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  • BAUAW NEWSLETTER
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    Tuesday, November 16, 2004
     

    BAUAW NEWSLETTER-TUEDAY, NOV.15, 2004

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    1) Lynne Stewart Frame-Up Unravels

    2) For those in the Chicago Area or coming to the
    USLAW National Leadership Assembly there ---
    Challenging the militarization of our schools:
    A forum on the fight to save Senn High School
    Friday December 3
    6:00 pm
    UNITE HERE union hall
    333 S. Ashland
    Chicago
    The Chicago School Board and the U.S. Navy want to turn the
    North Side's Senn High School into a naval academy.

    3) Please come out this November 19-21 to Columbus, GA to
    close the School of the Americas.
    SOA Watch Updates and Actions
    Converge on Ft. Benning, GA: November 19-21!
    Together We Will Shut Down the School of Assassins!

    4) 'This one's faking he's dead'
    'He's dead now'
    Fallujah: Video shows US soldier killing wounded insurgent
    in cold blood
    By Andrew Buncombe in Washington
    16 November 2004
    http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/story.jsp?story=583322

    5) U.S. Marines Rally Round Iraq Probe Comrade
    By Michael Georgy
    FALLUJA, Iraq (Reuters)
    Tue Nov 16, 2004 09:29 AM ET
    http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=6828512&src=eD
    ialog/GetContent§ion=news

    6) U.S. Forces Launch Assault on Iraqi Rebels in Mosul
    By Maher al-Thanoon
    MOSUL, Iraq (Reuters)
    Tue Nov 16, 2004 09:37 AM ET
    http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=6828657&src=eD
    ialog/GetContent§ion=news

    7) CKUT Radio: U.S. Military War Crimes in Fallujah

    8) 800 Civilians Feared Dead in Fallujah
    Inter Press Service
    By: Dahr Jamail
    {http://www.dahrjamailiraq.com/hard_news/archives/hard_news/000121.php#more}

    9) A short history of trade unionism in the Iraqi oil industry
    August 24, 2004
    http://www.iraqitradeunions.org/archives/000071.html

    10) A City Lies in Ruins, Along with the Lives of the
    Wretched Survivors
    By Michael Georgy in Fallujah and Kim Sengupta
    Published on Monday, November 15, 2004 by the lndependent/UK
    http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/story.jsp?story=582915
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines04/1115-01.htm

    11) THE CIVILIAN DEATH TOLL
    By Harvey McGavin
    http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/story.jsp?story=582915
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines04/1115-01.htm

    12) GI SPECIAL 2#C22
    thomasfbarton@earthlink.net
    11.16.04
    Huge Increase In Badly Wounded Floods U.S. Military Hospital;
    419 Since Attack On Falluja Started

    13) 'Twas a Famous Rollover, Continued
    By Fred Feldman

    14) CONSPIRING TO COMMIT MURDER FOR PROFIT!
    In a message dated 11/16/04 9:22:58 AM, Jibasmil writes:
    Following is a pre-written message which I am lazy enough
    to use. The fact that this "study" has been delayed is, I think,
    due the use of the internet -- word of it got around very quickly
    and the EPA felt the heat. We need to keep that heat up so the
    #$%@&#* EPA kills it. -judy

    15) United for Peace and Justice
    Development Coordinator
    Job Announcement

    16) Why I fear for the dream of my life
    Commentary
    Abdul Bariatwan
    The Observer
    Sunday November 14, 2004
    http://observer.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,6903,1350959,00.html

    17) Producer Prices Jump on Higher Energy Costs
    By TERENCE NEILAN
    November 16, 2004
    http://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/16/business/16cnd-prices.html?hp&ex=11006676
    00&en=3a278a97f6a5790e&ei=5094&partner=homepage


    18) Presbyterian Church receives arson threat over Middle
    East policies
    From: "Justice Freedom"
    Date: Mon, 15 Nov 2004 21:08:17 -0800
    [From Wendy Campbell]
    http://www.lex18.com/global/story.asp?s=2561665&ClientType=Printable

    19) S0CIALIST CUBA--THE HOPE OF THE PLANET
    To: ufpj-disc@yahoogroups.com
    By Dave Silver
    Tue, 16 Nov 2004 16:55:02 -0500

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    1) Lynne Stewart Frame-Up Unravels

    Dear Friends,

    Here's an important article on the Lynne Stewart case. Please help
    distribute it widely.

    In solidarity,

    Jeff Mackler

    Lynne Stewart Frame-Up Unravels
    by Jeff Mackler

    Almost 17 weeks after some dozen federal government prosecutors had begun
    their marathon presentation charging progressive New York attorney Lynne
    Stewart with aiding and abetting terrorism, Stewart finally took the
    witness stand in her own defense.

    On Oct. 25, before a packed courtroom of her supporters and a myriad of
    attorneys who were similarly outraged at Stewart's persecution-ordered by
    U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft-her defense counsel, Michael Tigar,
    methodically queried Stewart to expose the fraud of the "evidence" against
    her. In four days, shortened by technical and procedural delays, Stewart
    effectively tore apart and reduced to ridicule every aspect of the
    government's frame-up.

    The multi-racial jury panel of eight women and four men seemed transfixed,
    paying close attention as Stewart's responses to each key government
    exhibit demonstrated the innocence of her actions.
    There is no doubt this was to be a show trial designed to buttress the
    government's contention that Americans face real terrorist threats, not the
    least of which come from life-long radicals like Stewart, who has been a
    partisan in the struggle for social justice since her youth.

    Stewart is being tried in the very room in the Manhattan Federal District
    Court House where Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were railroaded to the
    electric chair in 1953 during the witch-hunt era of Joseph McCarthy and his
    governmental and judicial associates. Much as the McCarthyites made a
    mockery of the U.S. Constitution by executing the Rosenbergs, so their
    modern-day incarnations seek Stewart's life. If convicted of the "aiding
    and abetting terrorism" charges against her, Stewart, 65, faces 45 years in
    prison.

    Prosecutors spent more than four months presenting thousands of pages of
    Middle Eastern and U.S. press clippings, wiretapped phone calls,
    intercepted e-mails, and secret government video/audio recordings of
    Stewart's confidential jailhouse meetings with her 1995 client, Sheik Abdel
    Omar Rahman. Rahman was convicted on frame-up charges of conspiracy to blow
    up historic landmarks in New York City.

    The government's aim in the present trial is to postulate an intricate
    scenario in which Stewart and her co-defendants-professional Arabic
    translator, Mohamed Yousry and post office employee/paralegal, Ahmed Abdel
    Sattar-had been involved in a vast terrorist conspiracy.
    Press clippings refuted as evidence

    A central part of the prosecution's case consisted in presenting a
    seemingly never-ending series of Arabic and English-language press
    clippings on terrorist activities in several countries. The clippings had
    been confiscated from Stewart's office as well as from the home of Yousry.
    This was designed to demonstrate that Yousry's home and Stewart's law
    office were repositories of vast tombs of material that could only be of
    interest to terrorists.

    The procedural rules of law exclude the use of such press clippings. They
    are legally considered hearsay since the views expressed or the facts
    presented in them represent only those of the author and cannot be taken by
    the jury as fact.

    Early in the trial, however, at the government's request, presiding Judge
    John Koeltl approved an exception to the hearsay rule allowing introduction
    of the clippings, accompanied with instructions to the jury that the
    material was to be considered not in regard to factual accuracy but only to
    demonstrate "the state of mind" of the defendants. And what could be the
    "state of mind," the government implied, of persons who collect press
    clippings on terrorism, other than committing terrorist acts?

    With this ruling, the jury was subjected to prosecution attorneys' reading,
    line by line, countless press articles on terrorist activities into the
    official record. The fact that none of these connected any of the
    defendants to any of these activities, or any other terrorist acts, was
    deemed irrelevant.
    The government's verbal presentation of each article was accompanied by its
    simultaneous visual presentation on a huge courtroom movie-size screen and
    further elucidated with the aid of individual monitors placed in the jury
    box itself.

    In 16 weeks, with the exception of the testimony of a government bureaucrat
    who attested to his drafting government documents mailed to Stewart, not a
    single witness was produced to prove the government's charges.

    When defense attorney Tigar opened his questioning, holding up one of the
    government's press clippings, he blithely asked Stewart if this clipping
    actually came from her office. "Yes," Stewart responded.
    "And where did you get this press clipping?" Tigar continued. "From the
    U.S. government," Steward answered. Stewart explained that many of the
    press clippings in her alleged terrorist file box had been sent to her
    office by government prosecutors.

    This was a routine procedure employed as part of the 1995 trial
    proceedings, in which Stewart served as the chief counsel for Sheik Rahman,
    whom the U.S. government tried and convicted as a terrorist conspirator.
    Stewart explained that press clippings that the government intended to
    introduce as evidence were, in effect, required to be sent to her office.

    Additionally, Stewart and her staff made it a practice, in the course of
    the defense of their client, to collect such press clippings, as was her
    longstanding practice when handling such cases. Thus, in the course of a
    minute's testimony, the government's case began to unravel.

    What about the collection of press clippings and other material directly
    related to the Egyptian "Islamic Group" (which the U.S. government had
    designated a terrorist organization) that were found in the home of
    co-defendant Yousry?

    Yousry told this writer and will testify in early November that in addition
    to his professional work as a translator, he was a Ph.D candidate at a New
    York City university preparing his doctoral dissertation on the very same
    Islamic Group. At the suggestion of his doctoral adviser, who is also
    expected to testify on Yousry's behalf along with a dozen other defense
    witnesses, Yousry had long ago begun work on this subject. But his innocent
    collection of material for his thesis was turned by the government into
    "proof" of his engagement in criminal acts.
    "To fight zealously for our clients"

    The government seeks to associate the fact that Stewart represented Sheik
    Rahman as legal counsel with her having agreement with Rahman's ideas.
    Stewart, a radical political activist, supporter of Mumia Abu-Jamal, and
    opponent of the U.S. war in Iraq, has been legal counsel to a host of
    clients from left-wing socialists to members of the Mafia. She told the
    jury in response to Tigar's inquiry about her view of Rahman's ideas, "I'm
    not in the habit of fundamentalism."

    "We are bound to accept the cases of even those who are hated by the
    public," Stewart asserted. "We are abjured by the ethical system to fight
    as hard and as vigorously and as zealously as we possibly can for our
    clients." Stewart originally became involved in the Rahman case at the
    behest of former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark and Abdeen Jabarra,
    former head of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee. In the
    course of her testimony Stewart maintained that despite the government's
    attainment of a "guilty" verdict in the 1995 Rahman "terrorist conspiracy"
    trial, she still believed in her client's innocence.

    Defense attorney Tigar, turning the tables on the government's use of
    hearsay material, introduced into evidence a Wall Street Journal article
    authored by a prominent staffwriter who had observed Rahman's trial. The
    article held in essence that the government's prosecution of Rahman was
    without foundation. It concluded that Rahman was likely innocent of the
    charges against him.
    Stewart's defense was bolstered by an honest representation of her work as
    an attorney who provided her legal services to a blind Egyptian cleric with
    fundamentalist ideas opposing the U.S.-backed Egyptian dictatorship.

    Stewart's attention then turned to a critical government charge that she
    consciously violated a government Special Administrative Measure (SAM) that
    prohibited her from relaying messages or otherwise allowing her client to
    communicate with terrorist groups. The government asserts that Stewart's
    violation of this order took the form of her releasing to Reuters News
    Service a press statement from Rahman that announced his withdrawal of
    support to a cease-fire or "peace initiative" that had been in effect in
    Egypt for several years. The peace initiative was declared by the Islamic
    Group in the hope of reaching a rapprochement with the government of
    President Hosni Mubarak.

    The Mubarak regime is renowned for murder and incarceration of its
    political opponents.
    In the course of her defense Stewart introduced a key document, a decision
    of a U.S. immigration judge who had rejected a government effort to deport
    one of Rahman's associates to Egypt. The judge's decision was based on his
    conclusion that, despite the Egyptian defendant's illegal entry into the
    U.S., he would be granted political asylum based on the Egyptian
    government's lack of any democratic structures. In short, the judge ruled,
    Rahman would be punished, if not murdered, for his political opposition to
    the Mubarak regime.

    Stewart's 1995 client, Abdel Omar Rahman, is a leading Islamic
    fundamentalist scholar and Ph.D, who was perhaps the leading critic of the
    Egyptian government. The indictment and charges against Stewart focused on
    the assertion that her release of Rahman's statement resulted in a series
    of terrorist acts that took the lives of scores of innocent Egyptians. But
    Stewart's testimony proved these charges were totally without foundation.

    Stewart said that Rahman's 2000 press statement, when Stewart continued to
    represent him, did not result in a single act of terror. To the contrary,
    she told the jury, the Islamic Group virtually ignored Rahman's statement
    and formally decided to maintain the cease fire or "peace initiative."

    Stewart insisted that she had never violated any government SAM. Rather,
    her interpretation of the SAM was that it was not designed to prevent her
    from fully representing her client in accord with her sworn oath as an
    attorney. This, she said, required her to make public Rahman's views.

    Attorney Tigar proceeded to demonstrate that the government's response to
    the press release was merely to state its disagreement with Stewart's
    action and to bar her from further visits to Sheik Rahman until such time
    as she agreed to sign an amended SAM. After months of negotiations with
    government officials, a new SAM was indeed drafted by the government, and,
    after being amended following negotiations with Stewart's attorney whom she
    had hired as an advisor on this matter, signed by Stewart.

    There were no government reprisals until years later, when the new U.S.
    attorney general, John Ashcroft, appearing on the David Letterman
    television talk show, announced his intention to prosecute Lynne Stewart as
    a terrorist.

    Stewart concluded her Oct. 28 testimony by responding to a question posed
    by her attorney. "Ms. Stewart, looking back at the events of May and June
    and July and August of 2000, if you had to do it over again, would you do
    it the same way?"

    "Sitting here today, Mr. Tigar," Stewart responded, with uncontrolled tears
    coming to her eyes, "it's a very difficult question. I am diminished by the
    loss of my clientele. My family has suffered tremendously. I don't know if
    I would do it again."

    Stewart was interrupted by an objection from the prosecution that was
    overruled by Judge Koeltl. This was followed by another question from
    attorney Tigar, "As you sit there today, Ms. Stewart, do you believe that
    you violated any legal duty that you owed to the United States of America?"
    Regaining her composure, Stewart first responded to Tigar's initial
    question, "I'd like to think I would do it again because it was a duty owed
    to a client. I do not believe I ever violated anything, any command, any
    restriction by the United States of America."

    Stewart is expected to complete her testimony by early November. This will
    be followed by an expected period of three to four weeks when her
    co-defendants will present their cases. Following closing remarks by both
    sides, the case will go to the jury. A verdict is expected in late
    December. I'm betting on Lynne Stewart.

    Originally published in Socialist Action newspaper, November 2004
    www.socialistaction.org

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    2) For those in the Chicago Area or coming to the
    USLAW National Leadership Assembly there ---
    Challenging the militarization of our schools:
    A forum on the fight to save Senn High School
    Friday December 3
    6:00 pm
    UNITE HERE union hall
    333 S. Ashland
    Chicago
    The Chicago School Board and the U.S. Navy want to turn the
    North Side's Senn High School into a naval academy.

    SPEAKERS
    JESSE SHARKEY, Chicago Teachers Union delegate, Senn High School

    Students from Senn High School

    STACEY PAETH, mother of a soldier wounded in Iraq,
    Military Families Speak Out

    BILL DAVIS, national coordinator, Vietnam Veterans Against the War;
    president, International Association of Machinists Local 701*

    CHUCK HUTCHCRAFT, Chicago area coordinator, American
    Friends Service Committee

    *organization for identification only

    The Chicago School Board and the U.S. Navy want to turn the
    North Side's Senn High School into a naval academy.

    This proposal has met strong resistance from the Senn student
    body-one of the most ethnically diverse in the city-as well
    as the surrounding Rogers Park community.

    The Navy's attempted takeover of Senn highlights the growing
    militarization of our schools. For example, the federal No Child
    Left Behind act has required high school enrollment lists to be
    handed over to U.S. military recruiters.

    Come to this important meeting to find out how teachers, union
    members, community activists and antiwar activists are fighting back.

    To endorse or for more information, send a message to
    Chicago Labor Against the War
    chi_labor_antiwar@yahoo.com
    U.S. Labor Against War (USLAW)
    www.uslaboragainstwar.org
    info@uslaboragainstwar.org
    PMB 153
    1718 "M" Street, NW
    Washington, D.C. 20036
    Gene Bruskin and Bob Muehlenkamp, Co-convenors Amy Newell,
    National Organizer Michael Eisenscher, Organizer & Web
    Coordinator Adrienne Nicosia, Administrative Staff

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    3) Please come out this November 19-21 to Columbus, GA to
    close the School of the Americas.
    SOA Watch Updates and Actions
    Converge on Ft. Benning, GA: November 19-21!
    Together We Will Shut Down the School of Assassins!


    On November 20th and 21st, join Susan Sarandon, Martin Sheen;
    Carlos Mauricio and Neris Gonzales, torture survivors and plaintiffs
    in the successful lawsuit against Salvadoran generals now living in
    the US; Betita Martinez, long time Chicana activist and historian;
    Ruby Sales, prominent civil rights activist and native of Columbus,
    Georgia; Bob King, vice president of the United Auto Workers; Bishop
    Gabino Zavala, Bishop President of Pax Christi USA, Kathy Kelly,
    Nobel Peace Prize nominee and founder of Voices in the Wilderness;
    Sr. Helen Prejean, author of Dead Man Walking, grassroots activists
    from Mexico, labor leaders from Colombia and many more dynamic
    speakers gathered on stage in front of the main gates of
    Fort Benning, Georgia.

    Join, also, rousing musicians from around the country, including
    many of the long-time musicians that have been an essential part
    of our November presence: Amy Ray of the Indigo Girls, Charlie
    King and Karen Brandow, Pat Humphries and Sandy Opatow,
    Francisco Herrera, Jon Fromer, David Rovics, Dave Lippman and
    Llajtasuyo. Newcomers to the stage this year include Kim and
    Reggie Harris, Utah Phillips and Chicago-based ska/reggae band
    Los Vicios de Papá.

    SOA Watch Victory Against Metal Detectors and Illegal Searches:
    The Eleventh Circuit Court Upholds the Constitution!

    On Friday, October 15, the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals
    issued a groundbreaking ruling upholding the constitutional
    rights of free speech, freedom of assembly and freedom from
    unlawful search and seizure.

    In a unanimous decision, the court ruled that the search policy
    instituted by the Columbus City Police before the November 2002
    vigil violates the First and Fourth Amendments to the Constitution
    and that protesters may not be required to pass through metal
    detectors to enter the rally site this November.

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    4) 'This one's faking he's dead'
    'He's dead now'
    Fallujah: Video shows US soldier killing wounded insurgent
    in cold blood
    By Andrew Buncombe in Washington
    16 November 2004
    http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/story.jsp?story=583322

    The US Marine Corps launched an investigation into possible war
    crimes last night after video footage taken inside a mosque in
    Fallujah apparently showed a Marine shooting dead an unarmed
    Iraqi insurgent who had been taken prisoner.

    The footage showed several Marines with a group of prisoners who
    were either lying on the floor or propped against a wall of the bombed
    -out building. One Marine can be heard declaring that one of the
    prisoners was faking his injuries.

    "He's fucking faking he's dead. He faking he's fucking dead," says
    the Marine. At that point a clatter of gunfire can be heard as one of
    the Marines shoots the prisoner. Another voice can then be heard
    saying: "He's dead now."

    The footage was obtained by a team from the American NBC network
    that was embedded with the Marine Corps during last week's
    seven-day battle to capture the city of Fallujah, west of Baghdad,
    which military commanders say has been a focus of Iraqi resistance.
    The film was then pooled and made available to other media.

    On the footage that was broadcast last night, NBC correspondent
    Kevin Sites said that the five wounded Iraqi fighters had been left
    in the mosque after Marines had fought their way into that part of
    the city on Friday and Saturday. Ten other Iraqis had been killed in
    the battle for the mosque. Instead of being passed to the rear lines
    for treatment the wounded Iraqis were left in the mosque until
    a second group of Marines entered the building on Saturday, following
    reports that the building may have been reoccupied. Sites said that
    at this point one of the five Iraqis was dead and that three of the
    others appeared to be close to death.

    In his report accompanying the images, Sites said that one of the
    Marines noticed that one of the wounded men was still breathing
    before shouting that he was "faking it".

    "The Marine then raises his rifle and fires into the man's head. The
    pictures are too graphic for us to broadcast," said Sites. He added:
    "The prisoner did not appear to be armed or threatening in any way".
    Major Doug Powell, a spokesman for the Marine Corps in Washington,
    told The Independent : "It's being investigated - I can't say much more
    than that. It's being investigated for possible law of war violations.
    A naval criminal investigation team is looking into it."

    The footage - some of the first to show the situation inside Fallujah
    and the bloody nature of the street-by-street battle that has taken
    place there - is the latest to emerge from Iraq to contain possible
    evidence of war crimes perpetrated by the US military.

    Other footage has shown troops shooting wounded fighters lying
    in open ground as well as attacks on Iraqis - some said to be
    civilians - by US aircraft and helicopters. This latest footage is
    among the most shocking given that it apparently shows without
    obstruction the Marine shooting the prisoner in the head at close
    range.

    Kathy Kelly, a spokeswoman for the peace group Voices in the
    Wilderness, said last night that such images would "recruit more
    terrorists faster than they are being killed".

    "I don't think the US is paying much attention to the Geneva
    Conventions any more - that is the problem. This must be
    investigated," she said.

    NBC said in its report that the Marine who had shot the insurgent
    had apparently been shot in the face the day before and that one
    of his comrades had been killed the previous day by a booby-trap
    bomb that had been placed on the body of a dead insurgent. He
    has been withdrawn from the field and his unit removed from the
    front lines, officials said.

    Military experts said last night that rules of engagement prevented
    US troops from shooting an enemy where there was no threat
    being posed.

    Yesterday, the Marines said they had taken more than 1,000 prisoners
    in the battle for Fallujah. Colonel Michael Regner, operations officer
    for the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force at Fallujah, said at least 1,052
    prisoners had been captured in the battle. No more than about two
    dozen of them were "foreign fighters", he said.

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    5) U.S. Marines Rally Round Iraq Probe Comrade
    By Michael Georgy
    FALLUJA, Iraq (Reuters)
    Tue Nov 16, 2004 09:29 AM ET
    http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=6828512&src=eD
    ialog/GetContent§ion=news

    FALLUJA, Iraq (Reuters) - U.S. Marines rallied round a comrade
    under investigation for killing a wounded Iraqi during the offensive
    in Falluja, saying he was probably under combat stress in unpredictable,
    hair-trigger circumstances.

    Marines interviewed on Tuesday said they didn't see the shooting as
    a scandal, rather the act of a comrade who faced intense pressure
    during the effort to quell the insurgency in the city.

    "I can see why he would do it. He was probably running around
    being shot at for days on end in Falluja. There should be an
    investigation but they should look into the circumstances," said
    Lance Corporal Christopher Hanson.

    "I would have shot the insurgent too. Two shots to the head," said
    Sergeant Nicholas Graham, 24, of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. "You
    can't trust these people. He should not be investigated. He did
    nothing wrong."

    The military command launched an investigation after video
    footage showed a U.S. Marine shooting a wounded and unarmed man
    in a mosque in the city on Saturday. The man was one of five
    wounded and left in the mosque after Marines fought their way
    through the area.

    A pool report by NBC correspondent Kevin Sites said the
    mosque had been used by insurgents to attack U.S. forces, who
    stormed it, killing 10 militants and wounding the five. Sites
    said the wounded had been left for others to pick up.

    A second group of Marines entered the mosque on Saturday
    after reports it had been reoccupied. Footage from the embedded
    television crew showed the five still in the mosque, although
    several appeared to be close to death, Sites said.

    He said a Marine noticed one prisoner was still breathing.

    A Marine can be heard saying on the pool footage provided
    to Reuters Television: "He's fucking faking he's dead."

    "The Marine then raises his rifle and fires into the man's
    head," Sites said.

    NBC said the Marine, who had reportedly been shot in the
    face himself the previous day, said immediately after the
    shooting: "Well, he's dead now."

    THOROUGH PROBE PROMISED

    The Marine commander in Falluja, Lieutenant General John
    Sattler, said his men followed the law of conflict and held
    themselves to a high standard of accountability.

    "The facts of this case will be thoroughly pursued to make
    an informed decision and to protect the rights of all persons
    involved," he said.

    Marines have repeatedly described the rebels they fought
    against in Falluja as ruthless fighters who didn't play by the
    rules. They say the investigation is politically motivated.

    "It's all political. This Marine has been under attack for
    days. It has nothing to do with what he did," said Corporal
    Keith Hoy, 23.

    Rights group Amnesty International said on Monday both
    sides in the Falluja fighting had broken the rules of war
    governing the protection of civilians and wounded combatants.

    Gunnery Sergeant Christopher Garza, 30, favored an
    investigation but like other Marines said the Pentagon should
    weigh its decision carefully.

    "He should have captured him. Maybe the insurgent had some
    valuable information. There may have been mitigating
    circumstances. Maybe his two buddies died in Falluja," he said.

    Sites said: "I have witnessed the Marines behaving as a
    disciplined and professional force throughout this offensive.
    In this particular case, it certainly was a confusing situation
    to say the least."

    The U.S. military has been embarrassed by scandals in Iraq,
    most prominently the Abu Ghraib affair in which at least eight
    U.S. soldiers have been tried or face courts-martial over the
    abuse of prisoners at the jail outside Baghdad.

    There have also been several cases in which soldiers have
    been charged with wrongfully killing Iraqis during operations.

    (c) Copyright Reuters 2004

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    6) U.S. Forces Launch Assault on Iraqi Rebels in Mosul
    By Maher al-Thanoon
    MOSUL, Iraq (Reuters)
    Tue Nov 16, 2004 09:37 AM ET
    http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=6828657&src=eD
    ialog/GetContent§ion=news

    MOSUL, Iraq (Reuters) - U.S. and Iraqi forces launched an
    offensive in Mosul on Tuesday to retake control of rebel-held
    areas after a week of anarchy with insurgents rampaging through
    Iraq's third largest city.

    "Offensive operations have begun on the western side of the
    river to clear out final pockets of insurgent fighting," said
    Captain Angela Bowman, spokeswoman for U.S. forces in the
    north.

    "It's a significant operation to secure police stations in
    the area and make sure they can be put to use again."

    Violence in Mosul was part of a surge in unrest in Sunni
    areas of Iraq that coincided with a major U.S. assault on the
    rebel bastion of Falluja. The U.S. military says it has taken
    control of Falluja, but scattered resistance remains.

    On Tuesday morning a Marine was killed in a suicide car
    bomb attack in the south of Falluja, a Marine officer told
    Reuters. At least 39 U.S. troops have been killed since the
    start of the Falluja offensive eight days ago.

    U.S. and Iraqi forces had met little rebel resistance in
    the early stages of the Mosul operation but said a 4 p.m. to 6
    a.m. (8 a.m.- 10 p.m. EST) curfew would remain in place and
    that the five bridges over the Tigris in the city were closed,
    Bowman said.

    Last week scores of guerrillas seized control of parts of
    the city, attacking police stations, looting them of weapons
    and flak jackets and setting them ablaze. Nine of 33 police
    stations were overrun, and some were briefly held by
    insurgents.

    A few hundred U.S. troops, backed by Iraqi national guards
    and a unit of police special commandos were involved in
    Tuesday's operation, which would continue until all police
    stations were secure and insurgents defeated, Bowman said.

    A U.S. brigade, around 5,000 soldiers, and a brigade of Iraqi
    national guards had been assigned to the operation, but
    only a fraction of those assets were being used, she said.

    CONTROVERSY OVER KILLING

    Iraq's government has insisted that civilian casualties in
    Falluja have been minimal, and says reports of a humanitarian
    crisis in the city have been exaggerated.

    But controversy over the Falluja offensive has been fueled
    by video footage showing a U.S. Marine shooting a wounded and
    unarmed Iraqi in a mosque in the city on Saturday.

    The U.S. military says it is investigating the killing.

    "This investigation commenced immediately when allegations
    were brought forward and is continuing," the 1st Marine
    Division said in a statement on Tuesday.

    "The purpose of this investigation is to determine whether
    the Marine acted in self-defense, violated military law or
    failed to comply with the Law of Armed Conflict."

    The Iraqi was one of five wounded left in the mosque after
    Marines fought their way through the area on Friday and
    Saturday. A pool report by NBC correspondent Kevin Sites said
    the mosque had been used by insurgents to attack U.S. forces,
    who stormed it, killing 10 militants and wounding the five.

    A second group of Marines entered the mosque on Saturday
    after reports it had been reoccupied. Footage from the embedded
    television crew showed the five still in the mosque, although
    several appeared to be already close to death, Sites said.

    He said a Marine noticed one prisoner was still breathing.
    "The Marine then raises his rifle and fires into the man's
    head. The pictures are too graphic for us to broadcast," Sites
    said.

    Rights group Amnesty International said on Monday that both
    sides in the Falluja fighting had broken the rules governing
    the rules of war protecting civilians and wounded combatants.

    NO FALLUJA CRISIS, GOVERNMENT SAYS

    Iraq's government has dismissed reports that civilians in
    Falluja are desperately short of supplies and lacked adequate
    medical care. Most civilians were reported to have fled the
    city ahead of the start of the offensive last week.

    "The Iraqi government strongly rejects suggestions from
    some sources that there are shortages of supplies in Falluja,"
    a statement from Prime Minister Iyad Allawi's office said.

    A Health Ministry team had visited the city and Falluja
    hospital, seized by U.S. and Iraqi forces just before the
    assault began eight days ago, and found no shortages, the
    statement said, adding:

    "They have confirmed that they found no citizens in need of
    food or water. It is now clear there are very few citizens in
    Falluja. Most have already fled from the terrorists."

    The Falluja offensive sparked a surge in unrest in other
    rebel strongholds. In Baquba, northeast of Baghdad, five
    policemen and 26 guerrillas were killed in fighting on Monday.

    U.S. troops were also fighting guerrillas on Tuesday in the
    oil refining town of Baiji, witnesses said. They said
    guerrillas had taken to the streets and were fighting gun
    battles with American and Iraqi forces.

    Insurgents killed a Turkish truck driver in the town in a
    rocket attack on his truck, police said. Dozens of drivers have
    been killed on the perilous roads in the area over the last few
    months, with insurgents repeatedly targeting convoys.

    (Additional reporting by Lin Noueihed and Luke Baker in
    Baghdad and Haider Hamza in Falluja)

    (c) Copyright Reuters 2004

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    7) CKUT Radio: U.S. Military War Crimes in Fallujah

    Listen to a live report on the current military siege of Fallujah, from
    Dahr Jamail an independent journalist, currently based in Baghdad Iraq.
    According to a Red Cross official in Iraq, at least 800 civilians have
    been killed during the U.S. military siege of Fallujah, which has
    destroyed large areas of the city and inflicted a humanitarian disaster.

    This live report provides insight and context into the current siege of
    Fallujah, while questions the distinction between "insurgents" and
    "civilians" killed in Fallujah, created by official U.S. military
    statements and widely reported on major North American media networks.

    To listen / download the report visit:
    http://radio.indymedia.org/news/2004/11/2909.php

    To read Dahr Jamail's reports from Iraq visit:
    http://www.dahrjamailiraq.com

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    8) 800 Civilians Feared Dead in Fallujah
    Inter Press Service
    By: Dahr Jamail
    {http://www.dahrjamailiraq.com/hard_news/archives/hard_news/000121.php#more}

    BAGHDAD, Nov 16 (IPS) - At least 800 civilians have been killed during the
    U.S. military siege of Fallujah, a Red Cross official estimates.

    Speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of U.S. military reprisal, a
    high-ranking official with the Red Cross in Baghdad told IPS that "at
    least 800 civilians" have been killed in Fallujah so far.

    His estimate is based on reports from Red Crescent aid workers stationed
    around the embattled city, from residents within the city and from
    refugees, he said.

    "Several of our Red Cross workers have just returned from Fallujah since
    the Americans won't let them into the city," he said. "And they said the
    people they are tending to in the refugee camps set up in the desert
    outside the city are telling horrible stories of suffering and death
    inside Fallujah."

    The official said that both Red Cross and Iraqi Red Crescent relief teams
    had asked the U.S. military in Fallujah to take in medical supplies to
    people trapped in the city, but their repeated requests had been turned
    down.

    A convoy of relief supplies from both relief organisations continues to
    wait on the outskirts of the city for military permission to enter. They
    have appealed to the United Nations to intervene on their behalf.

    "The Americans close their ears, and that is it," the Red Cross official
    said. "They won't even let us take supplies into Fallujah General
    Hospital."

    The official estimated that at least 50,000 residents remain trapped
    within the city. They were too poor to leave, lacked friends or family
    outside the city and therefore had nowhere to go, or they simply had not
    had enough time to escape before the siege began, he said.

    Aid workers in his organisation have reported that houses of civilians in
    Kharma, a small city near Fallujah, had been bombed by U.S. warplanes. In
    one instance a family of five was killed just two days ago, they reported.

    "I don't know why the American leaders did not approach the Red Cross and
    ask us to deal with the families properly before the attacking began,"
    said a Red Cross aid worker, who also spoke on condition of anonymity.

    "Suddenly they attacked and people were stuck with no help, no medicine,
    no food, no supplies," he said. "So those who could, ran for the desert
    while the rest were trapped in the city."

    If the U.S. forces would call a temporary cease-fire "we could get our
    trucks in and get the civilians left in Fallujah who need medical care, we
    could get them out," he said.

    Mosques have organised massive collections of food and relief supplies for
    Fallujah residents as they did last April when the city was under attack,
    but these supplies have not been allowed into the city either.

    The Red Cross official said they had received several reports from
    refugees that the military had dropped cluster bombs in Fallujah, and used
    a phosphorous weapon that caused severe burns.

    The U.S. military claims to have killed 1,200 "insurgents" in Fallujah.
    Abdel Khader Janabi, a resistance leader from the city has said that only
    about 100 among them were fighters.

    "Both of them are lying," the Red Cross official said. While they agree on
    the 1,200 number, they are both lying about the number of dead fighters."
    He added that "our estimate of 800 civilians is likely to be too low."

    The situation within Fallujah is grim, he said. If help does not reach
    people soon, "the children who are trapped will most likely die."

    He said the Ministry of Health in the U.S.-backed interim Iraqi government
    had stopped supplying hospitals and clinics in Fallujah two months before
    the current siege.

    "The hospitals do not even have aspirin," he said. "This shows, in my
    opinion, that they've had a plan to attack for a long time and were trying
    to weaken the people."

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    9) A short history of trade unionism in the Iraqi oil industry
    August 24, 2004
    http://www.iraqitradeunions.org/archives/000071.html


    The history of trade unionism in the Iraqi oil industry began in
    the 1930s, when union committees were formed in Baghdad,
    Basra and Kirkuk.

    In 1930, about 1600 workers were employed by the oil companies,
    but improvements in production, the discoveries of new oil wells and
    increase in exports meant that this soared very quickly to over 10,000
    in 1957 and 48, 000 by 1975.

    Oil union committees were formed and fought for workers' rights across
    Iraq. The oil union at the Kirkuk plant organized the first strike on July
    1946, but the government brutally suppressed the strike and 15 strikers
    were martyred.

    The state became increasingly dependent on oil revenue during the
    1940s and 50s. This increased workers' awareness of importance of
    trade unionism. New and determined leaders emerged through the
    struggle for workers' democratic rights and membership of trade
    unions also expanded. By 1969 18,000 members were part of 9 oil
    workers branches but over the next two years this dropped to 16,000
    in 8 branches due to political and economic instability.

    By 1973 after the nationalisation of the oil industry, increased
    efficiency and the significant jump in oil prices led to huge increases
    in the workforce and union membership rose to 47,870.

    It was in this context of mass unionisation of the lucrative oil industry
    that Saddam's 1987 anti union Decrees (numbers 150 and 52) banned
    public sector workers from joining or forming unions. These decrees
    halved the number of unions from 12 to 6.

    The Iraqi labour movement received a severe blow from Saddam's
    fascist anti-union laws and state repression. A campaign of repression,
    imprisonment and execution was carried out by Saddam's dictatorial
    regime against oil workers. Many disappeared without trace.

    But trade unionism in Iraq had deeper roots, which Saddam's brutal
    regime could not manage to eradicate completely. A clandestine trade
    union movement was formed. The Workers Democratic Trade Union
    Movement (WDTUM) began organizing secretly in small trade union
    groupings. But despite severe state repression, its leaders and activists
    fought in defence of working people's legitimate rights to union
    representation.

    After the fall of Saddam's hated regime, many trade union activists
    of different political persuasions, including oil worker activists,
    initiated the rebuilding of Iraqi unions on a democratic and
    pluralistic basis.

    On 16 May 2003 the oil workers established their Oil and Gas Union
    in an open meeting held at the Al Dora oil refinery in Baghdad and
    a preparatory committee was established.

    Since then 18 oil union committees have been formed in Baghdad.
    Many tens of oil committees are also formed in Basra and Kirkuk.

    Membership of the union runs into tens of thousands and the Oil
    and Gas Union is affiliated to the Iraqi Federation of Trade Union
    (IFTU).

    Iraqi Oil workers like the rest of Iraqi working people are struggling
    in the most difficult and complicated circumstances. They are
    struggling to rebuild the infrastructure of the oil industry which
    was destroyed as a result of wars, foreign invasion and occupation.
    They are struggling along side other Iraqis for the return of full
    Iraqi sovereignty.

    Oil workers also struggle to defend their rights for decent job and
    better pay. Wages are low and working conditions are dangerous.
    Iraq has no labour code that guarantees and protects working people's
    rights. Oil workers have been subjected to waves of bombing and
    terrorist acts by local and foreign extremists which have killed
    many oil workers.

    The IFTU and the Oil and Gas Union back policies to ease oil workers
    suffering, to improve wages and working conditions.

    Oil workers along side other worker resist privatisation in the public
    sector and especially in the oil sector. The Oil and Gas Union stated
    clearly that oil must remain a property in the hands of Iraqi people.
    Multinational companies should not be allowed to reap easy profits
    at the cost of well-being of Iraqis.

    Due the high level of unemployment not least of oil workers, the Oil
    and Gas Union strongly oppose the importation of foreign workers,
    whilst thousands of skilled Iraqis have no job. Jobs should go first
    to Iraqi workers.


    The Oil and Gas Union is working to strengthen its cooperation and
    friendship with energy trade union centres around the world and
    seeking their support and solidarity to enable the union better to
    defend its members' rights.

    Iraqi Oil and Gas Union
    Baghdad
    21 August 2004

    U.S. Labor Against War (USLAW)
    www.uslaboragainstwar.org
    info@uslaboragainstwar.org
    PMB 153
    1718 "M" Street, NW
    Washington, D.C. 20036
    Gene Bruskin and Bob Muehlenkamp, Co-convenors Amy Newell,
    National Organizer Michael Eisenscher, Organizer & Web
    Coordinator Adrienne Nicosia, Administrative Staff

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    10) A City Lies in Ruins, Along with the Lives of the
    Wretched Survivors
    By Michael Georgy in Fallujah and Kim Sengupta
    Published on Monday, November 15, 2004 by the lndependent/UK
    http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/story.jsp?story=582915
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines04/1115-01.htm


    After six days of intense combat against the Fallujah insurgents,
    US warplanes, tanks and mortars have left a shattered landscape
    of gutted buildings, crushed cars and charred bodies.

    A drive through the city revealed a picture of utter destruction, with
    concrete houses flattened, mosques in ruins, telegraph poles down,
    power and phone lines hanging slack and rubble and human remains
    littering the empty streets. The north-west Jolan district, once an
    insurgent stronghold, looked like a ghost town, the only sound the
    rumbling of tank tracks.

    [Photo not shown]
    An Iraqi nurse treats 2-year-old child Mustafa Adnan, at a Baghdad
    hospital, who lost a leg when his house in Falluja's Jolan district was
    shelled by U.S. forces in the war-torn city November 14, 2004. U.S.
    tanks shelled and machine-gunned rebels still holding out in Falluja
    in heavy fighting that was preventing an Iraqi Red Crescent convoy
    from getting aid to civilians trapped in the city for six days. Photo
    by Ali Jasim/Reuters

    US Marines pointed their assault rifles down abandoned streets,
    past Fallujah's simple amusement park, now deserted. Four bloated
    and burnt bodies lay on the main street, not far from US tanks and
    soldiers. The stench of the remains hung heavy in the air, mixing
    with the dust.

    Another body lay stretched out on the next block, its head blown
    off, perhaps in one of the countless explosions which rent the city
    day and night for nearly a week. Some bodies were so mutilated it
    was impossible to tell if they were civilians or militants, male or female.

    Fallujah, regarded as a place with an independent streak where citizens
    even defied the former leader Saddam Hussein at times, seemed lifeless.
    The minarets of the city's dozens of mosques stood silent, no longer
    broadcasting the call to holy war that so often echoed across the
    rooftops, inspiring fighters to join the insurgency.

    Restaurant signs were covered in soot. Pavements were crushed
    by 70-ton Abrams tanks, and rows of crumbling buildings stood
    on both sides of deserted streets. Upmarket homes with garages
    looked as if they had been abandoned for years. Cars lay crushed
    in the middle of streets. Two Iraqis in one street desperately trying
    to salvage some of their smashed belongings were the only signs
    of life.

    As US soldiers walked through neighbourhoods, their allies in the
    Iraqi forces casually moved along dusty streets past wires hanging
    down from gutted buildings. They carried boxes of bottled water to
    the rooftops of the upmarket villas they now occupy. The soldiers
    sat on the roofs staring at the ruins.

    As a small convoy of Humvees moved back to position on the edge of
    the Jolan district, a rocket landed in the sand about 100ft away,
    a reminder that militants were still out there somewhere, even if the
    city that harboured them has fallen. The few civilians left in Fallujah
    talked of a city left in ruins not just by the six days of the ground
    assault, but the weeks of bombing that preceded the attack.

    Residents have long been without electricity or water, abandoning
    their homes and congregating in the centre of the city as the US
    forces advanced from all sides. They had cowered in buildings as
    the battle unfolded past the windows.

    The reaction of US troops to attacks, say residents, have been out
    of all proportion; shots by snipers have been answered by rounds
    from Abrams tanks, devastating buildings and, it is claimed,
    injuring and killing civilians. This is firmly denied by the
    American military.

    About 200,000 refugees fled the fighting, and there have been
    outbreaks of typhoid and other diseases.

    People leaving the city described rotting corpses being piled up
    and thousands still trapped inside their homes, many of them
    wounded and without access to food, water or medical aid. US
    commanders insist civilian casualties in Fallujah have been low,
    but the Pentagon famously claims it does not keep figures.

    Escaping residents described incidents in which non-combatants,
    including women and children, were killed by shrapnel or hit by
    bombs. In one case last week, a nine-year-old boy was hit in the
    stomach by shrapnel. Unable to reach a hospital, he died hours
    later from blood loss. His father had to bury his body in their garden.

    Those trapped inside the city say they are reaching a point of
    desperation. "Our situation is very hard," said Abu Mustafa,
    contacted by telephone in the central Hay al-Dubat neighbourhood.
    "We don't have food or water," he told Reuters. "My seven children
    all have severe diarrhoea. One of my sons was wounded by shrapnel
    last night and he's bleeding, but I can't do anything to help him."

    Aamir Haidar Yusouf, a 39-year-old trader, sent his family out of
    Fallujah, but stayed behind to look after his home, not just during
    the fighting, but the looting which will follow. "The Americans have
    been firing at buildings if they see even small movements," he said.

    As the fighting died down yesterday he said: "They are also
    destroying cars, because they think every car has a bomb in it.
    People have moved from the edges of the city into the centre, and
    they are staying on the ground floors of buildings. There will be
    nothing left of Fallujah by the time they finish. They have already
    destroyed so many homes with their bombings from the air, and
    now we are having this from tanks and big guns."

    There was no sign of the guerrillas who scribbled graffiti along the
    walls of the park, encouraging Fallujah's 300,000 residents to join
    a holy war against US-led troops. "Long live the mujahedin," read
    the graffiti.

    Mohammed Younis, a former policeman, said: "The Americans
    and [Iyad] Allawi [Iraq's interim Prime Minister] have been saying
    that Fallujah is full of foreign fighters. That is not true; they left
    a long time ago. You will find them in other places, in Baghdad.
    We have been saying to Allawi and the Americans that they are
    not here, but they do not believe us."

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    11) THE CIVILIAN DEATH TOLL
    By Harvey McGavin
    http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/story.jsp?story=582915
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines04/1115-01.htm

    US military officials were last night counting the cost of their week
    long assault on Fallujah in which they claim to have killed some
    1,200 insurgents and some 44 servicemen lost their lives.

    But in the city which was once home to 300,000 people there
    were few reports of the number of civilians killed.

    Many are thought to have fled the fighting, but reports from the
    city say it is impossible to tell how many of the bodies that litter
    its rubble-strewn streets are those of ordinary citizens.

    Last week a report collated by the UN said 20 doctors had died
    during a US air strike on a clinic and there have been numerous
    reports of the US dropping huge bombs.

    The US Defence secretary Donald Rumsfeld claimed last week that
    Iraqi civilians had been warned how to avoid injury. "Innocent civilians
    in that city have all the guidance they need as to how they can avoid
    getting into trouble. There aren't going to be large numbers of civilians
    killed and certainly not by US forces," he said.

    In addition to the 38 Americans and six Iraqis killed in the assault,
    more than 200 US soldiers were injured. About 400 suspected
    insurgents have been arrested in Fallujah including "some" foreigners,
    interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi said.

    The Iraq Coalition Casualties website reported that, as of Saturday,
    1,181 US troops had been killed in Iraq. One Iraq-based report
    estimates civilian casualties to be 37,000. A report in the British
    medical journal The Lancet put the figure as high as 100,000.

    Prime minister Iyad Allawi said there had been no civilian casualties
    during the battle for Fallujah, contradicting accounts from residents
    inside the city.

    (c) Copyright 2004 lndependent/UK

    ###

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    12) GI SPECIAL 2#C22
    thomasfbarton@earthlink.net
    11.16.04
    Huge Increase In Badly Wounded Floods U.S. Military Hospital;
    419 Since Attack On Falluja Started

    November 15, 2004 USA TODAY

    She added that the influx has not yet let up. "When I see a sustained
    decrease over more than 24 hours, I'll believe it," Cornum said.

    LANDSTUHL, Germany - The number of injured U.S. military personnel
    arriving at the Landstuhl Regional Medical Center this week, most from
    the offensive against insurgents in the Iraqi city of Fallujah, reached
    its highest level since April, a U.S. military official here said
    Sunday.

    The troops coming in over the past week have been more seriously injured
    than usual, and twice as many have been wounded in battle, said Army
    Col. Rhonda Cornum, commander of the hospital.

    She added that the influx has not yet let up. "When I see a sustained
    decrease over more than 24 hours, I'll believe it," Cornum said.

    Patients treated here are not capable of returning to duty within seven
    working days. Cornum said 419 patients, including one American
    civilian, have been flown for treatment to Landstuhl since Nov. 8, the
    day after the offensive began against militants in Fallujah, 40 miles
    west of Baghdad.

    She said 95% of those patients have come from Iraq, and 5% from
    Afghanistan. Most of those from Iraq were wounded in Fallujah, but
    Cornum could not say exactly how many.

    There have been two peaks in the patient load: 98 arrived Thursday, 44
    on Friday, 94 on Saturday, and 49 on Sunday, Cornum said. All of the
    patients have been U.S. citizens.

    Before the new offensive, the average number of patients admitted daily
    had been 32. In the past week, that number has more than doubled to 70.
    On Sunday, the number of patients in the hospital was 150, compared with
    the typical average of 100. The injuries suffered include gunshot and
    blast wounds and burns.

    The seriousness of injuries is reflected by the number of inpatients.

    About half the patients admitted since the Fallujah offensive began have
    needed to be hospitalized. Hospital spokeswoman Marie Shaw said most
    patients usually receive outpatient care.

    More than 50% of incoming patients have had battle wounds this past
    week, compared with 25% before the offensive. Among those seriously
    injured patients, 37 are in the intensive care unit.

    Because of the heavier-than-usual load and the increased seriousness of
    injuries, the hospital has had to call in help from military facilities
    in the area.

    "This was not a holiday weekend for us," said Air Force Col. Todd Hess,
    deputy commander for clinical services, referring to Veterans Day.

    The number of beds in the medical-surgical ward has grown from 64 to
    117. The number could be increased if necessary, Cornum said. The
    intensive care unit has gone from 20 to 27 beds.

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    13) 'Twas a Famous Rollover, Continued
    By Fred Feldman

    Clearly, the resistance forces decided not to stage an urban battle of
    the Stalingrad-Warsaw Ghetto -- Khorramshahr -- Hue type. Except for
    Hue, these were backs-against-the-wall battles by forces who faced utter
    defeat and destruction if they could not hold the line. I was pointing
    to the gravity of the battle they did fight.

    One question I asked was whether any of the battles in the three Iraq
    wars so far produced a comparable US death toll, let alone the injuries.
    I don't think so. I think this is the most costly battle yet for the US
    forces, that is, since the Gulf war of 91.

    Dave said the Pentagon can accept 38 dead. The Pentagon can accept
    100,000 US dead, or even a million. Maybe more than that, as long as
    its not them that's dying.

    The problem is what can the home front accept. I don't think the home
    front will not tolerate 38 dead a week, I believe, or not for very long.

    The public tolerance is lower, not higher or equal to the casulaltie
    rates in Vietnam. For this reason, the entire methods of US warmaking
    have been reorganized to prevent excessive casualties.

    The US resistance to Vietnam led to a more advanced technology and
    skillful organization of mass murder just as the proletarian struggle
    for shorter hours and higher wages forces mechanization,
    computerization, and so on of industry. The Rumsfeld reorganization is
    built around the political limits imposed by the anti-Vietnam war
    movement and the defeat in Indochina.

    >From a political standpoint, 36 or 38 (the number is still rising for
    some reason although the fighting has largely ended) is a very costly
    price for a battle, and not one they will rush to repeat next week in
    Mosul or wherever.

    And the resistance has clearly gotten better at targeting GI'S than
    they were in previous battles such as Najaf. Thirty-eight is a high
    death toll, and its impact on the US public is going to be carefully
    buried for as long as possible.

    And the fighters were able to wage this gigantic (though not
    world-historic scale) urban battle, and still take over Mosul and some
    other cities. This seems to mark a shift in favor of the resistance in
    the overall combat situation.

    And yes, I suspect the US may for now -- precisely to stop the stream of
    US dead -- be living with a significant degree of resistance strength IN
    FALLUJAH, aside from the thousands who appear to have left to fight
    another day somewhere else.

    Overall, this seems to be neither a clear military victory for the
    United States (aside from in the heavily propagandized US, which the
    battle was substantially aimed at), nor a defeat or even a setback for
    the national resistance, which seems to have become better organized
    (more united?) and more effective militarily relative to the US-"Iraqi"
    forces.

    The low casualty rate among "Iraqi" government troops should be seen as
    evidence that they carried little of the burden of fighting.

    ffeldman@bellatlantic.net

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    14) CONSPIRING TO COMMIT MURDER FOR PROFIT!
    In a message dated 11/16/04 9:22:58 AM, Jibasmil writes:
    Following is a pre-written message which I am lazy enough
    to use. The fact that this "study" has been delayed is, I think,
    due the use of the internet -- word of it got around very quickly
    and the EPA felt the heat. We need to keep that heat up so the
    #$%@&#* EPA kills it. --judy

    Dear friend, The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has announced
    plans to launch an outrageous new study in which participating low
    income families will have their children exposed to toxic pesticides
    over the course of two years. For taking part in these studies, each
    family will receive $970, a free video camera, a T-shirt, and a framed
    certificate of appreciation. The study entitled CHEERS (Children's
    Environmental Exposure Research Study) will look at how chemicals
    can be ingested, inhaled or absorbed by children ranging from babies
    to 3 years old. Please take a moment to follow this link and join tens
    of thousands of citizens in petitioning the EPA to terminate this study
    prior to its proposed launch in early 2005. More information, related
    newspaper headlines and petition here:
    http://www.organicconsumers.org/epa-alert.htm
    Please also forward this message.

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    15) United for Peace and Justice
    Development Coordinator
    Job Announcement


    About United for Peace and Justice
    United for Peace and Justice, founded in October 2002, is a major
    national anti-war coalition with over 800 member groups, ranging
    from local groups such as Nebraskans for Peace and the Peoria Area
    Peace Network to major national organizations like the American
    Friends Service Committee, Black Voices for Peace, Peace Action,
    and Global Exchange. Our primary areas of work include war and
    occupation; immigrant rights and civil liberties; global justice;
    and nuclear disarmament.

    Job Responsibilities
    United for Peace and Justice seeks a Development Coordinator
    to oversee all aspects of fundraising for our coalition. Job
    responsibilities will include the following:
    - Seek out and cultivate relationships with major donors,
    including direct solicitations.
    - Oversee our direct mail program and donor database.
    - Work with UFPJ member organizations on collaborative
    fund raising efforts.
    - Oversee foundation grant writing, including developing
    strategies for foundation work and writing grant proposals.
    - Improve UFPJ's online fundraising program.
    - Develop plan for fundraising benefits and other activities.
    - Work with UFPJ national coordinator and steering committee
    to expand the existing funding base.

    Qualifications
    Applicant must be well organized, high energy, self-motivated
    and creative. A commitment to UFPJ's peace and justice mission
    is a must. Excellent written and oral communication skills are
    essential. We are looking for someone with development experience
    in social change and/or nonprofit organizations. Experience and
    contacts in the progressive funding community is a plus but not
    a requirement.

    Salary: to be negotiated, plus benefits.

    To Apply
    UFPJ is an affirmative action employer and strongly encourages
    people of color, women and lgtb people to apply. Send resume
    and cover letter to:
    Leslie Cagan
    United for Peace and Justice
    Times Sq. Station
    PO Box 607
    New York, NY 10108

    or by email to: lesliecagan@igc.org
    NO CALLS PLEASE.

    UFPJ mailing list
    UFPJ@mediajumpstart.net
    https://secure.mediajumpstart.net/mailman/listinfo/ufpj

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    16) Why I fear for the dream of my life
    Commentary
    Abdul Bariatwan
    The Observer
    Sunday November 14, 2004
    http://observer.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,6903,1350959,00.html

    I was born 54 years ago in a refugee camp in Gaza. My parents were
    illiterate and, like thousands of others, were forced to leave their home
    town in 1948 to create space for the Jewish immigrants pouring into
    Palestine from Europe.

    My parents' abiding dream was to go back to the farm and mud-brick
    house in Ashoud, their sleepy home town on the Mediterranean. But
    they spent their lives in transit, waiting for this dream to come true.
    Their dream lives on in me and in my children, too.

    Yasser Arafat worked very hard for 40 years towards the independent
    Palestinian state he longed for, yet never saw. Despite his mistakes, he
    brought this dream closer. He brought the Palestinian cause into the
    global arena and the resolution of this struggle is now of enormous
    significance in determining the security of the world, not only the
    Middle East.

    I was deeply saddened by Arafat's death, not only because I knew him
    personally, but also because Arafat, like my parents, spent his life in
    transit, from Amman to Beirut to Tunisia and thence to Palestine.
    What an irony it is that, even in death, his coffin is in transit, awaiting
    his final transfer to Jerusalem.

    Last Friday, George W Bush and his closest ally, Tony Blair assured us
    that we would see such a state within the next four years - but we have
    heard this story before. Before the invasion of Iraq, Bush assured the
    world that an independent Palestinian state would be in place before
    the end of 2005.


    The American project in Iraq is a fiasco. The war which was supposed
    to be over on 9 April 2003 has started all over again.

    This is the climate in which Bush and Blair have revived the notion of
    an independent Palestinian state - without a single indication of how
    this will be achieved.

    Bush asserts that an independent Palestinian state must be a democracy.
    But what constitutes democracy in this lexicon? Will this concept simply
    become a useful tool, replacing Arafat as justification for Israeli
    atrocities,
    delays to the peace process and the establishment of a Palestinian state?
    In 1996, Arafat was elected leader in an election supervised by US and
    Israel, yet how easily he was written off three years ago when those
    same powers found him insufficiently yielding in the peace process.

    The US insists it is enabling democracy in Iraq - a benefit that has cost
    100 000 lives. If this is the kind of democracy Bush wishes to impose
    on the Palestinians, we have every reason to be afraid. Very afraid.

    ·Abdul Bariatwan is editor of al Quds
    Guardian Unlimited (c) Guardian Newspapers Limited 2004

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    17) Producer Prices Jump on Higher Energy Costs
    By TERENCE NEILAN
    November 16, 2004
    http://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/16/business/16cnd-prices.html?hp&ex=11006676
    00&en=3a278a97f6a5790e&ei=5094&partner=homepage


    Soaring energy costs and a surge in food prices contributed to
    a surprising 1.7 percent rise in United States producer prices in
    October, the Labor Department reported today, the biggest gain
    in almost 15 years.

    Excluding the volatile food and energy sectors, the Producer Price
    Index climbed 0.3 percent last month, the same as in September,
    but ahead of the 0.1 percent gain anticipated by Wall Street analysts.

    Energy prices soared 6.8 percent last month, the steepest climb
    since February 2003, as gasoline costs increased by 17.3 percent,
    home heating oil prices rose 17.9 percent and the price for liquefied
    petroleum gas gained 14.7 percent. Residential electricity costs
    climbed 2.3 percent.

    After climbing to $55 a barrel last month, however, crude oil prices
    have come down sharply, with oil for December delivery trading at
    $45.95 around midday today in New York.

    The seasonally adjusted increase in the overall Producer Price Index
    was the largest since January 1990, outstripping wide expectations
    for an increase of 0.5 percent to 0.6 percent.

    The financial markets reacted negatively to the report, with stocks
    and bonds falling moderately. Around midday, the leading stock indexes
    were down more than half a percent. The Treasury's benchmark
    10-year note was down 6/32 of a point, pushing its yield up to
    4.21 percent, from 4.19 percent late Monday.

    Analysts said the surge in producer prices reinforced the Federal
    Reserve's strategy of gradually increasing short-term interest rates
    to dampen inflationary pressures in the economy.

    Some analysts took the surge in the overall Producer Price Index
    in stride, especially given the impact of higher oil prices.

    "The rise in the energy component was more or less expected, and
    there's actually reason to be sanguine on that front, knowing that
    energy prices have fallen in the past few weeks,'' said Haseeb
    Ahmed, senior economist at Economy.com, an economic analysis
    firm. "In fact, we should expect that component to fall in the next
    report."

    But Mr. Ahmed argued that the 0.3 percent rise in the core number
    was actually more worrisome than the headline 1.7 percent.

    "If the core number remains close to the 0.3 level for the next few
    months, that would be evidence that there is significant pass-
    through from lower levels of production,'' he said. "If this trend
    continues, businesses may start raising prices."

    The Producer Price Index issued today showed that food prices
    rose 1.6 percent in October, compared with an 0.1 percent gain
    in September.

    A 34.2 percent surge in fresh and dry vegetables, most probably
    the result of the hurricanes that struck Florida and other southern
    states, followed a 12.1 percent increase in September. The rise in
    vegetables was the highest in more than eight years. Fruit prices
    rose by 11.3 percent, slowing from a 23.1 surge in September.

    Prices for beef and veal, pork, soft drinks, dairy products and
    processed fruits and vegetables rose in October, compared with
    decreases in September, the government report said.

    Zubin Jelveh contributed reporting for this article.

    Copyright 2004 The New York Times

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    18) Presbyterian Church receives arson threat over Middle
    East policies
    From: "Justice Freedom"
    Date: Mon, 15 Nov 2004 21:08:17 -0800
    [From Wendy Campbell]
    http://www.lex18.com/global/story.asp?s=2561665&ClientType=Printable

    LOUISVILLE, Ky. Presbyterian Churches in the U-S have been put
    on high alert. This after a letter received at the church's Louisville,
    Kentucky, headquarters threatened arson attacks because of the
    church's policies toward the Middle East.

    A church spokesman says the letter threatened to set churches on
    fire while people were inside in retaliation for "anti-Israel and anti-
    Jewish attitudes."

    The spokesman says the letter had no return address, but was
    postmarked Queens, New York.

    The church's General Assembly decided in June to begin the
    process of selective divestment from corporations supporting
    the Israeli occupation of Gaza and the West Bank.

    An FBI spokesman says the agency is investigating the letter
    with help from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and
    Explosives.

    - The Palestinian intifada is a war of national liberation. We
    Israelis enthusiastically chose to become a colonialist society,
    ignoring international treaties, expropriating lands, transferring
    settlers from Israel to the occupied territories, engaging in theft
    and finding justification for all these activities ... we established
    an apartheid regime.
    - Michael Ben-Yair, Israeli attorney general in the1990s, quoted
    in The Guardian (U.K.), April 11, 2002

    - I became convinced that non-cooperation with evil is as much
    a moral obligation as is cooperation with good.
    - Martin Luther King, Jr, Autobiography, Chapter 2

    - The "Middle East Conflict" is not rooted in the Middle East, but
    in the United States.

    - Look, our strategy is to create chaos, to create a vacuum . . .
    We will export death and violence to the four corners of the earth
    in defense of our great nation.
    - gw bush to his staff, after the Afghan war had started

    - The lie can be maintained only for such time as the State can
    shield the people from the political, economic and/or military
    consequences of the lie. It thus becomes vitally important for
    the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for the truth
    is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the truth
    becomes the greatest enemy of the State.
    - Josef M. Goebbels

    Daniel Stone
    justice_freedom@earthlink.net

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    19) S0CIALIST CUBA--THE HOPE OF THE PLANET
    To: ufpj-disc@yahoogroups.com
    By Dave Silver
    Tue, 16 Nov 2004 16:55:02 -0500

    The nature of the relentless and continuing colonial and imperialist
    domination of Cuba by Spain and the United States especially since
    1898 changed dramatically with the triumph of the Cuban Revolution
    in 1959. The imperialist vulture to the North was driven out militarily,
    economically, politically and culturally. However the imperialists,
    fearing that a new humane and just model for the overwhelming
    masses of people would not be good for exploitation and their super
    profits, used new methods of destabilizing the new Cuba . On October
    8, 1987, the 20 th anniversary of the death of Ernesto Che Guevara,
    Fidel said that Che "was totally opposed to using and developing
    capitalist economic laws and categories in building socialism." Che
    advocated that the "building of socialism and communism is not just
    a matter of producing and distributing wealth but is also a matter of
    education and consciousness."

    It then becomes apparent why Cuba, a beacon of internationalist
    solidarity for oppressed peoples worldwide, became anathema not
    only to the transnational corporate ruling class and their political
    puppets in Wall Street, western Europe and Tokyo but also those
    who have rejected Marxism for more pragmatic philosophies;
    liberals, neo-liberals, neo-marxists, anarchists and various trends
    within social democracy. Those who have never recognized
    a really existing socialism, who have embraced opportunism,
    were not prepared for nor could they accept the arming of the
    Cuban masses, or the Committees for the Defense of the Revolution,
    the Peoples' Assemblies, the voluntary work or the use of moral
    incentives which were later modified under the pressures of the
    imperialist Blockade-an act of war-according to international law.
    No these folk could not accept Revolutionary Cuba's attempts at
    creatively applying Marxism-Leninism.

    The revisionists and opportunists discount the terrorist acts, over
    flights, the C.I.A. funded Radio Marti, assassination attempts and
    the support for counter revolutionaries in and outside of Miami .
    No, they call for "free elections" bourgeois style which offers the
    evil of two lessers to the masses. Or they call for freedom for
    "dissidents" another useful code word that masks their counter
    revolutionary acts within Cuba and connections to western
    imperialist sources. Some like the former Chief of the U.S.
    Interests Section in Havana , Wayne Smith, calls for an end to the
    "embargo" (a more benign term) not because Cuba is a sovereign
    state which first and foremost means the right to self determination
    including the right to build socialism, NO. He and his ilk want to
    end the Blockade for ulterior motives namely to bring a little
    perestroika and glasnost to the island. In short they, like the
    gusanos, look to a smooth "post Castro transition" really meaning
    a post socialist Cuba .

    Cuba 's nationalization and collectivization under the guidance of
    the Communist Party was a political and economic declaration of
    war against the capitalist countries and their financial representatives
    at the IMF and World Bank. ( Canada is a partial exception) Cuba 's
    staunch international solidarity includes supporting the armed
    struggle in Angola to providing doctors and training university
    students from other countries. This too is deeply hated by those
    who would like to bring the "benefits" of gangsterism, corruption
    and poverty now "enjoyed" by the Russian people. Those whom
    Brecht called the intellectual pimps for the bourgeoisie belittle the
    heroic accomplishments of a Cuba under siege such as safeguarding
    the high standard of health, education, and literacy services while
    seeing to it that no one goes hungry or is homeless.

    Does this mean that this beacon and alternative model to the "free
    market" has solved all basic social, political and economic questions?
    Of course not. In his eulogy honoring Che, Fidel asks "what are we
    rectifying?" Self critically including his own mistakes he says that
    "we're rectifying all those things -and there are many- that strayed
    from the revolutionary spirit, revolutionary work, and revolutionary
    responsibility; all those things that strayed from the spirit of
    solidarity among people. We're rectifying all the shoddiness and
    mediocrity that is precisely the negation of Che's ideas, his
    revolutionary thought, his style, his spirit, and his example."
    Of course Fidel had in mind a developing bureaucracy as well as
    technocrats and some intellectuals that never appreciated the fact
    that while there may be compromise in dealing with other states
    and Parties there could never be a compromise of the fundamental
    ideological underpinning of the Revolution-Marxism-Leninism.

    Cuba is a multicultural mixture of Spanish, African and Indigenous
    peoples. Yet quite legitimately many comrades and friends have
    questioned Havana 's policies and efforts toward bringing more
    people of color into higher government, Party and professional
    positions. The Central Committee of the Party acknowledged this
    problem 15 years ago and made decisions accordingly. About three
    years ago I had the privilege of attending a meeting arranged by
    Black comrades who invited a member of the Department of International
    Relations of the Central Committee of the Cuban Communist Party.
    Our guest Adelina, is a Black woman who was in the U.S. on
    a Fellowship to study the institutionalized racism in the U.S.
    There were many hard and challenging questions as to the
    proportionate representation of people of color and particularly
    those of very dark complexion in all spheres of society. Our
    guest provided data and policy decisions of the Party in the social,
    economic and political areas whose goal was to significantly improve
    this situation. The results of this truly affirmative action by the Party
    and government more than doubled the number of people of color
    in the leading bodies of society. This was accomplished in less than
    5 years. Comrade Adelina indicated that the Party has made this an
    ongoing priority.

    Unlike China, who, while professing socialism and the supremacy of
    the Party, is well on its way to dismantling its socialist infrastructure
    and accepting the IMF version of globalisation meaning an entry of
    transnationals into their economy using extremely cheap labor while
    a comparatively few become wealthy. The Socialist Republic of
    Vietnam is at a crossroads and seeking most favored nation status
    while Nike sets up an outpost there for capital accumulation. It is
    too early to tell whether North Korea will travel the same path. Of
    course there are enormous contradictions between these countries
    and the developed nations. Frequently the former are forced into
    taking anti-imperialist positions which should be fully supported.
    Cuba does have joint ventures with Canada and Germany for
    instance but under conditions that guarantees benefits to its
    economy. We must be crystal clear that there is no hybrid third
    way. While certain compromises and even retreats are necessary
    at a particular historic juncture, (such as Havana 's need for hard
    currency and the development of a mini parallel economy around
    tourism) the fundamental course is either socialist or capitalist.
    Solidarity with and material and ideological support for Socialist
    Cuba deserves the highest priority from all who seek to better.
    the human condition.

    UNITED FOR PEACE & JUSTICE | 212-868-5545

    This email list is designed for discussions specifically related to
    United for Peace & Justice business. It is NOT intended for general,
    wide-open political discussion, nor is it a place to post news
    articles or event announcements.

    To post news articles or event announcements of interest to
    member groups of UFPJ, join our news list by sending a blank
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