NATO Airstrikes Target Grain Silos In Syria – Defeating ISIS By Starving Syrians?


NATO-lovebombs-anthonyfreda-072812

NATO’s “love kisses. (click to enlarge)

Anthony Freda Art

Brandon Turbeville | Activist Post

[A]s the United States continues its shrouded assault on the Syrian government, new targets for the U.S. airstrikes have emerged. This time, it is not oil refineries, but grain silos.

In an airstrike campaign that took place Sunday night, “coalition” aircraft struck “mills and grain storage facilities in Manbij,” a town in Northern Syria which was controlled by Western-backed death squads.

Manbij is located slightly northeast of Aleppo, the largest city in Syria which is itself the scene of fierce fighting between the NATO-directed ISIS forces and the Syrian government. The SAA began focusing on Aleppo intently in the last few months.

The attack on grain facilities by NATO/GCC forces is yet one more example of how the bombing of Syria is not aimed at destroying the West’s ISIS proxy army but at crippling and destroying the Assad government.

Just like the bombing of Syrian oil refineries, the effect of bombing Syrian grain silos is to prevent the Assad regime from retaking much needed resources to provide for its citizens or its military after long fought battles with ISIS.

The elimination of the grain silos would, of course, do nothing to stop ISIS but it will go quite some distance in adding to the burdens of an already oppressed and hungry people barely surviving under the rule of the so-called “moderate rebels” also known as ISIS.

Interestingly enough, when Bashar al-Assad’s forces have blockaded ISIS controlled areas in the past, no matter how lenient the blockade may have been in terms of food shipments, the West has responded with claims that he was “starving his own people.” Yet, when death squads banned food and baby products from being shipped in to areas that they themselves controlled, the West ignored and silenced the reports. When the West directly bombs food storage, it is presented as bombing for democracy and freeing the people from ISIS.

Unsurprisingly, no death squad fighters were killed in the attack on the Manbij grain stores, only civilians. Even death squad supporter Rami Abdulrahman, the director of the propaganda outfit called Syrian Observatory For Human Rights, was forced to admit the results of the U.S. bombing only produced civilian casualties.

‘These were the workers at the silos. They provide food for the people.’ The airstrikes ‘destroyed the food that was stored there,’ said Abdulrahman

The United States military, typically, refused to acknowledge the fact that any civilians were killed.

While any unintentional killing of Syrian civilians by the Assad government was presented to American audiences as premeditated slaughter against innocent people, American airstrikes continue to be presented as manna from heaven, designed to rid the world of Islamic terror and brutal dictators at the same time.

Of course, in the twilight zone of American media, the truth is that the United States has created, funded, armed, and directed the Islamic terror for decades and that the “brutal dictator” is actually fighting for the survival of Syria. Little details like facts and reality, however, have never gotten in the way of Western media outlets.

Recently from Brandon Turbeville:

Codex Alimentarius — The End of Health Freedom, 7 Real ConspiraciesFive Sense Solutions and Dispatches From a Dissident, volume 1 and volume 2, and The Road to Damascus: The Anglo-American Assault on Syria. Turbeville has published over 300 articles dealing on a wide variety of subjects including health, economics, government corruption, and civil liberties. Brandon Turbeville’s podcast Truth on The Tracks can be found every Monday night 9 pm EST at UCYTV.  He is available for radio and TV interviews. Please contact activistpost (at) gmail.com. 




SYRIA BECOMES THE 7TH PREDOMINANTLY MUSLIM COUNTRY BOMBED BY 2009 NOBEL PEACE LAUREATE

A dispatch from The Intercept

 obama-SyriaBombing

BY GLENN GREENWALD ! @ggreenwald 

[T]he U.S. today began bombing targets inside Syria, in concert with its lovely and inspiring group of five allied regimes: Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, United Arab Emirates, Qatar, and Jordan. [All crooks and criminals despots—eds.]

That means that Syria becomes the 7th predominantly Muslim country bombed by 2009 Nobel Peace Laureate Barack Obama—after Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia, Libya and Iraq.

https://firstlook.org/theintercept/2014/09/23/nobel-peace-prize-fact-day-syria-7th-country-bombed-obama/

The utter lack of interest in what possible legal authority Obama has to bomb Syria is telling indeed: Empires bomb who they want, when they want, for whatever reason (indeed, recall that Obama bombed Libya even after Congress explicitly voted against authorization to use force, and very few people seemed to mind that abject act of lawlessness; constitutional constraints are not for warriors and emperors).

It was just over a year ago that Obama officials were insisting that bombing and attacking Assad was a moral and strategic imperative. Instead, Obama is now bombing Assad’s enemies while politely informing his regime of its targets in advance. It seems irrelevant on whom the U.S. wages war; what matters it that it be at war, always and forever.


 

The U.S. has known for years that what fuels and strengthens anti-American sentiment (and thus anti-American extremism) is exactly what they keep doing: aggression in that region.


Six weeks of bombing hasn’t budged ISIS in Iraq, but it has caused ISIS recruitment to soar. That’s all predictable: the U.S. has known for years that what fuels and strengthens anti-American sentiment (and thus anti-American extremism) is exactly what they keep doing: aggression in that region. If you know that, then they know that. At this point, it’s more rational to say they do all of this not despite triggering those outcomes, but because of it. Continuously creating and strengthening enemies is a feature, not a bug. It is what justifies the ongoing greasing of the profitable and power-vesting machine of Endless War.

If there is anyone who actually believes that the point of all of this is a moral crusade to vanquish the evil-doers of ISIS (as the U.S. fights alongside its close Saudi friends), please read
Professor As’ad AbuKhalil’s explanation today of how Syria is a multi-tiered proxy war. As the disastrous Libya “intervention” should conclusively and permanently demonstrate, the U.S. does not bomb countries for humanitarian objectives. Humanitarianism is the pretense, not the purpose.


President Barack Obama makes a speech during the Nobel Peace Prize Concert at Oslo Spektrum on December 11, 2009 in Oslo, Norway


Photo: Sandy Young/Getty Images

Email the author: glenn.greenwald@theintercept.com




“Peace” demonstrations in Russia and other manufactured matters

RUSSIA  DESK
A dispatch from The Saker | Facilitated by Alevtina Rea, Deputy Editor
Dateline: September 21 Ukraine and Russia mini-SITREP

 
Demonstrations in Russia
(VIDEO BELOW SUPPLIED BY VOICE OF AMERICA, so expect this to show the most impressive crowd.)
[A]ccording to RT, 5’000 to 26’000 people have marched in the streets of Moscow demanding peace in the Ukraine.  According to Vzgliad, 20 people demonstrated in Petrozavodsk and Saratov, 50 in Perm, up to 100 in Ekaterinburg, 10 in Novosibirsk, 15 in Syktyvkar and a few people in Barnaul.  What are important here are not the actual figures, but the order of magnitude.  What we clearly see is that these demonstrations were tiny, at least by Russian standards and when RT’s  Anissa Naouai reports that there was a “very high turnout” she is plain wrong.

Also, and this is no less important, let us be very careful about what these demonstrations were all about: for peace in the Ukraine and against war.  With such a vague and yet doubleplusgoodmeaningslogan, even refugees from bombed out Donetsk could agree (maybe even especially them).What we have here is a typical propaganda ploy: get people in the streets in support of peace, love and happiness all over the world, and then present that as an “opposition” protest against the government policies.  But, come on, seriously, who wants war in the Ukraine?  The Kremlin?


In approving tones, official propaganda organs of the American state like Radio Free Europe and Voice of America have been busy disseminating the “news” about these demonstrations. They clearly hope for a Russian Maidan, another Kiev in Moscow. The corporate media are banging the drums of support, too.


 

(Click to enlarge)

(Click to enlarge)

The other important point is this: even if, for argument’s sake, we agree that 100% of the demonstators were fierce opponents of Putin or Russian policies in the Ukraine, that is less than nothing compared to Putin 80%+ approval rate.

So what did not happen?

What did not happen is the “Russian Maidan” predicted by Evgenii Fedorov and his supporters.  This is what he predicted would happen on September 14th:

They chose Saint Petersburg as the first site. The process has begun. The process is being helped: the whole story with an early election in Saint Petersburg is not accidental! (…)  They will send to Petersburg the same trained young people and fighters as those who were prepared in Ukraine. If necessary, they will be issued with Russian passports. The total number of fighters in Russia, prepared by the Americans, ranges from 50’000 to 100’000. On the basis of Ukraine. Of course, you won’t be able to pick them out: they are Russian people, in pure form. These people will come to Petersburg and rent apartments in great numbers. Their task will be to carry out provocations, if necessary, military provocations.  What does it all mean? It means terrorist activities! The Right Sector as you know does not have any problems with terrorist activities.

(Click to enlarge)

(Click to enlarge)

How much of that did actually happen? None at all.
Where is the Nationalist Maidan?  Nowhere.
How is the regime in power?  As stable as ever.

Fedorov did not stop here. In the same article (please do read it all), he even wrote this:

First, there is a new Ukrainian factor: a 100 thousand brainwashed people. The propaganda is at work turning people into animals there. Their position has strengthened in case you haven’t paid attention. You know, people are watching and many of them are rejoicing at the victories in Ukraine. There are no victories! There are some tactical gains, but no wins. Just six months ago we had a neutral neighbouring country. Now we have a country that has more than 40 million people and is absolutely militarily hostile to Russia. What kind of victory is that? Moreover, they have a Russian population. This is a country which can serve as a good base for the invasion of Russia by orange invaders of the modern type. It wasn’t like this just six months ago. It means that the balance of power around Russia has fundamentally changed. We suffered a huge defeat in the geopolitical sense. We didn’t have an enemy yesterday, and today our enemies look like us. In fact, it is a clear victory by the 5th column. It has won politically, militarily, and from there to a military invasion of Russia.

A military invasion of Russia, no less!

Evgenii Fedorov is a very nice person and he has many good ideas.  I honestly like him.  But as an analyst he is firmly set into the “doom, gloom and total panic” camp and, frankly, he has zero credibility with me.  I have tried to warn about this, but mostly I was ignored or attacked.  I hope that with the total “flop” on this “Russian Maidan” everybody now see that Fedorov should be listened to with a couple of pounds of salt.

Russian strategy in the Ukraine

Several of you have pointed out the apparent contradiction in my assertion that Russia’s real goal in the Ukraine is regime change while, at the same time, staying out of the Ukraine and placing the burden of liberation and de-Nazificaton on the Ukrainian people.  The contradiction is, I submit, only apparent.  Here is what Russia can, and should, do:

1) Politically oppose the regime everywhere: UN, media, public opinion, etc.
2) Express political support for Novorussia and any Ukrainian opposition
3) Continue the informational war (Russian media does a great job)
4) Prevent Novorussia from falling (covert military aid)
5) Mercilessly keep up the economic pressure on the Ukraine
6) Disrupt as much as possible the US-EU “axis of kindness”
7) Help Crimea and Novorussia prosper economically and financially

In other words – give the appearance of staying out while very much staying in.


The American media slogan has been, “Moscow marchers condemn Kremlin role in Ukraine war”


 

The key here is to create the conditions which would make it possible for the Ukrainian people to overthrow the Nazis currently in power, boot out the CIA proconsul in Kiev and begin de-Nazifying the country. Yes, this is a long-term and difficult task, but Russia has no other viable options.  There will never be stability or safety for Russia as long as the Nazis are in power in Kiev.  Sure, a temporary cease-fire or truce or even treaty can be signed with the Nazis, but it will never be viable and at most it will provide a short term respite.  I will repeat it again, regime change and de-nazification in the Ukraine are a vital national strategic objective for Russia.  Nothing short of that will do.

In conclusion, a couple of short items:

Business Insider says that “Ukraine Is On The Brink Of Total Economic Collapse“.

The Kiev basketball team played in Lithuania against Russia wearing ‘camo sport’s gear’:

They lost 77 to 102 🙂

And now, last but not least, the really good news!!

According to Yahoo, the notorious Jewish oligarch, Mafia Don, mega-oligarch and iconic “Putin foe” Mikhail Khodorkovksy wants to lead the anti-Putin opposition and he is even contemplating a presidential position for himself.  This is absolutely wonderful news as, now that Berezovsky is dead, Khodorkovsky can legitimately claim the title of most hated oligarch in Russia.  To have him now declare that he wants to “lead” (read: finance) the Russia non-systemic (which did not even make it into the Duma) opposition is a dream come true for Putin’s PR team.  They will now have a wonderful time discrediting all the pro-US opposition  “Khodorkovsk’s agents”.

Great news indeed!

Kind regards,

—The Saker

SELECT COMMENTS ON PAGE 2

Select comments from original thread

Anonymous said…

I just completed watching the RT documentary on the situation in Ukraine filmed in April. I suppose Bro. Putin and Bro. Lavrov and their Prime Minister and Defense Minister in Donetsk aren’t too interested in what is happening to the residents of Odessa, Dnienep. and Kharkov at the hands of the Ukrainian Nationalists.Onward Masonic New World Order Types, the Apres Ski Slopes of Davos awaits the Progressive Heroes of the United Nations of International Law…

Brabantian said…

Absolutely magnificent large photo of Igor Strelkov, handsome and noble, standing in a home before a fireplace, religious icon in back of him, beautiful cat happily in his arms, his face showing immense peace of soul …Ladies and gentlemen, we are privileged to live with this hero in our worldIgor Strelkov with cat in his arms

Anonymous said…

I’m glad you expose RT in this instance. I have always be wary of that site. I think sincere contributors are beginning to take note as well.

Anonymous said…

BTW says:I wonder how many of these 5 – 10K “peace” protesters are naïve idiots, how many are ideological fanatics of the “democracy – we want to be like the west” variety, and how many are the pushing and organizing force behind this.
No news account mentioned that ordinary patriotic Russians offered to debate with them; nor is there any account of people telling them to march in Kiev instead. Indeed, why did people not shout at them to march on the US embassy instead to demand an end to bombing of country after country.
— BTW

Gayle said…

It looks like Russia may have decided that it wants out of Novorossia:Strelkov addressing rumors that the “voentorg” has been turned off If true … what else to conclude except RF has abandoned Novorossiya, and betrayed Strelkov?

Anonymous said…

Build the Red Army underground of Novorossiya!Build the Red Army underground of New Soviet Ukraine!- from Nazi-occupied Amerika

Anonymous said…

According to Wikipedia, Mikhail Khodorkovksy’s father was Jewish, while his mother was Russian Orthodox. So he is technically not Jewish according to Jewish law, which is matrilineal. (I’m not sure how Russian nationality law defines Jewishness, matrilineally or patrilineally. He could be Jewish by Russian law, but not by Jewish ! A despicable person nevertheless.)

Anonymous said…

A prediction borne from studious observation of the conflict, and comparison of multiple sources, giving the most weight to Cassad, Flores and Blazov generally:1) ‘sellout’ of Novorossiya by ‘Putin’ will congeal in the inforeality, as border control tightens, OSCE drones fly, etc.2) humanitarian aid will increase massively3) guerilla war will spread beyond the current ‘borders’ of the revolution over the winter4) Strelkov will return

Anonymous said…

it’s nice to see you saker in the optimistic mood but i think putin is already on its milosevic path…russia is full of people who would kill its own mother for a new iphone, as well as rich russians who would kill its own mother for a new house in london…russia wasted a years living from day to day on money from gas and oil, and this inertia will cost them…there is a funny quote here in serbia which says “prase se ne goji pred božić”…russia is now drawing moves in the panic mode, because they, together with china, didn’t do anything through the years to break up its ties with the western financial institutions including joint attack on the dollar…and it cant be doing overnight…maybe someone sees condolesa rice who is saying couple of days ago how russia will running out of cash faster than europe will running out of energy…at the same time, we have a coca cola generation in moscow and bejing…they want western goods, western clothes, western tv shows, western music, western gadgets…which is called soft power sometimes…at the end of the day, i would like to be optimistic, but judging by the things in serbia in the past, i’m afraid future is not so optimistic…

jo6pac said…

Mikhail KhodorkovksyI wonder what his cia salary is?

Anonymous said…

Dutch media are reporting just now
that Ukraine asked the international court in The Hague to take on the case against those who are responsible for downing the MH17 (it was strongly implied that Russia is involved and that it is in the category of warcrimes).
In february/march the court already took on a case, proposed by Ukraine, to investigate the ‘crimes committed during the Yanukovitsch presidency’ and more specifically ‘during the maidanprotests’.

Anonymous said…

I see by http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ukrainians_in_Russia#Demographics that in 2010 there were 1,927,988 Ukrainians in Russia. If a fraction of a percent of those turned out (or were transported there by 5th column?) at the rally that alone would about account for a number of 5 or 10 K.It also says
“According to the 2001 census, there are 253,644 Ukrainians living in the city of Moscow [2], making them the third largest ethnic group in that city, after Russians and Tatars. A further 147,808 Ukrainians live in the Moscow region.”(One might even wonder if protesters were offered free cookies afterwards?)I can’t get excited over this.__Blue

Dalpe said…

The way one can defeat a false flag is to make as many people aware of the possibility of one occurring, Similarity, Fedorov’s intention had nothing to do with being right or wrong. His intention was to make individuals aware of the dangers. Just by presenting the worst case scenario, he has thwarting them. He is a happy man as we speak.As far as I am concerned, he was right on target. They started their “voter fraud” wild assertions, followed by the money flowing like wine to pay for “mercenary protesters”

Anonymous said…

This analysis is overly simplistic and naive.How could anyone think today’s demonstration is the end of attempts to destabilize Russia?I would remind The Saker that Maidan started with a handful of people for a couple weeks. Truly, it could not have been more than a couple dozen people at first.See where we are now? I agree with those who say Putin (and China) made serious mistakes in the last few years: mostly by not striking at the international monetary system in 2008-2009.I fear it is too late now. I hope I am wrong. But when it comes down to it, why didn’t Russia do anything to help avoid the destruction of its ally, Lybia? Why didn’t lend yanukovitch a hand last year to nip Maidan in the bud? I won’t even go into Novorussia.I think The Saker seriously underestimates how evil those people are. The fact that the khodorkovsky was published in Le Monde no less is a strong signal that things are about to get very ugly.Again, I hope I am wrong, but when it comes down to it, all the people that have dared to challenge the international monetary system (and we all know what that means) were eventually destroyed: Napoleon, Hitler (oh yes…. Look up TRUE history), Charles De Gaulle… We are talking international giants here and I don’t think Putin can do better.Of course recently there were Saddam, Kaddafi and Chavez ( who was probably the most vocal).I’ll finish this post by asking everyone on their opinion of Lavrov. For months now, I have felt like Lavrov was a true diplomat superstar and that he and putting we’re running circles around the west. I also felt like Medvedev was probably more prone to be a traitor…Now I am not so sure and I actually wonder if perhaps I got it all backwards… I have been wondering about Lavrov in the last couple weeks or so…




NAMIBIA – GERMANY’S AFRICAN HOLOCAUST

 Text and photos: Andre Vltchek

SWAPO and fight for freedom

ow outrageous, how heartbreaking, how truly grotesque! Windhoek City – the capital of Namibia – is, at one extreme full of flowers and Mediterranean-style villas, and at the other, it is nothing more than a tremendous slum without water or electricity.

 

And in between, there is the town center– with its Germanic orderly feel, boasting ‘colonial architecture’, including Protestant churches and commemorative plaques mourning those brave German men, women and children, those martyrs, who died during the uprisings and wars conducted by local indigenous people.

German church with racist depiction of history and Fidel Street

German church with racist depiction of history and Fidel Street.  (Click to enlarge.)

The most divisive and absurd of those memorials is the so-called “Equestrian Monument”, more commonly known as “The Horse” or under its German original names, Reiterdenkmal and Südwester Reiter (Rider of South-West). It is a statue inaugurated on 27 January 1912, which was the birthday of the German emperor Wilhelm II. The monument “honors the soldiers and civilians that died on the German side of the Herero and Namaqua ‘War’ of 1904–1907’”.

That ‘war’ was not really a war; it was nothing more than genocide, a holocaust.

And Namibia was a prelude to what German Nazis later tried to implement on European soil.

A European expert working for the UN, my friend, speaks, like almost everyone here, passionately, but without daring to reveal her name:

“The first concentration camps on earth were built in this part of Africa… They were built by the British Empire in South Africa and by Germans here, in Namibia. Shark Island on the coast was the first concentration camp in Namibia, used to murder the Nama people, but now it is just a tourist destination – you would never guess that there were people exterminated there. Here in the center of Windhoek, there was another extermination camp; right on the spot where “The Horse” originally stood.” 

The Horse and German tourists

The Horse and German tourists. (Click to enlarge.)

“The Horse” was recently removed from its original location, and placed in the courtyard of the old wing of The National Museum, together with some of the most outrageous commemorative plaques, glorifying German actions in this part of the world. Nothing was destroyed, instead just taken away from prime locations.

Where “The Horse” stood, there now stands a proud anti-colonialist statue, that of a man and a woman with broken shackles, which declares, “Their Blood Waters Our Freedom”.

Germany never officially apologized for its crimes against humanity in what it used to call German South-West Africa. It did not pay reparations.

*

A visit to those German genocidal relics is ‘an absolute must’ for countless Central European tourists that descend every day on Namibia. I followed several of these groups, listening to their conversations. Among these people, there appears to be no remorse, and almost no soul-searching: just snapshots, posing in front of the monuments and racist insignias, pub-style/beer jokes at places where entire cultures and nations were exterminated!

Central European, German-speaking tourists in Windhoek, appear to be lobotomized, and totally emotionless. And so are many of the descendants of those German ‘genocidal pioneers’. Encountering them is like déjà vu; it brings back memories of the years when I was fighting against the German Nazi colony, ‘Colonia Dignidad’ in Chile; or when I was investigating the atrocities and links, of the German Nazi community in Paraguay to several South American fascist regimes that had been implanted and maintained by the West.

And now the German community in Namibia is protesting the removal of “The Horse”. It is indignant. And this community is still powerful, even omnipotent, here in Namibia.

Almost nobody calls the ‘events’ that took place here, by their rightful names, of holocaust or genocide. Everything in Namibia is ‘sensitive’.

But even according to the BBC: “In 1985, a UN report classified the events as an attempt to exterminate the Herero and Nama peoples of South-West Africa, and therefore the earliest attempted genocide in the 20th Century.”

On 21 October 2012, The Globe and Mail reported:

“In the bush and scrub of central Namibia, the descendants of the surviving Herero live in squalid shacks and tiny plots of land. Next door, the descendants of German settlers still own vast properties of 20,000 hectares or more. It’s a contrast that infuriates many Herero, fuelling a new radicalism here.

This is how most of Namibians live

This is how most of Namibians live. (Click to enlarge.)

Every year the Herero hold solemn ceremonies to remember the first genocide of history’s bloodiest century, when German troops drove them into the desert to die, annihilating 80 per cent of their population through starvation, thirst, and slave labor in concentration camps. The Nama, a smaller ethnic group, lost half of their population from the same persecution.

New research suggests that the German racial genocide in Namibia from 1904 to 1908 was a significant influence on the Nazis in the Second World War. Many of the key elements of Nazi ideology – from racial science and eugenics, to the theory of Lebensraum (creating “living space” through colonization) – were promoted by German military veterans and scientists who had begun their careers in South-West Africa, now Namibia, during the genocide…”

The Namibian government is still negotiating the return (from Germany) of all skulls of the local people, which were used in German laboratories and by German scientists to prove the superiority of the white race. German colonialists decapitated Herero and Nama people, and at least 300 heads were transported to German laboratories for ‘scientific research’. Many were ‘discovered’ in the Medical History Museum of the Charite hospital in Berlin, and at Freiburg University.

for those Germans who died for 'Reich'

Their blood waters our freedom

Their blood waters our freedom. (Click to enlarge)

Bizarrely, German pre-Nazi/WWII monuments and insignias literally rub their shoulders alongside those great liberation struggle tributes.

Divisions are shocking: ideological, racial, social.

In Namibia, there is segregation on an enormous scale, everywhere.

While neighboring South Africa is moving rapidly away from racial segregation, introducing countless social policies, including free medical care, education and social housing, Namibia remains one of the most segregated countries on earth, with great private services for the rich, and almost nothing for the poor majority.

“Apartheid was even worse here than in South Africa”, I am told by my friend from the United Nations. “And until now… You go to Katutura, and you see who is living there, they are all local people there, all black. Katutura literally means ‘We have no place to stay’. 50% of the people in this city defecate in the open. Sanitation is totally disastrous. Then you go to Swakop city, on the shore, and it is like seeing Germany recreated in Africa. You also see, there, shops with Nazi keepsakes. Some Nazis, who escaped Europe, came to Windhoek, to Swakop and other towns. In Swakop, men march periodically, in replicas of Nazi uniforms.”

*

Katutura is where the black people were moved to, during apartheid.

My friend, a ‘colored’ Namibian, who fought for the independence of his own country and of Angola, drove me to that outrageous slum which seems to host a substantial amount of the capital’s population, with mostly no access to basic sanitation or electricity.

South African armored apartheid era train in Namibia

South African armored apartheid era train in Namibia. (Click to enlarge.)

He has also chosen to remain anonymous, as he has explained, in order to protect his lovely family. To speak up here, unlike in South Africa, which may, these days, be one of the freest and most outspoken places on earth, can be extremely dangerous. But he clarifies further:

“In Namibia, it is very rare for people who used to suffer, to speak about it publicly. In South Africa, everyone speaks. In Angola, everyone speaks… But not here.”

Then he continues:

“What we can see in Namibia is that many German people are still in control of big business. They are ruling the country. They have hunting farms and other huge estates and enterprises. Germans bring money to Namibia, but it stays with them, and it consolidates their power – it does not reach the majority. You cannot even imagine, how much local people working on their farms, are suffering. It is still like slavery. But it is all hushed up here.”

L1290786

Commemorating the people’s battles for independence. (Click to enlarge)

*

“Sprechen Sie Deutch?” A black Namibian man intercepts me, as I am walking down the Fidel Castro Street.

“I do, but I would rather not, here”, I explain.

“But why not?” He grins at me. “You know… It is not only them… Germans… I grew up; I was educated, in East Germany during our fight for independence. And my friend that you see over there – he was flown to Czechoslovakia and he went to school there. Communist countries did so much for us, for the Africans: Cuba, North Korea, Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia and East Germany. We are so grateful!”

“Yes”, I say. “But it is over, isn’t it? Czechoslovakia, East Germany… They joined the imperialists, the rulers. They exchanged ideals for iPads.”

“Yes”, he said. “But one day… who knows… things could be different, again.”

Yes, definitely, I think. But most likely not in Europe…

*

At the new and lavish National Museum in Windhoek, I salute the Namibian and foreign fighters against apartheid – those who struggled and died for freedom, and the independence of Africa.

Cuba and N Korea fighting for freedom of Namibia

Cuba and N Korea fighting for freedom of Namibia. (Click to enlarge.)

Then, I descended to the “Goethe Institute”, the German cultural center, a colonial building surrounded by barbed wire.

There, a local starlet is loudly rehearsing for something called ‘a night under the stars’, or something of that sentimental, over-sugary pop nature. These are basically evenings designed to bring together the pampered international crowd and those ‘feel-good-about-life’ local elites.

I ask the starlet, whether this institute is trying to address the most painful issues of the past and present, all connected to Germany, of course.

She is black but she speaks and behaves like a German. She gives me a huge and pre-fabricated smile:

“At Goethe we don’t want that… We are trying to get away from all this (meaning colonial and segregation issues). We are just trying to get Germans and Namibians together, you know…”

I later peek at those Namibians who are being brought together with the Germans. No Katutura here, naturally…

And for some reason, what came to my mind is a conversation I had, on the phone, many years ago, with one of the editors of the German magazine, Der Stern, after I offered him my findings and photos from Nazi Colonia Dignidad in Chile. He said: “Oh, Colonia Dignidad! Hahaha! Never again, ja?”

*

One evening I eat at Angolan/Portuguese restaurant in Windhoek, O Portuga; an institution known for its great food and mixed crowd. What an evening, what a place!

After dinner, I dive into German ‘Andy’s Bar’, a nearby place that was described to me as “An institution, which not even a black or a colored person from the embassies or the UN would dare to enter”.

The Beer is flat, but the conversation of the local crowd is extremely ‘sharp’. Patrons are freely giving black Namibians names of local farm animals. Their spite is open and sincere. I listen, I understand. Eventually I leave.

I catch a taxi, driven by a corpulent black man. The radio is blasting and I hear the socialist, anti-imperialist lyrics of ‘Ndilimani’, a brilliant local political band.

It is now well past midnight, and despite the warnings from all those ‘well-meaning Germans’ that I met in Windhoek, I feel much safer in this taxi than in Andy’s Bar and in so many other similar institutions.

“Is this country really governed by Marxist SWAPO?” I wonder aloud.

“No way”, the driver points back, towards the bar. “’They’ never left. ‘They’ are still controlling the country. The revolution is not over.”

I tell him that I am beginning to understand what drove Robert Mugabe mad and angry, in Zimbabwe. The driver nods. I push my seat back, and make it recline.

“It is all fucked up”, I say.

The driver thinks for a while, but then replies, using almost the same words as the man who spoke to me on Fidel Castro Street: “Yes, brother, yes! But one day… who knows… things could be different, again.”

*


ABOUT CORRESPONDENT ANDRE VLTCHEK

ANDRE VLTCHEK54674Andre Vltchek is a novelist, filmmaker and investigative journalist. He covered wars and conflicts in dozens of countries. The result is his latest book: “Fighting Against Western Imperialism”.  ‘Pluto’ published his discussion with Noam Chomsky: On Western Terrorism. His critically acclaimed political novel Point of No Return is re-edited and available. Oceania is his book on Western imperialism in the South Pacific. His provocative book about post-Suharto Indonesia and the market-fundamentalist model is called “Indonesia – The Archipelago of Fear”. His feature documentary, “Rwanda Gambit” is about Rwandan history and the plunder of DR Congo. After living for many years in Latin America and Oceania, Vltchek presently resides and works in East Asia and Africa. He can be reached through his website or his Twitter.




David Swanson: James Foley Is Not a War Ad

INTRODUCTION | WASHINGTONBLOG

James Foley: a lot more than a propaganda tripwire. (Click to enlarge)

James Foley: a lot more than a propaganda tripwire. (Click to enlarge)

 

[I]nteresting thoughts on war straight from James Foley, one of the reporters recently beheaded by ISIL / ISIS / Syrian rebels / AlQueda / CIA , or whatever the warmongering military-indusrial-MSM-PTB complex are calling them this week.

James Foley Is Not a War Ad

ISIS-foley1[T]o the extent that the U.S. public is newly, and probably momentarily, accepting of war — an extent that is wildly exaggerated, but still real — it is because of videos of beheadings of James Foley and Steven Sotloff.

When 9-11 victims were used as a justification to kill hundreds of times the number of people killed on 9-11, some of the victims’ relatives pushed back.

Now James Foley is pushing back from the grave.

Here is video of Foley (courtesy of DemocracyNow!) talking about the lies that are needed to launch wars, including the manipulation of people into thinking of foreigners as less than human.


James Foley on the Dehumanization of War: Acclaimed Filmmaker Haskell Wexler Shares 2012 Interview

http://publish.dvlabs.com/democracynow/ipod/dn2014-0912.mp4

 

Foley’s killers may have thought of him as less than human. He may not have viewed them the same way.

The video shows Foley in Chicago helping Haskell Wexler with his film Four Days in Chicago — a film about the last NATO protest before the recent one in Wales.  I was there in Chicago for the march and rally against NATO and war. And I’ve met Wexler who has tried unsuccessfully to find funding for a film version of my book War Is A Lie.

Watch Foley in the video discussing the limitations of embedded reporting, the power of veteran resistance, veterans he met at Occupy, the absence of a good justification for the wars, the dehumanization needed before people can be killed, the shallowness of media coverage — watch all of that and then try to imagine James Foley cheering like a weapons-maker or a Congress member for President Obama’s announcement of more war. Try to imagine Foley accepting the use of his killing as propaganda for more fighting.

You can’t do it. He’s not an ad for war any more than the WMDs were a justification for war. His absence as a war justification has been exposed even faster than the absence of the WMDs was.

While ISIS may have purchased Sotloff, if not Foley, from another group, when Foley’s mother sought to ransom him, the U.S. government repeatedly threatened her with prosecution. So, instead of Foley’s mother paying a relatively small amount and possibly saving her son, ISIS goes on getting its funding from oil sales and supporters in the Gulf and free weapons from, among elsewhere, the United States and its allies. And we’re going to collectively spend millions, probably billions, and likely trillions of dollars furthering the cycle of violence that Foley risked his life to expose.

The Coalition of the Willing is already crumbling. What if people in the United States were to watch thevideo of Foley when he was alive and speaking and laughing, not the one when he was a prop in a piece of propaganda almost certainly aimed at provoking the violence that Obama has just obligingly announced?

Foley said he believed his responsibility was to the truth. It didn’t set him free. Is it perhaps not too late for the rest of us?

 


CODA
We bet this comes as shocking news to you, since you did NOT hear it on CNN, MSNBC, or the networks. 

http://news.yahoo.com/james-foleys-mother-says-government-threatened-family-not-182735673.html