slain. Many in Lebanon have accused Damascus in the previous assassinations, including the 2005 bomb blast that killed former prime minister Rafik Hariri, a claim Syria has denied' and a link

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20061121/ap_on_re_mi_ea/lebanon_minister_shot

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/6183878.stm
and this is from another source highly critical of Israel, yet all implications point toward Syria, it's looking to dominate control of the Lebanese political structure and create a genuine facist state...

Think about it, Syria and Iran back Hizbollah. Hizbollah is a highly trained and competent terrorist organization that refuses to acknowledge international boarders, in fact denies the actualy right for Israel to exist. Hizbollah wants to have a larger say and greater power in the parliment.

I'm willing to bet the anti-Syrian Lebanese christians, who oppose giving greater power to Hizbollah, and do not want to be a proxy for Syria/Iran are more apt to the recognition of Israel.

Under this premise, its absurd to think that anyone else but Syria could be responsible...

Honestly, what's more advantageous a neighbor that recognizes your right to exist or a neigbor who wants you literally wiped off the map?

on another note

2-0 Sixx said:
They are trying to destroy the Palestinians as a people with a specific ethnic identity.
If this were true, it would have happened a long time ago...

2-0 Sixx said:
Fascism: is a radical political ideology that combines elements of corporatism, authoritarianism, nationalism, militarism, anti-liberalism and anti-communism.

Further:

A recent definition is that by former Columbia University Professor Robert O. Paxton:

* "Fascism may be defined as a form of political behavior marked by obsessive preoccupation with community decline, humiliation, or victim-hood and by compensatory cults of unity, energy, and purity, in which a mass-based party of committed nationalist militants, working in uneasy but effective collaboration with traditional elites, abandons democratic liberties and pursues with redemptive violence and without ethical or legal restraints goals of internal cleansing and external expansion."[5]

Paxton further defines fascism's essence as:

* "1. a sense of overwhelming crisis beyond reach of traditional solutions; 2. belief one’s group is the victim, justifying any action without legal or moral limits; 3. need for authority by a natural leader above the law, relying on the superiority of his instincts; 4. right of the chosen people to dominate others without legal or moral restraint; 5. fear of foreign `contamination."[6]
sounds like the archaic fundamentalsit countries I previously mentioned...
 
Jul 10, 2002
2,180
18
0
45
#27
Anti-Syrian leaders say Damascus had Gemayel killed to try to derail plans for an international tribunal to try suspects in the 2005 assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri

http://www.sabcnews.com/world/the_middle_east/0,2172,138952,00.html

The commonalities between this and that KGB murder are as follows---speak/act out against an oppresive regime and face the ultimate consequences...
 

Hemp

Sicc OG
Sep 5, 2005
1,248
2
0
#28
The assassination of Rafiq Hariri: who benefited?

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2005/feb2005/hari-f17.shtml

The US media has responded predictably to the assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri, echoing the bellicose threats of the Bush administration against Syria and amplifying unsubstantiated charges that the regime in Damascus was the author of the killing.

Leading the pack was the Washington Post, which editorialized on Wednesday that “The despicable murder of Mr. Hariri benefits no one outside the rogue regime in Damascus—and the world should respond accordingly.”

The editorial acknowledged that the “crudeness of the killing and the denials by the government of Bashar Assad will cause some to wonder whether it has been framed for a crime it may have desired but did not commit.” But the Post hastened to assure its readers that the assassination was “the panicked act of a cornered tyrant,” terrified by the forced march to democracy which Washington has supposedly initiated in the Middle East with the recent elections in Iraq and the Palestinian territories.

“Crude” is the appropriate designation for the Post’s arguments, which amount to nothing more than war propaganda. The newspaper’s charges are both unsupported and nonsensical. Their transparent purpose—much like the stories about Iraqi “weapons of mass destruction”—is to promote the policy of aggression which the Bush administration is pursuing in the Middle East.

The Post’s brief against Damascus is based on the well-known detective’s maxim: to discover who committed a crime, ask the question, “Who benefits?” Washington’s newspaper of record asks the question in order to supply its predetermined answer: “the rogue regime in Damascus.”

But precisely how has Syria benefited from the murder? Its immediate concrete consequences are mass demonstrations organized by anti-Syrian political forces in Lebanon demanding that Damascus withdraw its troops from the country, a ratcheting up of Washington’s threats of anti-Syrian military aggression, and the prospect of Lebanon descending into civil war.

That the assassination of Hariri would produce such consequences—all of them extremely threatening to the Syrian government of Bashar Assad—was hardly unforeseeable. Whatever else may be said about the Baathist regime in Damascus, it is committed to its own survival and its leaders are not insane.

What of the acknowledged doubt—summarily dismissed by the Post—that the Syrian regime is being “framed” for a crime it did not commit? Curiously, the newspaper gives no indication of who might be responsible for such a frame-up. Here, however, the question of “who benefits” is definitely worth pursuing.

The powers that most clearly stood to advance their strategic aims by having Hariri assassinated and blaming the crime on Syria are the US and Israel. Among those who play the game of speculating who organized the car bombing in Beirut, the smart money is undoubtedly on Washington and Tel Aviv.

Under pressure from Washington, the United Nations Security Council passed Resolution 1559 last September, demanding that Syria withdraw its troops from Lebanon. This political fact sheds light on the decision of the White House, before the blood on Beirut’s streets had dried on Monday, to issue a statement blaming Damascus. This entirely unsupported charge was followed by instructions to Washington’s ambassador to slap the Syrian regime with a demarche and leave the country.

In the midst of Washington’s provocative moves against Syria, for which the killing of Hariri supposedly provided justification, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice declared, with consummate cynicism, that the US was making no presumptions as to the authors of the crime. “We’re not laying blame,” she said, “It has to be investigated.”

The US media went beyond adopting an uncritical attitude to the US response, treating the bellicose statements of the Bush administration as though they constituted, in and of themselves, some kind of proof of Syrian culpability. “US Seems Sure of the Hand of Syria,” read the headline in the New York Times. NBC’s Middle East correspondent wrote that the recall of the US ambassador represented “the first indication that the US knows something about Syrian involvement in the assassination attempt.”

It indicated nothing of the kind. Rather, it suggested that Washington was prepared in advance to seize upon Hariri’s death as a pretext for escalating its threats against Damascus.

The Bush administration has in place extensive plans for military action against Syria. Unable to crush the resistance in Iraq—and unwilling to acknowledge that it is a manifestation of popular hostility to the US occupation—the Pentagon has long accused the Syrian regime of harboring a “command-and-control” center of Iraqi Baathists that is supposedly masterminding the attacks on US forces. The logic of the US colonial venture in Iraq, far from Bush’s fanciful talk of burgeoning democracy throughout the Middle East, leads to new wars of conquest against any and all regimes that fail to collaborate with Washington.

Various Middle East “security” experts have been quoted in the media describing Syria as “low-hanging fruit” in Washington’s military pursuit of hegemony in the region. The regime is viewed as isolated and vulnerable.

Washington also hopes to use the assassination to pursue French support for US strategic aims in the Middle East. France, the former colonial power in Lebanon, has its own fish to fry, and joined the US in supporting the UN resolution demanding a Syrian troop withdrawal. Secretary of State Rice urged closer collaboration in her visit to Paris earlier this month, calling for an end to the divisions provoked by the US war in Iraq.

The maneuvers against Syria manifest as well the unprecedented coordination of US and Israeli policy in the region. Damascus is a primary target because it has provided sanctuary to Palestinian groups that have opposed Israel, including the Islamist organization Hamas. It has also failed to curb the growing influence of the Lebanese Shiite movement, Hezbollah, which forced Israeli troops out of southern Lebanon after 20 years of occupation. It is hoped in both Washington and Tel Aviv that either forcing Syrian troops out of Lebanon or carrying out “regime change” in Damascus will undermine Hezbollah’s position and open the door for renewed Israeli control on both sides of its northern border.

Tel Aviv calculates that the expulsion of Syria from Lebanon or the toppling of the Baathist regime in Damascus could bring to power a Lebanese government more amenable to Israeli demands. In particular, both want Lebanon to grant citizenship to the estimated 400,000 Palestinian refugees inside that country, a move that would effectively abrogate their right—never recognized by Israel—to return to the homes from which they were expelled in the course of the creation and expansion of the Zionist state.

The timing of the assassination, barely a week after Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas announced their truce in Egypt, is noteworthy. It is quite possible that any limited concessions the Israeli regime may agree to make as part of the “peace process” with the Palestinians will be repaid by Washington giving the green light for Israeli provocations and military actions against Syria.

US officials tied to Israel planned attack on Syria

The killing of Hariri has set the stage for the implementation of plans for US aggression against Syria that have long been nurtured by a group within the US administration that is closely tied to Israel and the right-wing Likud bloc, in particular. Prominent among them is David Wurmser, Vice President Dick Cheney’s adviser on the Middle East. Wurmser played a leading role in the creation of a Pentagon intelligence unit that sought to fabricate a case for linking the Iraqi regime with Al Qaeda in the months leading up to the US invasion.

In 1996, Wurmser co-authored a report drafted for incoming Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, entitled “A Clean Break: a New Strategy for Securing the Realm.” It called for a repudiation of the “land for peace” formula that had served as the basis for Middle East peace negotiations, in favor of a plan to “roll back” regional adversaries. It advocated the overthrow of the Iraqi regime of Saddam Hussein and recommended Israeli strikes against “Syrian targets in Lebanon” and within Syria itself.

The co-authors of the report included Douglas Feith, the current undersecretary for policy at the US Defense Department, and Richard Perle, the former chairman of the Pentagon’s Defense Policy Board.

In 2000, Wurmser helped draft a document entitled “Ending Syria’s Occupation of Lebanon: the US Role?” It called for a confrontation with the regime in Damascus, which it accused of developing “weapons of mass destruction.” Among those signing the document were Feith and Perle, as well as Elliott Abrams, Bush’s chief advisor on the Middle East, who was recently appointed deputy national security advisor.

This document urged the use of US military force, claiming that the 1991 Persian Gulf War had proven that Washington “can act to defend its interests and principles without the specter of huge casualties.” It continued: “But this opportunity may not wait, for as weapons-of-mass-destruction capabilities spread, the risks of such action will rapidly grow. If there is to be decisive action, it will have to be sooner rather than later.”

If one asks the question, “Who benefits?” the answer is clear. The destabilization of Lebanon, the mobilization of the US-backed opposition to the pro-Syrian government in Beirut, and the vilification of Damascus all serve to advance US and Israeli strategic plans long in the making.

It is not just a question of motive, however. Israel has a long history of utilizing assassination as an instrument of state policy. The Israeli regime has not infrequently carried out acts of terror and blamed them on its enemies.

Among the more infamous examples was the so-called Lavon Affair, in which the Israeli intelligence agency Mossad organized a covert network inside Egypt which launched a series of bombing attacks in 1953. The targets included US diplomatic facilities, and the attackers left behind phony evidence implicating anti-American Arabs. The aim was to disrupt US ties to Egypt.

In its long history of assassinations of Palestinian leaders, many of them carried out in Beirut, the Israeli regime has routinely attempted to implicate rival Palestinian factions.

Car bomb killings in Beirut are a regular part of Mossad’s repertoire. In the 1970s and 1980s, when the Israelis invaded Lebanon, such bombings were a fact of daily life, and many of them were attributed to Israel.

Among the more recent killings is that of Elie Hobeika, an ex-Lebanese cabinet minister and former Christian warlord, in January 2002. He was killed along with three bodyguards by a remote-controlled car bomb on a Beirut street. Hobeika, who participated in the massacre of Palestinian refugees in the Sabra and Shatilla refugee camps in 1982, had announced just days earlier that he was prepared to testify on the role played by Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon in the killings.

Last June, a Lebanese magistrate indicted five Arabs who were said to be working for Mossad in connection with a plot to assassinate Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah. At least one of the defendants testified that Mossad had organized the Hobeika assassination.

In May 2002, Mossad carried out the assassination of Mohammed Jihad Jibril, the son of Ahmed Jibril, the leader of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command. Israeli Defense Minister Benjamin Ben-Eliezer commented cynically at the time, “Not everything that blows up in Beirut has a connection with the State of Israel.”

In August 2003, Ali Hassan Saleh, a leader of Hezbollah, was assassinated in Beirut. Israel denied any knowledge of the killing, but it was seen throughout Lebanon as a Mossad operation.

Since 2002, Mossad has been headed by Meir Dagan, who formerly commanded the Israeli occupation zone in Lebanon. Sharon reportedly gave Dagan a mandate to revive the traditional methods of Mossad, including assassinations abroad.

Washington has itself revived the methods of “murder incorporated” that were historically associated with the CIA, boasting of assassinations of alleged Al Qaeda operatives in Yemen and elsewhere.

While the Washington Post and other US media outlets echo the White House in denouncing Syria as a “rogue regime” guilty of the Hariri assassination, the two governments responsible for the great bulk of the killing and political murders in the Middle East are Israel and the United States.

In contrast to the jingoist propaganda of the American press, it is worth noting the editorial comment published Wednesday by the Daily Star, the Beirut English-language daily, dealing with the broader political implications of the assassination.

“The fact that within just hours of the murder five distinct parties were singled out as possible culprits—Israel, Syria, Lebanese regime partisans, mafia-style gangs, and anti-Saudi, anti-US Islamist terrorists—also points to the wider dilemma that disfigures Lebanese and Arab political culture in general: the resort to murderous and destabilizing violence as a chronic option for those who vie for power,” the newspaper stated. It continued, “That madness has now been even more deeply institutionalilzed and anchored in the modern history of the region due to the impact of the American-British invasion of Iraq and the new wave of violence it has spurred.”

The murder of Rafiq Hariri constitutes a brutal warning that the US war in Iraq is only the beginning of a far broader campaign of military aggression aimed at crushing resistance to US and Israeli domination. This escalating militarism is creating the conditions for a conflagration throughout the region.

See Also:
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2005/feb2005/syri-f16.shtml
 

Mike Manson

Still Livin'
Apr 16, 2005
9,015
19,439
113
44
#30
WHO KILLED LITVINENKO?

Radiation Trail Leads to Moscow Flights

A new clue has emerged in the search for the killer of former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko. On Wednesday, investigators found traces of a radioactive substance on three British Airways aircraft with two other planes being tested. The real-life spy thriller continues.

In the search for the killers of former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko, new clues seem to be emerging daily. On Wednesday, the trail led detectives to a series of commercial flights between London and Moscow.

British Airways announced on Wednesday that it has taken three Boeing 767s out of service for forensic testing after Scotland Yard contacted the airline on Tuesday. British officials confirmed the initial test results Wednesday afternoon, which revealed "very low traces of a radioactive substance onboard two of the three aircraft," according to a statement on the airline's Web site. The third plane has been grounded in Moscow for further testing.

Home Secretary John Reid announced on Thursday that a fourth charter plane -- leased by the Russian airline Transaero -- was being tested for radioactive contamination. A spokesperson later said that no radiation was detected on that plane. Meanwhile, a fifth aircraft, also belonging to an unknown Russian airliner, is undergoing similar tests.

Litvinenko, a former KGB spy, died in a London hospital on Nov. 23 after a potent radioactive poison -- a substance known as polonium 210 -- sent his body into a slow and painful decline. During his three-week deterioration, doctors were unable to pinpoint exactly what was wrong with him, and a conclusive diagnosis was only possible after he died. Since then, traces of polonium 210 have been found at several locations all across London.

The British Health Protection Agency has yet to confirm whether the aircraft were contaminated by polonium 210. It is also unclear how the radioactive traces got on the aircraft, since Litvinenko was not listed as a passenger on any of the jets.

All three British Airways planes had been on the London-Moscow route, but also traveled to other destinations across Europe, including Frankfurt, Düsseldorf, Athens, Barcelona and elsewhere. The airline has published a comprehensive list of all flights suspected of being affected -- and BA is currently scrambling to contact up to 33,000 passengers and 3,000 crew members who have been on the aircraft since October 25, one week before Litvinenko fell ill. The three planes have flown 221 flights on 10 different routes since then, according to airline spokeswoman Kate Gay.

Still, officials aren't concerned about the risk to public health. The substance is only deadly when injested as it cannot penetrate human skin. "The advice we have been given is that the risk to the public is very low," said British Airways head Willie Walsh.

A hotline for concerned passengers, though, has been set up and some 2,500 people have called with concerns. Dozens have been referred to doctors for examination and 18 have been sent to a special clinic for radioactive testing.

Investigators are currently pursuing leads that the killer may have been contaminated by the radioactive poison. The London Times newspaper cites an unnamed airline spokesman as saying that officials examined the aircraft because "individuals involved in the Litvinenko case" had traveled on them.

One such individual was Andrei Lugovoi, one of two Russian contacts Litvinenko met for tea in London on Nov. 1, the day he first felt the effects of the deadly poison. Lugovoi told the Russian paper Kommersant on Wednesday that he had flown from London to Moscow on Nov. 3 aboard one of the contaminated planes. Lugovoi denies any wrongdoing, and tested negative for polonium 210 contamination.

It remains unclear exactly where the radioactive path will lead. Many suspect the Russian government of ordering the killing, since Litvinenko turned from being a KGB spy into an outspoken enemy of the Kremlin. At the time he was poisoned, the former agent was in the midst of looking into the October slaying of investigative journalist Ana Politkovskaya. On his death bed, Litvinenko blamed Russian President Vladimir Putin not only for Politkovskaya's shooting, but also for his own poisoning.

By contrast, sources close to the Kremlin say the killings were orchestrated by Putin's enemies in an attempt to discredit the government. Others have postulated that Litvinenko posed an obstacle to the interests of powerful Russian exiles, while some go so far as to believe that Litvinenko was betrayed by his longtime ally and magnate-in-exile Boris Berezovsky. Authorities found traces of polonium 210 in Berezovsky's office.

Suspicion also fell on Mario Scaramella, an Italian security expert who met with Litvinenko on the day he fell ill. But Scaramella insists he is "not under investigation by any British authority" after tests showed no signs of polonium 210. London's Metropolitan Police have also not excluded the possibility that Litvinenko poisoned himself. A coroner is expected to perform an autopsy on Friday, according to local authorities at the Camden Council.

Previous reports indicated that polonium 210 is the sort of radioactive substance that is only available in advanced nuclear laboratories. But a report in the San Francisco Chronicle on Thursday refuted this assumption, claiming that the substance, which is "about 100 billion times as deadly as cyanide" when ingested, can be ordered legally on the Internet for US$69 per sample.


http://www.spiegel.de/international/0,1518,451667,00.html