Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Clashes erupt at South Korea car plant

[Courtesy of cde John L -- May his tribe increase!]

South Korean riot police backed up by armour and helicopters, have clashed with hundreds of sacked auto workers who have been holed up in a car factory outside of Seoul for almost two months. Several of the protesters used high-powered slingshots to fire nuts and bolts at police from factory rooftops as they tried to storm the Ssangyong motors car plant on Tuesday. Some 3,000 riot police have been deployed to the plant at Pyeongtaek, about 70km south of Seoul, in an effort to clear up to 600 sacked workers who have occupied the factory's paint shop.
Ssangyong is South Korea's fifth-largest automaker and the occupation which began in late May has paralysed production at the plant. Police first entered the factory on Monday after the company cut off water and gas supplies to the plant in an effort to force the workers to leave. As they did so, protesters tried to block their path by setting light to vehicles and tyres while pelting police with shrapnel from catapults.
Job cuts
The workers began their occupation on May 21 in protest at job cuts designed as part of a restructuring plan to save the troubled carmaker. Ssangyong, which is majority-owned by Shanghai Automotive Industry Corp., has been in court-approved bankruptcy protection since February. South Korean media reports have said the paint shop, where most of the protesters are holed-up, contains flammable materials that could potentially ignite amid a major clash.
As part of its restructuring plan, Ssangyong aims to shed 36 per cent of its workforce or about 2,646 jobs. According to the company, some 1,670 have left the company voluntarily, but nearly 1,000 opposed the move and some were later fired. Ssangyong mostly manufactures light SUVs and a luxury sedan – sales of which have plummeted in the global economic downturn.
The company sold 13,020 vehicles during the first six months of the year, down 73.9 percent from the same period in 2008, according to South Korea's Yonhap news agency. Government officials have warned that unless the occupation of the factory ends and production resumes, any hope of saving the company will evaporate.

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Is Obama Continuing the Bush-Cheney Assassination Program?

[Courtesy of antiwar.com http://original.antiwar.com/scahill/2009/07/14/is-obama-continuing/]

Is Obama Continuing the Bush-Cheney Assassination Program?
by Jeremy Scahill, July 15, 2009

In June, CIA Director Leon Panetta allegedly informed members of the House Intelligence Committee of the existence of a secret Bush-era program implemented in the days after 9/11 that, until last month, had been hidden from lawmakers. The concealment of the plan, Panetta alleged, happened at the orders of then-vice president Dick Cheney.
Now, the New York Times is reporting that this secret program that had "been hidden from lawmakers" by Cheney was a plan "to dispatch small teams overseas to kill senior Qaeda terrorists." The Wall Street Journal, which originally reported on the plan, reported that the paramilitary teams were to implement a"2001 presidential legal pronouncement, known as a finding, which authorized the CIA to pursue such efforts.
"The plan, the Times says, never was carried out because "Officials at the spy agency over the years ran into myriad logistical, legal, and diplomatic obstacles." Instead, the Bush administration "sought an alternative to killing terror suspects with missiles fired from drone aircraft or seizing them overseas and imprisoning them in secret CIA jails."
The House Intelligence Committee is now reportedly preparing an investigation into this program and the Senate may follow suit. "We were kept in the dark.That's something that should never, ever happen again," said Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Dianne Feinstein. Withholding this information from Congress "is a big problem, because the law is very clear."
There are several important issues raised by this unfolding story. First, while the Times claims the program was never implemented, the program sounds very similar to what Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Sy Hersh described in March as an "executive assassination ring" run by Dick Cheney that operated throughout the Bush years:
"Congress has no oversight of it. It's an executive assassination ring essentially, and it's been going on and on and on. Just today in the Times there was a story that its leaders, a three star admiral named [William H.] McRaven, ordered a stop to it because there were so many collateral deaths."
Under President Bush's authority, they've been going into countries, not talking to the ambassador or the CIA station chief, and finding people on a list and executing them and leaving. That's been going on, in the name of all of us."
Hersh's description sounds remarkably similar to that offered by the Times and the Wall Street Journal. While the House and Senate should certainly investigate this program – and lying to Congress, misleading it, or concealing from it suchprograms is likely illegal – it is also important to guarantee that it has actually stopped. But another pressing issue for the Congress is investigating the Obama administration's adoption of this secret program's central components.
As the Times noted, the major reason – beyond logistical hurdles – that the program was not implemented (if that is even true) was that the Bush administration began increasing its use of weaponized drones to conduct Israeli-style targeted assassinations (often, these drones kill many more civilians than so-called "targets"). These drone attacks, coupled with the use of extraordinary rendition and secret prisons, became the official program for "eliminating" specific individuals labeled "high value" targets by the administration.
The Obama administration has not only continued the Bush policy of using drones to carry out targeted assassinations, it has also continued the use of prisons where people are held indefinitely without charge or access to the International Committee of the Red Cross. Under Obama, Bagram air base in Afghanistan is expanding and, at present, hundreds of prisoners are held there without charges. In essence, the Obama administration is doing exactly what this secret CIA program sought to do, albeit out in the open.
Beyond the Cheney assassination program, what is really worthy of congressional investigation right now is the legality of Obama's current policy of assassination. In 1976, President Gerald Ford issued an executive order banning assassinations. "No employee of the United States government shall engage in, or conspire to engage in, political assassination," states Executive Order 11905.
White House lawyers – with their seemingly infinite legal creativity – would likely say that the drone strikes are not assassinations, but rather part of war, that putting poison in a cigar of a foreign leader is different from launching missiles at a funeral where an "enemy" is believed to be among the mourners. While the implications of the U.S. assassinating heads of state or foreign officials are grave, it could be argued that, on some levels, the drone attacks are worse in the sense that they kill many more civilians. Moreover, these drone attacks largely take place in Pakistan, which is a sovereign nation. There is no legal or congressional declaration of war against Pakistan.
It is long past due that the Congress investigate this U.S. government assassination program. The politically inconvenient truth, however, is this: An actual investigation would require the Democrats pounding Cheney over his concealment of an assassination program (that allegedly was not implemented) to focus their investigation on how President Obama actually implemented and expanded that very program.

Saturday, July 11, 2009

Resistance inside the US Military -- Antiwar soldier freed from San Diego brig

Army deserter Robin Long was released this morning from the brig at Miramar Marine Corps Air Station in San Diego after serving 12 months of a 15-month sentence.

Long, 25, of Boise, Idaho, fled to Canada in 2005 to avoid being deployed to Iraq. He said he could not go to Iraq because of his moral opposition to the war that began with the U.S. invasion in 2003.

Long's forced return to the U.S. by Canadian authorities caused a political furor because many Canadians saw it as a reversal of the country's welcoming attitude toward U.S. deserters and draft evaders during the Vietnam War.
"Wow, what a journey the last four years has been," Long said as he left the brig. He was accompanied by Dawn O'Brien, a board member of Veterans for Peace and a leader in Military Families Speak Out.

After being returned to this country, an Army court-martial sentenced Long to 15 months and a dishonorable discharge.

Even after he is processed out of the Army, Long may not be able to return to Canada, where his girlfriend and their 2-year-old son reside. Canadian law prohibits convicted felons from entering the country, although Long's supporters have vowed to appeal.

Long enlisted in 2003 and was stationed at Ft. Carson, Colo., as a private when his unit was ordered to Iraq. In Canada, his application for refugee status was rejected. His supporters said he was the first U.S. service member to be deported from Canada during the Iraq war.

In Canada, Long opened a business encouraging water conservation.

-- Tony Perry in San Diego

Monday, July 6, 2009

No negotiation with the murderous coup participants in Honduras!

“NO NEGOTIATION WITH THE MURDEROUS COUP PARTICIPANTS IN HONDURAS" PRESS RELEASE
(PTS, July 6, 2009) Christian Castillo, national leader of the Partido de los Trabajadores Socialistas (PTS), indicated today that, "in view of the murder of two demonstrators and tens of people wounded this Sunday, during the massive demonstration in the Toncontin Airport, it is necessary to intensify the actions against the coup in Honduras. Words and communiqués of repudiation are not enough. Thousands of us have to be in the streets, repudiating the murderous coup participants and backing the workers, campesinos and students who are confronting them in the streets." Castillo also stated that "we charge that beyond the declarations of rejection in the OAS and the UN, there is a continuing attempt to make the coup acceptable and arrive at an understanding with the coup participants. In order to defeat that, it is necessary to increase the workers' and people's mobilization, both in Honduras and throughout Latin America. For that reason, we say: Down with the coup by the Honduran bourgeoisie, the Armed Forces, the Supreme Court of Justice, the Parliament, the churches and the big communications media! The blood of our Honduran brothers, that was spilled, is not to be negotiated!"

Saturday, July 4, 2009

Down with the coup and the state of siege in HONDURAS!

Friday, July 3, 2009
Press release

Down with the coup and the state of siege in Honduras!
No negotiations with the coup plotters!
All our solidarity with the women and all the Honduran people in struggle

(Buenos Aires, July 3, 2009) The group Pan y Rosas – as it has done from the beginning – expresses its most vigorous repudiation of the coup d'état in Honduras perpetrated by groups of the Honduran bourgeoisie, with the active collaboration of the Armed Forces, the Supreme Court of Justice, the Parliament, the churches and the big communications media. We also reject the state of siege decreed on July 1 by Micheletti's de facto government, that is reducing the democratic freedoms of the Honduran people even more, and we demand the immediate release of the arrested militants.

In addition, we reject the interference of the OAS – commanded by US imperialism – whose Secretary General, José Miguel Insulza, will arrive in Honduras today with the obvious intention of negotiating "a solution to the political crisis" with the coup plotters. This "solution" is nothing other than the reestablishment of a regime that, with or without Zelaya, not only guarantees the interests of Honduran businessmen and landowners, but also future impunity for the coup participants.
Women in struggle, the working people of Honduras, and those of us who are mobilizing throughout Latin America and the world against the coup, cannot trust that the OAS – that, in its history, recognized all the bloodthirsty dictatorships of Latin America in the 1970's and 1980's, that backed the criminal blockade of Cuba for more than four decades, and that supports the submission of Latin American countries to imperialism – can give a solution that would favor the popular sectors and their democratic freedoms. Quite the contrary: it seeks an "agreed upon" solution with the coup plotters. For that reason, we the women of Pan y Rosas call for the broadest popular mobilization against the coup in Honduras and for trusting only in our own strength, that of the exploited and oppressed, to overthrow the coup and prevent the consolidation of a reactionary conclave in the region, setting a terrible precedent on our continent.

Down with the coup and the state of siege!
No negotiations with the coup plotters!
US imperialism, get out!
Our solidarity is with the women and all the Honduran people in struggle!

Thursday, July 2, 2009

Down with the coup in HONDURAS!

Down with the coup in HONDURAS!

From <http://www.ft-ci.org/>
Declaration of the FT-CI
Down with the coup in Honduras!
By Fracción Trotskista - Cuarta Internacional

Down with the coup in Honduras!
For the broadest mobilization throughout Latin America to defeat the coup plotters

The morning of June 28 witnessed a new military coup in Central America, this time in Honduras, where the ultra-rightists, backed up by the armed forces, but in coordination with the Electoral Court, the Courts of Justice and the Parliament, removed the constitutional President Manuel Zelaya, from office, by force. After a little more than 200 soldiers surrounded Zelaya's personal residence, a confrontation took place between army squadrons and the President's personal guard, and he was kidnapped and expelled from the country.