WE
REMEMBER
TUESDAY,
SEPTEMBER 11 is the anniversary of the 1973, US-led
overthrow of the democratically
elected government of Salvador Allende in Chile which ushered in the 17
year reign of terror by
General Pinochet and the death of more than 3,000 persons.
TUESDAY,
SEPTEMBER 11 is also the anniversary of the 2001 attack
against the World Trade
Center and the Pentagon killing 3,000 persons resulting in the “War on
Terror” which is expected to
last, we are told, several generations and puts the US in a permanent
state of war.
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11 is the day General Petraeus is to give
his Iraq progress report to
Congress. (see the article below for another point of view) President
Bush intends to use this report as
justification for asking Congress for at least $150 Billion more
this year, beginning in October.
THURSDAY,
SEPTEMBER 13 begins the holy month of Ramadan which is
considered the most
venerated, blessed and spiritually-beneficial month of the Islamic
year. Prayers, fasting, charity, and
self-accountability are especially stressed at this time.
THURSDAY,
SEPTEMBER 13 is also the Jewish “new year” Rosh Hashanah
which begins ten Days
of Repentance and ends with the holiday Yom Kippur, the Day of
Atonement, which is considered the
holiest day of the Jewish year.
ACTIONS
1. Regard Gen. Petraeus’ report to Congress with the highest skepticism
2. Write/call your elected representatives to say “not one more dime
for war funding.” Instead, ask
them to vote for funding only to bring the troops home now.
You may contact any Senator or Representative by calling the
Congressional switchboard at 202-224-
3121. If you don’t know their name, simply give the operator your zip
code and s/he will connect you.
Or you may look up their contact info, including email address at http://www.visi.com/juan/congress/
IRAQ BODY COUNT RUNNING AT DOUBLE PACE
Steven R. Hurst, AP, 8/25/07
This year's U.S. troop buildup has succeeded in bringing violence in
Baghdad down from peak levels,
but the death toll from sectarian attacks around the country is running
nearly double the pace from a
year ago.
Some of the recent bloodshed appears the result of militant fighters
drifting into parts of northern Iraq,
where they have fled after U.S.-led offensives. Baghdad, however, still
accounts for slightly more than
half of all war-related killings - the same percentage as a year ago,
according to figures compiled by
The Associated Press.
The tallies and trends offer a sobering snapshot after an additional
30,000 U.S. troops began
campaigns in February to regain control of the Baghdad area. It also
highlights one of the major themes
expected in [the Sept. 11] Iraq progress report to Congress: some
military headway, but extremist
factions are far from broken.
In street-level terms, it means life for average Iraqis appears to be
even more perilous and
unpredictable.
The AP tracking includes Iraqi civilians, government officials, police
and security forces killed in attacks
such as gunfights and bombings, which are frequently blamed on Sunni
suicide strikes. It also includes
execution-style killings - largely the work of Shiite death squads.
The figures are considered a minimum based on AP reporting. The actual
numbers are likely higher, as
many killings go unreported or uncounted. Insurgent deaths are not a
part of the Iraqi count.
The findings include:
• Iraq is suffering about double the number of war-related deaths
throughout the country compared
with last year - an average daily toll of 33 in 2006, and 62 so far
this year.
• Nearly 1,000 more people have been killed in violence across Iraq in
the first eight months of this
year than in all of 2006. So far this year, about 14,800 people have
died in war-related attacks and
sectarian murders. AP reporting accounted for 13,811 deaths in 2006.
The United Nations and other
sources placed the 2006 toll far higher.
• Baghdad has gone from representing 76 percent of all civilian and
police war-related deaths in Iraq in
January to 52 percent in July, bringing it back to the same spot it was
roughly a year ago.
According to the Iraqi Red Crescent Organization, the number of
displaced Iraqis has more than
doubled since the start of the year, from 447,337 on Jan. 1 to 1.14
million on July 31.
(For the complete article see
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/huff-wires/20070825/iraq-counting-the-dead/
)
***
As the AP notes, even the [decline in violence in the Anbar province]
had little to do with the troop
surge: "In truth, the progress in Anbar was initiated by the Iraqis
themselves, a point [Defense Secretary
Robert] Gates himself made, saying the Sunni tribes decided to fight
and retake control from al-Qaida
many months before Bush decided to send an extra 4,000 Marines to Anbar
as part of his troop
buildup."
***
The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees believes that 1.7 million
Iraqis are displaced inside Iraq,
whose prewar population was 21 million.
The U.N. also reports that roughly 40 percent of Iraq’s middle class is
believed to have fled the
country; this in the wake of violence that has cost the lives of at
least 2,000 Iraqi doctors since the U.S.
invasion in 2003. Their flight has undermined basic services such as
water and sanitation and disrupted
commerce, making it increasingly difficult for Iraqi society to
function.
Neighboring countries are being overwhelmed by the influx of Iraqi
refugees. Iraqi refugees now
account for 10 percent of the population of Jordan, a nation of only 6
million persons – the equivalent of
30 million landing on U.S. shores. The U.S. has allowed only 466 Iraqis
to immigrate under refugee
status since 2003 and allocating only $20 million for Iraqi refugee
assistance.