SOFIA: Nazarian on track for third gold; Men’s Greco-Roman 60kg

Nazarian (Bulgaria) on track for third gold

Men’s Greco-Roman 60kg

Athens2004.com
25 August 2004

ATHENS, 25 August – After two elimination pools, reigning Olympic
champion Armen NAZARIAN (BUL) is looking good to repeat his earlier
successes in the Men’s Greco-Roman 60kg.

Also the Olympic flyweight (55kg) gold medallist in Atlanta, the
Bulgarian guaranteed his passage to the next round with two wins over
Ashraf ELGHARABLY (EGY) and Olexandr KHVOSHCH (UKR).

Akaki CHACHUA (GEO), third in Sydney in the discontinued 63kg class,
easily accounted for Italy’s Paolo FUCILE and will likely progress to
the next round.

Wlodzimierz ZAWADSKI (POL), gold medallist in the 63kg class in Atlanta,
has surpisingly lost twice.

In Pool 2, Eusebiu Iancu DIACONU (ROM) and James GRUENWALD
(USA) share first place with four points apiece and will wrestle for the
top spot.

Competition continues this evening at the Ano Liossia Olympic Hall.

;dcpnews=1&rsc=WR0000000

http://www.athens2004.com/en/resultsWrestling/results?item=32e7c29c6f19ef00VgnVCM4000002b130c0a____&amp

Equatorial Guinea ‘coup’ trial to start on Monday

Mail & Guardian Online , South Africa
Aug 23 2004

Equatorial Guinea ‘coup’ trial to start on Monday

Fienie Grobler | Johannesburg

advertisementThe trial of eight South Africans accused of plotting a
coup d’état in oil-rich Equatorial Guinea is due to open in Malabo on
Monday with claims of torture and denial of due process casting
doubts over the proceedings.

The eight men detained at the notorious Black Beach prison in Malabo
along with six Armenians and a German — who died in custody — were
arrested early March for conspiring to topple leader Teodoro Obiang
Nguema.

The eight South Africans are to go on trial along with the six
Armenians on Monday but South African officials said that the group
saw their lawyers for the first time on Friday.

Family members say the men have been severely tortured and even
though the official cause of German Gerhard Eugen Nershz’s death is
cerebral malaria, Amnesty International has said he “died on March
17, apparently as a result of torture”.

Three more men have since contracted malaria. Two have recovered but
a third is still ill.

The men have for the largest part of their incarceration been held
incommunicado, according to Amnesty International, and two wives from
South Africa were only allowed to visit them for the first time
earlier this month.

“The lawyers have just seen them today [Friday] and this was the
first contact they had,” said Billy Masetlha, advisor to South
African President Thabo Mbeki.

Mbeki, after a meeting with Obiang in July, announced his government
would send a team to Malabo, on request from Equatorial Guinea, “to
assist them in understanding what would represent a free and fair and
just trial”, Masetlha said.

“We have been pushing them to give access to the lawyers, however it
happened too late. The case is on Monday and clearly a case of that
level would need some preparation.

“From my simple reading of the situation… I would think it would be
possible that the lawyers go to the court and ask can you please give
us more time to study the charges, consult the clients, prepare the
documents,” said Masethla.

The 15 men arrested in Equatorial Guinea were nabbed two days after
Zimbabwean authorities detained 70 suspected mercenaries at Harare
airport following a tip-off from the South African government.

The Equatorial Guinea men, led by South African Nick du Toit, were
allegedly an advance group responsible for the preparations of the
coup d’état before the arrival of the 70 suspected soldiers of
fortune who took off from South Africa and stopped in Harare to pick
up weapons.

“I am very, very worried about this court case. My first name is
fear,” said Belinda du Toit, the wife of Nick du Toit.

“My logic tells me that you cannot have a trial like this without
legal representation. For cases like these you need months and months
to prepare. I do not think it could be a fair trial,” said Du Toit.

The men who are awaiting judgement in Harare say they were on their
way to guard diamond mines in the Democratic Republic of Congo while
the Equatorial Guinea detainees deny any involvement in the alleged
plot.

Nick du Toit (48), owns fishery and air-transport businesses in
Equatorial Guinea.

He is a former member of the South African police’s elite Special
Task Force unit and has been linked to Executive Outcomes, a
mercenary outfit that closed down in the 90s when the African
National Congress government outlawed mercenary
activity.

Du Toit is also said to have good relations with the soldiers of the
former so-called “Buffalo Battalion”, a mercenary unit created by the
apartheid government in South Africa in the 1970s to fight in Namibia
and Angola.

Five of the South African men detained with Du Toit, all of them of
Angolan descent, were members of the Buffalo Battalion.

Also arrested with Du Toit is Bones Boonzaaier, another a former
Special Task Force member. He is said to be a business associate of
Du Toit and took care of the logistics of his companies in Equatorial
Guinea.

The third man in detention is Mark Schmidt. He has no military
background and was employed by Du Toit as a cook.

Exhibition in Remembrance of 9/11

PRESS RELEASE
August 20, 2004
Embassy of the Republic of Armenia
2225 R Street, NW, Washington, DC, 20008
Tel: 202-319-1976, x. 348; Fax: 202-319-2982
Email: [email protected]; Web:

Exhibition in Remembrance of 9/11

In remembrance of the third anniversary of 9/11, the Congressional Caucus on
Armenian Issues and the Embassy of the Republic of Armenia in the United
States are launching an exhibition of paintings by the children of Armenia,
entitled “Message of Freedom and Hope,” on September 13, 2004, in Rayburn
House Office Building on the Capitol Hill. The exhibition reflects the
feelings and senses of the children and carries their message of freedom and
hope to the people of the United States. The paintings are generously
granted by “Kamk” Benevolent Fund and Children’s Center of Fine Arts of
Armenia.
Proceeds will benefit The American Red Cross Liberty Fund (9/11 families).

Date and Time of the Exhibition:
Monday, September 13, 2004
6:30pm – 8:30pm
Room 2325
Rayburn House Office Building
(Independence Ave. & South Capitol St., SW)
Washington, DC 20515

www.armeniaemb.org

Festival of Iranian wedding ceremonies seeking sponsor

Tehran Times, Iran
Aug 21 2004

Festival of Iranian wedding ceremonies seeking sponsor

Tehran Times Culture Desk
TEHRAN (MNA) — The director of the Sa’dabad Historical and Cultural
Complex announced here this week that the Peyvand Festival, which
aims to showcase Iranian wedding ceremonies of various ethnic groups,
is seeking a sponsor. Mohammad Abdol-Alipur said that 1.8 billion
rials will be needed to organize the festival, adding, `If an Iranian
sponsor can not be found, the festival might look for a foreign
sponsor and hold the festival in a European country.’

Festival organizers want to use the event to introduce people to the
local dance, music, and traditions of wedding ceremonies in different
regions of Iran, such as the Gilaki wedding ceremony of northern
Iran, the wedding ceremony of Bushehr in southern Iran, which
features local music played on kettledrum and bagpipe, the wedding
ceremony of Loristan in western Iran, which features local music
played on kamancheh (Iranian fiddle), the Azeri wedding ceremony’s
lezgi dancing, the local costumes of the Kohkiluyeh-Boyer Ahmad
wedding ceremony, and Gerayli, the Qashqai wedding ceremony, in which
the groom hunts a ram while local music and dances are performed.

The wedding ceremonies of Iran’s Zoroastrians and Armenian and
Assyrian Christians will also be featured at the festival.

Putin states concern on South Ossetia

Putin states concern on South Ossetia

Channel One TV, Moscow
20 Aug 04

[Presenter] The situation in South Ossetia was one of the main
subjects at the final news conference of the Russian and Armenian
presidents. Negotiations are the only way to settle the
Georgia-Ossetia conflict, Vladimir Putin said. The president restated
his view that Tbilisi’s actions in the 1990s, when Abkhazia and South
Ossetia were stripped of their status as autonomies, had been
mistaken.

[Putin] The situation is tense and concerns us. A decision about South
Ossetia was taken, and it is absurd to dispute that. Appropriate
documents exist, and we even have copies of those documents. They
abolish the autonomous status of South Ossetia. These documents were
signed by [Georgia’s late ex-President Zviad] Gamsakhurdia. We can
present these to journalists.

I can tell you that in conversations I have had with Mikhail
Nikolayevich Saakashvili [Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili] he
also said he thought these decisions were wrong.

As for a way out of this situation, there can be only one way out –
one needs to sit down at the negotiation table, which is the first
thing. Second, one needs to know how to come to agreement and, third,
to have the political will to carry out these accords.

If, on the other hand, everything goes on as it has done recently,
with the commission agreeing on something in the morning and in the
evening these accords being disavowed by other representatives of that
state, it is impossible for anyone to get anything done under those
conditions and, of course, there will be no result. We very much hope
that all parties to the process will show political maturity and
responsibility.

The Armenian genocide: Face history’s heartbreaking truth

The Armenian genocide

Face history’s heartbreaking truth

The International Herald Tribune
Thursday, August 19, 2004

By Jay Bushinsky

JERUSALEM — When the writer Franz Werfl, visiting this majestic city in
the early 1930s, sought a shoemaker, he was told that there was a very
competent one on Jaffa Road. His wife, the former Alma Mahler, had lost
one of her shoes aboard ship en route to Palestine and was desperate to
have the missing one replaced.

The shoemaker’s name was Garabidian – an Armenian name. Werfl was
surprised to discover Armenians in Jerusalem. When he found out that the
Old City had an Armenian Quarter and that most of its inhabitants were
survivors of the 20th century’s first genocide, he was overwhelmed with
emotion. That conversation inspired his internationally acclaimed novel,
“The Forty Days of Musa Dagh.”

The carnage perpetrated by the Ottoman Turks 89 years ago, in which 1.5
million ethnic Armenians were killed or deported, was a tragic prelude
to the Nazi Holocaust of 1939-1945 in which six million Jews were
annihilated.

Hitler’s determination to destroy European Jewry was encouraged by the
world’s lack of interest in the Armenian tragedy. In a speech delivered
to his troops on Aug. 22, 1939 – nine days before he invaded Poland – he
was quoted as having said: “Who, after all, speaks today of the
annihilation of the Armenians?”

The fact that these words were not included in the official text has
prompted skeptics to contend that they never were uttered. They may have
been said off the cuff, since it is hard to believe that they could have
been invented by others.

Ironically, Hitler’s rhetorical question is inscribed on one of the
walls of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial in Washington, and rightly so. But
there is a vast chasm between moral sentiment and political expediency.
The latest attempt by Armenian-American activists to win Congressional
recognition of the Armenian genocide was a failure. Other interest
groups, including Jewish ones, misguided or opportunistic, convinced a
vast majority of the American lawmakers that a resolution along those
lines would offend the Turks at a time when the United States needs them
as allies.

Israeli diplomacy also puts contemporary priorities ahead of moral
obligations. When a major documentary about the Armenian genocide was
due to be screened here, the foreign ministry intervened out of
consideration for Turkish sensibilities. It is hypocritical to expect
compassion and sympathy from the peoples of the world for the lives lost
in the Holocaust when ‘raison d’état’ prevents Israel and most Israelis
from commiserating with the Armenians.

Israel’s government winced when Turkey’s prime minister, Recep Tayyip
Erdogan, assailed its policy and behavior in the West Bank and Gaza
Strip as well as toward the Palestinians in general. But neither Israel
nor the overseas Jewish organizations dared remind Erdogan that leaders
of nations that had committed crimes against humanity had best refrain
from preaching to others – a lesson learned and followed by Germany.

Historical truth must be faced regardless of how heartbreaking it may
be. It cannot be subordinated to the ebb and flow of modern
international relations. Anyone who visited the Armenians’ grim memorial
to their martyred brothers and sisters south of Yerevan, Armenia’s
capital, in the shadow of biblical Mount Ararat, cannot but grieve with
them.

Israelis, Jews, Zionists and their supporters should comfort the
Armenians in their national sorrow and the Turks should accept the
photographs, documents and above all testimony, which commemorate the
Armenian genocide, instead of insisting that it never happened.

By Jay Bushinsky is a freelance writer based in Israel.

Vatican stirs debate on Turkish EU membership

EU Observer
August 16, 2004.

Vatican stirs debate on Turkish EU membership

16.08.2004 – 09:52 CET | By Honor Mahony

Negative comments by a high-ranking Cardinal in Vatican about Turkish
membership of the EU have once more stirred the controversial debate.
In an interview last week with Le Figaro magazine, Cardinal Joseph
Ratzinger said that Turkey is “in permanent contrast to Europe” and that
linking it to Europe would be a mistake.
To make his point he spoke of the Ottoman Empire’s incursions into the
heart of Europe in past centuries.
Cultural riches should not be sacrificed for the sake of economic
riches, the Cardinal is quoted as saying in Turkish media.
The German, who heads the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith, said that Turkey, which is a predominantly Muslim secular
republic, should seek political union with Arab states and not with
European countries.
He suggests it “could try to set up a cultural continent with
neighbouring Arab countries and become the leading figure of a culture
with its own identity”.
Turkish rejection
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan rejected the Cardinal’s
comments.
“The Vatican is a religious state. We are speaking to and making
evaluations with EU member countries,” said Mr Erdogan, according to
Zaman.
All of these comments come ahead of some crucial decision in the EU
about Ankara’s bid to join the bloc.
The European Commission will publish a report in October on Turkey’s
readiness to join.
On the basis of this report, EU leaders will make a decision in
December.
But Turkey already has support from some influential countries in the EU
– including the UK and Germany.

Birds Without Wings

San Francisco Chronicle, CA
Aug 14 2004

Birds Without Wings

By Louis De Bernières

KNOPF; 553 PAGES; $29.95

“Birds Without Wings” is Louis De Bernières’ first novel since
“Corelli’s Mandolin” (1994), which won the Granta Prize, sold 2.5
million copies worldwide and became a big-budget Hollywood film with
Penelope Cruz and Nicolas Cage. Even the author acknowledges that his
new novel may not duplicate the success of the previous one. “Birds”
is a long, interesting and sometimes challenging book. An account of
the changes the first third of the 20th century brings to a small
Turkish village may not appeal to a mass audience, particularly
without an overriding romance to leaven the tale.
At the dawn of the 20th century, Eskibahçe is a town of no
distinction in western Anatolia. Muslims, Orthodox Christians and
Armenians live there in relative peace under the policy of tolerance
that represented the Ottoman Empire at its best. In Eskibahçe, a
Christian father veils his young daughter at the request of the
learned imam, who finds that her beauty is distracting the local men;
a Muslim housewife asks her Christian neighbor to light a candle
before the icon of the Virgin — just in case. The scandals,
triumphs, solutions and problems remain local matters that the local
people can handle, just as their parents and grandparents did.

Then what Iskander the Potter calls the “great world” intervenes,
precipitating decades of wrenching sorrow and bloodshed. The Armenian
genocide is followed by World War I, the collapse of the Ottoman
Empire and the emergence of modern Turkey. The end of the war
produces the forced expulsion and resettlement of half a million
ethnic Greek Christians to Greece (and of 1 million ethnic Turks to
Turkey), a socially and economically disastrous policy dictated by
the Lausanne Settlement.

De Bernières presents the suffering of the inhabitants of Eskibahçe
in counterpoint to the life of Kemal Ataturk, commenting that history
“is finally nothing but a sorry edifice constructed from hacked flesh
in the name of great ideas.” De Bernières writes dense, fine-grained
prose that moves with the measured grace of a 19th century novel. But
he often seems to have spent too much time with the thesaurus and to
have picked up a little too much local color. If there’s an obscure,
multi-syllable adjective that can replace a simple, familiar one, he
invariably chooses the former. He delights in including words and
phrases in Turkish and Greek, but rarely bothers to translate them.
When a grotesque, eccentric beggar takes up residence among the
nearby ancient tombs, the people of Eskibahçe provide alms in the
form of food: “They arrived with their small but honourable offerings
of kadinbudu köfte, green beans in olive oil and iç pilàv, and then
departed, having greeted him with a quiet ‘Hos geldiniz.’ ”

In an interview with the Observer, De Bernières said, “I’m one of
those writers who’s always going to be trying to write ‘War and
Peace’: failing, obviously, but trying.” A more apt comparison would
be Dickens. De Bernières’ narrative doesn’t proceed with the
irresistible, martial sweep of “War and Peace”; events seem like the
product of chance and myriad small decisions made by individuals,
rather than historical inevitability. There’s a Dickensian tone to De
Bernières’ accounts of the everyday experiences of his numerous
characters, including minor, eccentric ones. It’s easy to imagine Pip
encountering Daskalos Leonidas, the embittered teacher who spends his
days teaching Greek to students he disdains and his nights writing
subversive political tracts that everyone ignores.

“Birds Without Wings” also lacks the passion that marks the novels of
Tolstoy (and Dickens, for that matter). Although Iskander’s son
Karatavuk takes part in it as a sniper, De Bernières fails to convey
the horrors of Battle of Gallipoli in 1915, where 281,000 Allied
troops and 250,000 Turks perished. The intimate domestic vignettes
come to life in a way that the big set pieces don’t. When two village
housewives help each other during hard times, blithely ignoring the
religious and ethnic differences that will later tear their lives
apart, the reader can almost smell the onions and olives in their
kitchens. Karatavuk describes the stench and filth of the battlefield
in endless detail, but the images don’t register with the same force.
The catalog of tortures inflicted on the civilian populace by various
armies and brigands has less impact than the list of dishes at the
feast that Rustem Bey’s new mistress prepares for him.

Ultimately, “Birds Without Wings” is an ambitious book in which the
little things are what come to life. –

BAKU: DMs of Azerbaijan & GB sign memo on mutual understanding

Azer Tag, Azerbaijan State Info Agency
Aug 13 2004

DEFENSE MINISTRIES OF AZERBAIJAN AND GREAT BRITAIN SIGN MEMO ON
MUTUAL UNDERSTANDING
[August 13, 2004, 16:02:08]

Minister of Defense of Azerbaijan Colonel-General Safar Abiyev met
with Ambassador of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern
Ireland in Baku Laurie Bristow and Military Attaché to Georgia and
Azerbaijan Christopher Nann to sign the memorandum on mutual
understanding between the two countries.

He expressed satisfaction with the existing cooperation between
Azerbaijan and the United Kingdom in political, economic and other
spheres. It is very remarkable that the memo on mutual understanding
we are to sign today will lay the foundation for our military
cooperation, he said.

Ambassador Bristow noted for his part that the two countries had been
cooperating in military sphere even before within the framework of
the NATO Partnership for Peace program, and that, both counties’
units are now serving side by side in Iraq. The memo according to him
will promote intensive development of the military cooperation
between Azerbaijan and UK.

I believe, Colonel-General Safar Abiyev responded, that the signing
of the memo will serve strengthening of independence and security of
Azerbaijan. Then, the Minister exchange views with the British
Ambassador on the political and military situation in the Southern
Caucasian region. Touching upon the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict over
Nagorno-Karabakh, he expressed concern over the fact that the
international community had not yet recognized Armenia, which had
occupied 20% of the Azerbaijan’s territories as an aggressor.

The Minister also informed the guests on Azerbaijan’s integration
into the European security structures, intensification of the
country’s activities within the NATO Partnership for Peace program
and implementation jointly European countries of large-scale economic
project.

Ambassador Bristow expressed his government’s belief in fair
resolution of the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict, and noted that the
United Kingdom is very interested in long-term security in
Azerbaijan.

In conclusion, Minister of Defense of Azerbaijan Colonel-General
Safar Abiyev and Ambassador Laurie Bristow have signed the memorandum
on mutual understanding and Defense links between the Republic of
Azerbaijan and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern
Ireland.

The Human-Capital Equation of the U.S. Occupation of Iraq

Infoshop News
Aug 12 2004

The Human-Capital Equation of the U.S. Occupation of Iraq
by Stephen “Flint” Arthur

“Endless development of armed force. Every day we hear of fresh
inventions for the more effectual destruction of our fellow-men,
fresh expenditure, fresh loans, fresh taxation. Clamorous patriotism,
reckless jingoism; the stirring up of international jealousy have
become the most lucrative line in politics and journalism. Childhood
itself has not been spared; schoolboys are swept into the ranks, to
be trained up in hatred… drilled in blind obedience to the
government of the moment, whatever the colour of its flag, and when
they come to the years of manhood to be laden like pack-horses with
cartridges, provisions and the rest of it; to have a rifle thrust
into their hands and be taught to charge at the bugle call and
slaughter one another right and left like wild beasts, without asking
themselves why or for what purpose. Whether they have before them
starvelings… or their own brothers roused to revolt by famine-the
bugle sounds, the killing must commence.” — Peter Kropotkin – War!

When a state is determined to pursue war, and all forms of indirect
symbolic protest actions have failed to sway politicians to halt
their imperialist aggression, the only remaining option is direct
action by the working class. One option is a general strike by
workers that can effect the production and transpiration of military
capital, that is the materials essential for the war machine. The
other is to deprive the military of the labor it needs to fight the
war. The slogan from the Vietnam War protests deliberately speaks to
this, “What if they had a war, and no one came?” The U.S. military is
overwhelmingly recruited from the working class, and convincing our
class as a whole to refuse to work for this blood money may be our
best chance for both ending the war in Iraq and limiting the
imperialist ambitions of the U.S. for future decades.

Military recruitment is a big business. The U.S. federal government
spends $2.4 billion dollars a year to recruit soldiers for what is
the most capital intensive army in the world. It costs the U.S.
Department of Defense about $11,600 to recruit a solider. In addition
to the cost of recruitment, training and equipping the average
solider costs an additional $50,000. The U.S. Army estimates that
each increase in the size of the army by 10,000 soldiers increase
costs by $1.2 billion a year.

The U.S. military spending is $395.2 billion, with an additional cost
of the current war of $74.7 billion. To understand the kind of money
we are talking about, the annual budget for the U.S. Department of
Defense (not including the current war) is three times the combined
military budgets for Russia, China, Iraq (before the U.S.
invasion/occupation), Iran, North Korea, Libya, Cuba, Sudan and
Syria.

It also represents 48% of the Federal Discretionary Budget. The U.S.
federal spending on education is $61.4 billion — it is ironic that
if not for the huge sums the U.S. spends on the military and the
prosecution of various wars, the very economic benefits it tempts
recruits with could be shared across the entire U.S. populace. We
need resources for housing, education and healthcare — not warfare.

The Class Character of Cannon Fodder

“Politicians hide themselves away. They only started the war. Why
should they go out to fight? They leave that role to the poor” —
Black Sabbath “War Pigs”

A 1999 Pentagon study says that the military is recruited from the
lower middle class, and that the socioecomic status of recruits is
slightly lower than the general populace. To lure a segment of the
working class into the “voluntary army” a number of benefits, that
are quite commonplace as social benefits in other countries, are
offered to soldiers.

Education, job training, medical treatment, housing subsidies, a
steady income — all benefits that the working class has won through
class struggle in some other countries are lacking in the U.S. and
used as a form of economic conscription. The “poverty draft” targets
the most economically precarious sections of U.S. society and among
super-exploited communities; mainly youth of color.

Military recruiters prey upon working class people in Black, Latino,
Native American, Arab, Asian, and Pacific Islander communities. Quite
simply, the armed forces target people of color for recruitment
disproportionately, and thus they die in war disproportionately.
During Operation Desert Storm over 50% of the front-line troops were
people of color, largely Latino. While blacks make up about 12.7% of
the same-age civilian population, they constitute about 22% of
enlisted personnel.

Perhaps most striking is the number of enlisted women who are black:
more than 35%, indicating not only that black women enlist at higher
rates, but that they serve longer. In the Army, half of all enlisted
women are black, outnumbering whites, who account for only 38%.

The U.S. military doesn’t restrict recruitment to U.S. citizens.
35,000 non-citizens are active in the armed forces, of which 15,000
are now eligible for expedited naturalization under an executive
order from President Bush.

Do You Want to Be a Bullet Sponge for Career Day?

The No Child Left Behind Act (NCLBA) has led to more intense military
recruitment in schools. Before the act, one third of all high schools
refused recruiters’ request for students’ names or access to campus.

Under the NCLBA, schools can loose federal funding if they refuse to
release student information to recruiters. So now most schools turn
over student’s names, addresses and phone numbers to military
recruiters and allow military recruiters unrestricted access to
campuses. The NCLBA opened up some 22,000 schools to military
recruiters. Through the Deferred Enlistment Program, students can
join the military before they have graduated high school. The
proportion of new recruits who were high school graduates has dropped
to 91% from it’s peak of 98% in 1992. Only 6.5% of enlistees had some
college as opposed to the 46% of civilians of the same age.

The Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps (JROTC) is present in over
2,800 high schools nationally. Further, the limit on the national
number of JROTC units in high schools has just been lifted. These
programs traditionally target communities of color, especially areas
of Latino concentration.

Fifty-four percent of JROTC participants nationwide are students of
color. The prior JROTC expansion took place in 1992 in the aftermath
of the Gulf War and the L.A. uprising. Writes Shelly Reese, for
American Demographics Magazine, “The riots underscored the lack of
opportunities for teenagers in economically disadvantaged areas. That
led General Colin Powell to lobby for expanded JROTC.”

There are now even feeder courses in middle schools to recruit
adolescents into high school programs in the future. In some schools,
a course in JROTC has become effectively mandatory for freshmen who
find it listed in their initial class schedule. JROTC programs even
cost their host schools money, about $50,000 per school; for
1995-1996, Atlanta spent $1.5 million on JROTC. Considering the size
and expense of the program, it also is very effective; with 50% of
program graduates joining the military, recruited directly into the
lowest ranks.

Military “Adventure Vans” (actually RVs and Semi-Tractor Trailers)
now travel across the country attracting youth with video games and
educational multi-media shows, reaching 500,000 students every year.
The army vans visit 2,000 schools; and the Navy and Airforce vans
visit another 500 each.

One new recruitment strategy has been to attract youth through video
games. America’s Army video game is a first person shooter developed
at a cost of $7 million. Released on July 4th, 2002, the game was a
free downloadable. It’s website got 750,000 hits per/second the first
two days it was online. Computer Gaming World magazine packaged
40,000 copies of the game in an issue of their magazine. It is
certainly worth the army’s investment since 28% of hits to
goarmy.com’s are from websites that host America’s Army

Human Resources for the Greatest of Inhumanities

“The reason to have a military is to be prepared to fight and win
wars. That is our basic fundamental mission. The military is not a
social welfare agency, it’s not a jobs program.” – Dick Cheney, Vice
President of the U.S.A.

The much lauded fringe benefits to military service in terms of job
training, education and healthcare, are really just another big
swindle.

Only 12% of male veterans, and 6% of female veterans say they have
made use of their skills learned in the military for regular jobs.
Veterans actually earn less than non-veterans. The average post
Vietnam-war era veteran earns between 11% and 19% less than
non-veterans from comparable class backgrounds. Over 50,000
unemployed veterans are on the waiting list for the military’s
“retraining” program. The Veteran’s Administration estimates that
one-third of all homeless people are veterans.

Soldiers must pay $1,200 into the Montgomery G.I. bill during their
first year, while their pay is as low as $700/month. Bureaucracy
tends to delay paying soldiers up to the first three months in
college. Only 35% of recruits receive any education benefits from the
military, that means about two-thirds don’t. Only 15% of military
recruits graduate with a 4 year degree. The American Council has
attributed a drop in black college enrollment to military
recruitment.

You can wait for months for an appointment with a VA medical center.
In some states, veterans who are not disabled cannot use the centers.
In 2002, an infestation of mice, maggots, and flies caused the
removal of the director and deputy director for the VA medical
regional network for Missouri, Kansas, and southern Illinois.
Janitors had not touched food storage areas or the cafeteria for over
a year. Maggots had nested in the noses of two comatose patients.
Bush slashed the VA medical budget by $275 million in 2002.

Job Security Through Infinite Destruction

One thing often told to U.S. soldiers in Iraq is that they are
rebuilding country, however the military is not the Peace Corps. The
U.S. military is also responsible for much of the damage to Iraq’s
infrastructure since during the Persian Gulf War in 1991. The
intentional bombing of civilian life and facilities systematically
destroyed Iraq’s infrastructure leaving it in a de-industrialized
condition.

The economic sanctions against Iraq after the Gulf War exacerbated
the problems of destroyed infrastructure. The combination of
infrastructure destruction and sanctions was quite deliberate. Col.
John Warden III, deputy director of strategy, doctrine and plans for
the Air Force, agreed that one purpose of destroying Iraq’s
electrical grid was that “you have imposed a long-term problem on the
leadership that it has to deal with sometime. Saddam Hussein cannot
restore his own electricity,” he said. “He needs help. If there are
political objectives that the U.N. coalition has, it can say,
‘Saddam, when you agree to do these things, we will allow people to
come in and fix your electricity.’ It gives us long-term leverage.”

The Iraqi government and the U.S. military have financed
reconstruction of nearly 40 hospitals. Iraq’s Health Ministry’s
budget for next year is nearly $1 billion with an additional $793
million from the U.S. as well as donations from other countries.
Iraq’s hospitals were once the envy of the Middle East. The rich used
to fly their relatives in for everything from heart transplants to
plastic surgery, and Iraqi specialists traveled the world lecturing
about their research.

Targeting the electrical grid and water-treatment facilities in Iraq
in 1991 resulted in epidemics of gastroenteritis, cholera, and
typhoid, leading to perhaps as many as 100,000 civilian deaths and a
doubling of the infant mortality rate. Medical care continued
deteriorate under the economic sanctions imposed after 1991, and
Hussein banned the importation of medications produced by U.S.
companies and their affiliates, even though those were often the best
available. Iraq has one of the highest infant mortality rates in the
world — one that climbed from 40 out of 1,000 live births in 1989 to
108 per 1,000 live births today. Former US Secretary of State,
Madeline Albright, was asked if the death of a half of a million
Iraqi children from sanctions was worth the price, Albright replied:
“This is a very hard choice, but we think the price is worth it.”

The education system in Iraq was once one of the best in the Middle
East in the 1980s, but investment declined from $620 per year per
student in 1988/89 to $47 in the late 1990s. Sanctions hit the
economy and schools were left short of basic supplies such as chalk
and blackboards, and poverty forced many children out of education.
Until last year, very little money had been put into construction or
repair work since the 1991 Gulf War, resulting in a shortage of
buildings. During and after the latest war, more than 3,000 schools
were looted, destroyed or burned in southern and central Iraq – and
60 in Baghdad suffered bomb damage.

Downsizing in the Death Factory

“Is there anywhere where our theory that the organization of labor is
determined by the means of production is more brilliantly confirmed
than in the human slaughter industry?” — Marx to Engels (1866)

Much of the 1990s was known for a profound restructuring of labor
through plant closings, layoffs and downsizing made possible through
the increased efficiency of automation as well as speedups,
taylorizations and “just-in-time” production made possible through
improved communication and distribution networks — a philosophy that
has been applied to the U.S. military. The smaller, more flexible,
more mobile army championed by Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld,
shows that he has been thinking like the CEO of the military. Many
CEOs discovered that a reduction in the amount of labor makes what
labor is used, particularly skilled labor, more essential. Further,
that a breach in one link in a global just-in-time production chain
can bring the whole enterprise to a screeching halt. A leaner and
meaner operation, becomes far more vulnerable to disruption by a
withdrawal of labor.

Today, roughly 1 in 200 U.S. citizens are on active military duty —
the lowest proportion in a century. The army’s ranks have dropped by
40% since the fall of the Berlin wall in 1989. A surprising
retirement bulge after Desert Storm contributed to the decline.
Currently, there are 499,000 active duty Army troops, backed up by
700,000 National Guard and Army reservists. That’s a third less than
when the U.S. fought the Gulf War in 1991.

The U.S has troops in 156 countries; 63 with military bases.
According to the Department of Defense, “the United States military
is currently deployed to more locations than it has been throughout
history”. Over 130,000 Army troops are in Iraq, 9,000 in Afghanistan,
3,000 in Bosnia, 37,000 in South Korea, 56,000 in Germany. More than
half of the U.S. troops stationed permanently on foreign soil are in
Germany and South Korea. By comparison, during the Persian Gulf war
in 1991, The U.S. had more than 500,000 troops deployed in the Gulf
while the non-U.S. coalition forces equaled roughly 160,000, or 24%,
of all forces.

The U.S. has already begun to shift resources. For instance one unit
has been permanently removed from South Korea and is moving it’s
3,600 troops to Iraq. The move will deplete U.S. forces in South
Korea by nearly 10%, the first major shift of resources out of the
country in decades –indeed this is shifting troops from the border
with North Korea one of the dreaded “Axis of Evil” that actually has
openly demonstrated that it has nuclear weapons of mass destruction.
There is a real limit to exactly how much the U.S. military can
rearrange it’s troop deployments.

According to the Congressional Budget Office, “the United States has
invested heavily over the past 50 years in base infrastructure for
its troops stationed overseas, any major shifting of forces — either
between overseas locations or to the United States — would require
significant spending to provide that infrastructure somewhere else.”

Increasing numbers of National Guard and Reserves are being called up
for one year stings since 9/11. 15,000 were mobilized this spring, in
addition to the 43,000 already mobilized. Deployments of the National
Guard and Reserves have gone up 3-400%. This year, 40% of US troops
in Iraq will be from the National Guard or Reserves.

Outsourcing and Privatizing the Privates

“Mercenaries and auxiliaries are useless and dangerous; and if one
holds his state based on these arms, he will stand neither firm nor
safe; for they are disunited, ambitious and without discipline,
unfaithful, valiant before friends, cowardly before enemies; they
have neither the fear of God nor fidelity to men, and destruction is
deferred only so long as the attack is; for in peace one is robbed by
them, and in war by the enemy. The fact is, they have no other
attraction or reason for keeping the field than a trifle of stipend,
which is not sufficient to make them willing to die for you. They are
ready enough to be your soldiers hilst you do not make war, but if
war comes they take themselves off or run from the foe” — Niccolo
Machiavelli, The Prince

The largest military presence in Iraq after the U.S. is not the
contingent from the United Kingdom, rather it is the some 20-30,000
mercenaries employed by various private security firms — the exact
number is unknown. Their losses can be high, but are rarely reported
because of non-disclosure agreements–but as many as 80 foreign
mercenaries were killed in an eight day period in April. Is the pay
worth the risk? It certainly depends on who you are. Some foreign
mercenaries receive up to $1,500 a day, while an Iraqi might receive
as little as $150 per month. Former British SAS commandos can expect
$10,000 month, while the 700 Nepalese gurkas hired by ArmorGroup earn
one tenth what white soldiers make. A low-ranking U.S. army grunt
makes about $1,000 month in Iraq, about the same as a Nepalese gurka
mercenary.

The U.S. has pushed for the interim Iraqi government to grant
mercenaries with U.S. citizenship the same immunity to Iraqi law that
U.S. military troops have — but the mercenaries aren’t accountable
to the U.S. military either. Officially, the “US government assumes
no responsibility for the professional ability or integrity of the
persons or firms whose names appear on the list” of private security
firms. The question of immunity is particularly troublesome since two
of the accused torturers at Abu Ghraib prison are U.S. employees of
CACI International.

The largest mercenary group is the South African/British company,
Erinys. It is charged protection of oil fields and pipelines. Ahmad
Chalabi, previously the Department of Defense’s favorite stooge,
secured Erinys the $100 million contract which employs 14,000 Iraqi
troops, largely from Chalabi’s militia for the Iraq National
Congress.

Around 1,500 South Africans are employed as mercenaries in Iraq. SAS
International, an Erinys subcontractor, was revealed to be employing
troops who had been part of South Africa’s apartheid-era security
forces. This included a member of the Koevoet, a South African unit
used in Namibia which paid bounties on blacks during the 1980s
independence movement; as well as a former Pretoria police sergeant
who was part of the Vlakplaas death squads whose actions ncluded a
car bomb assassinations of a government official, killing fifteen
blacks and firebombing the homes of between 40-60 anti-apartheid
activists.

Mercenaries continue to find themselves at flashpoints. Blackwater
USA contractors were the victims whose corpses were mutilated and
hung off a bridge which triggered the increased repression of U.S.
forces on Fallejuh. Blackwater also participated in the siege —
which was only resolved by turning security in the town over to Iraqi
troops lead by former Baath officers. Having received additional
training at Blackwater’s 6,000 acre compound in North Carolina, the
company has also employed and dispatched 60 former officers of the
Pinochet’s Chilean military. Blackwater (as well as Titan Corp) also
have employed between 500-1,000 Serbian troops who have experience in
Bosnia. Among it’s contracts, the company won a bidless $21 million
dollar contract to provide security for the boss of the U.S.
occupation — Paul Bremer.

Iraqi Civil Defense Corps (ICDC) current 21,000 troops might be the
outsourcing solution to the occupational army’s labor problem — if
only they would show up reliably to work and not slack off so much
when they do show up. During the uprising of al-Sadr and the Mehdi
army, there were reports of ICDC troops deserting, leading U.S.
troops into ambush, and firing upon U.S. troops. In April, half of
the Iraqi army, paramilitary units and police deserted or left their
posts.

“Right now the ICDC are a mess. They have no disciple and no
motivation to do anything. All they want to do is show up, get their
pay and their three good meals a day, and that’s that. Plenty of guys
over here view them as cannon fodder for us, people we put on the
very front of the gate as a first line to stop whoever first.” —
Anonymous U.S. soldier working with the ICDC

The behavior of the ICDC is not surprising in light of the Iraqi
military under Saddam. That army was one of the most disloyal,
deserting, fraternizing, mutineering, couping militaries of all time.

Forty percent of the Iraqi army failed to show up for muster when the
U.S. invasion started, and even more deserted once it started. During
the Iraq-Iran war, the Iraqi army had to shell itself to get its own
units to fight. Many of the frontline troops surrendered to Iran
rather than fight — which accounts for the fact that at the end of
the war Iran had 75,000 Iraqi prisoners of war — seven times the
number of Iranian POWs. After the first Gulf War, the U.S. released a
similar amount of 71,204 Iraqi POWs to Saudi control.

Between 1991-1994, over 13,000 Iraqi troops deserted. Strangely
enough, during the U.S. invasion and occupation of Iraq in 2003, only
7,000 Iraqi soldiers surrendered — leaving the bulk of the Iraqi
army to go underground or desert. Perhaps they had a premonition
about what might await them at the Abu Ghraib prison; but more likely
it was the mass slaughter of Iraqi troops deserting the front lines
during the first Gulf War where some where literally buried alive by
bulldozed trenches or massacred along the “highway of death” that
encouraged them not to surrender so easily to the U.S. this time.

If the U.S. military followed the lead of the Iraqi military, there
wouldn’t have been a war at all. With the retirement bulge after the
first gulf war, and the current difficulties with retention… some
U.S. soldiers might be taking at least some Iraqi advice — albeit in
a less dramatic fashion.

Similar problems plague the Afghan National Army (ANA) under the
Karazi government where 3,000 troops have deserted, leaving the ANA
with only 7,000 troops to fight a resurgent Taliban. Other
Jehadi/Northern Alliance militia, like those Dostum and Gulbuddin
have already proved themselves as less than loyal to the Karazi
government.

Iraq’s new police force has some 70,000 cops. There is also 21,000
border police, and an additional 92,000 Iraqis guard important
infrastructure and government buildings through the facilities
protection services. While these positions are some of the most
dangerous in Iraq, and while the pay of $3-500 a month for security
services is the equivalent to the salaries of civil servants and
teachers — a larger motivating factor might be Iraq’s 45%
unemployment rate.

The largest challenge for the future Iraqi army is the incorporation
of standing militias. So far, the army has an officer core of 1,700
officers — but it remains to be seen if they can successfully
integrate the militias. Some 100,000 troops are being ordered into
the army, border security or police –they are being given the
enticement of being treated as veterans with various government
benefits including pensions.

The bulk of militia fighters are 75,000 Kurdish pesh merga under the
control of the two main Kurdish political parties PUK and KDP. The
Kurds have been seen as the U.S. strongest allies, but that all might
be about to change. At the beginning of May, the Kurdistan Workers
Party (PKK) under it’s new name of the People’s Congress of Kurdistan
has declared an end to it’s five year-old cease-fire with the Turkish
army — which they backed up with attacks that the Turkish army
responded to in kind. Since no Kurd was selected as either president
or prime minister in the interim government, Kurdish political
parties are feeling frozen out. The KDP and PUK have threatened to
pull out of the interim government unless Kurdish autonomy is
guaranteed. A new Kurdish uprising could mean mission creep to
Turkey, Syria, Iran, Armenia and Azerbaijan.

The rest of the militias are controlled by Allawi’s Iraqi National
Accord, Chalabi’s Iraqi National Congress, the Shiite Dawa party, the
Iraqi Islamic Party, Iraqi Hezbollah, the Iraqi Communist Party and
the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, The Badr
Brigade (of the Supreme Council) numbers 15,000 and so far appears to
be cooperating, however many Badr brigadiers were sympathetic to the
uprising by al-Sadr and the Mehdi Army, with over 800 fighters
killed, still appears to be growing.

The other U.S. allies in Iraq are the 24,000 troops from the armies
of other nation-states who are increasingly concerned about their
role in Iraq. It was U.S. allies that bared the brunt of Mehdi
uprising. Britain has more than 10,000 troops in Iraq, and Italy,
Poland and the Ukraine have between 3,000 and 1,000 troops deployed
in Iraq respectively. Spain’s removal of 1,300 troops is the most
significant so far. A request by the U.S. to involve NATO in Iraq has
fallen on deaf ears. Will the new U.N. mandate help in securing more
peace keepers?

The Rising Cost of Blood in Exchange for Oil

“We don’t do body counts.” — General Tommy Franks, US Central
Command

Even though Bush declared an end to major hostilities over a year
ago, death of occupying forces continues. Since the start of the Iraq
war there have been 1,000 coalition deaths including 880 U.S.
soldiers. For the U.S. forces alone that’s more deaths than the first
three years of U.S. involvement in Vietnam war. At least two dozen
U.S. soldiers have committed suicide. According to the Pentagon,
5,013 U.S. troops have been wounded in action. Soldiers are medically
evacuated from Iraq for other reasons including “non-combat related
weapons discharges”, malingering (self-inflicted wounds),
pregnancies, psychological breakdowns, and accidents. An unknown
number of mercenaries have died, as well as an unknown number of
Iraqi military. Civilian Iraqi deaths are estimated between 9,436 and
11,317.

Four divisions — half the Army’s active-duty strength — are in the
two lowest readiness categories because of their service in Iraq.
They are expected to be in that situation for the next six months. US
ground force requirements in post-invasion Iraq “have stressed the
U.S. Army to the breaking point” With a third of the army’s total end
strength involved in occupying Iraq, the Army War College calls “for
an across-the-board reassessment”, that is for an increase in service
levels.

Part of the effort to increase service levels has led to the highly
resented “stop-loss” policies, which prevent armed forces members
from retiring or resigning. At the end of May 2004 some 44,000
soldiers had there service extended. The most recent stop-loss policy
restricts soldiers from completing their service if their unit is
within three months of deployment to Iraq.

Finding it increasingly difficult to retain current soldiers and
recruit future soldiers; as well as finding increasing needs to
increase the size of the military; the U.S. government may try to
return to one of the more primitive forms of labor expropriation —
slavery. While they will wait till after the elections this fall,
politicians might find it necessary to reinstitute forced military
labor-conscription: The Draft.

“Unless so-called Army short tours in the badlands of Iraq and
Afghanistan become manageable based on the number of troops available
— right now the Army is trying to do the work of 14 divisions with
10 under-strength, active-duty divisions–we’ll see a mass exodus
from the Green Machine and the inevitable return of the draft.” —
Col. David H. Hackworth (USA Ret.), Soldiers for Truth

Take This Job and Shove It

“We soldiers who are driven along to the word of command, or by
blows, we who receive the bullets for which our officers get crosses
and pensions, we, too, poor fools who have hitherto known no better
than to shoot our brothers, why, we have only to make a
right-about-face towards these plumed and decorated personages who
are so good as to command us, to see a ghastly pallor overspread
their faces.” — Peter Kropotkin, An Appeal to the Young

We can expect retention to continue to decline as morale continues to
decline, which will increase both the amount of stop-loss orders as
well as number of soldiers fleeing military service when they have
the opportunity. An October (2003) Stars and Stripes survey said that
1/3rd of the military personnel surveyed believed that the war had
“no value” or “little or no value” at all.

Further, nearly half of the U.S. troops plan not to re-enlist. The
New York Times reports that for the last three years, Army, Navy and
Airforce Reserves have failed to meet their recruitment requirements.
According to Thomas White, retired general and former Secretary for
the Army, “We are in serious danger of breaking the human-capital
equation of the Army. Once you break it, it takes along time to put
it back together. It took us 20 years after Vietnam”.

“The voting via the shoe leather express isn’t about to start, it HAS
started. A few of my best friends and confidants here at Campbell are
company grade officers and they can’t wait for their obligation to
end. They have no intention of staying in. One of them spent 9 months
in Afghanistan and then 7 months in Iraq. He just took company
command and he will be going back to Iraq in a few months for another
year. 3.5 years in and most of it spent in the Middle East. He has no
intention of staying past his mandatory service date.” — Anthony
Topkick, Soldiers for Truth

While many soldiers will “vote with their feet” and decline future
service at their end of their tours, a few have already started to
apply as conscientious objectors, that is they are refusing to
participate in war in any manner. Conscientious objection reached
record heights in the Vietnam War era where there were some 200,000
COs. By comparison, the Gulf War had only 111, but military put a
stop to the practice and imprisoned 2,500 C.O. applicants. To qualify
as a CO, an applicant must have a “firm, fixed and sincere objection
to war in any form or the bearing of arms” because of deeply-held
moral, ethical, or religious beliefs. The GI Rights Hotline
(1-800-394-9544) can provide information to military service members
about military discharges, grievance and complaint procedures, and
other civil rights. In 2002 the number of calls to the hotline had
grown to 21,000 calls — it now averages 3,000 calls a month.

For some, they won’t be willing to wait out the terms of the service
(or stop loss), nor will they qualify as conscientious objectors.
Their choice becomes imprisonment or desertion. After being Absent
With Out Leave (AWOL) for 30 days soldiers are classified as
deserters. In the Vietnam war some 100,000 people went into exile to
avoid military service, mostly to Canada — and the New York Times
estimates that 25,000 Vietnam resisters never returned to the U.S.

According to the U.S. Army public affairs office. Over 3,800 soldiers
deserted in 2002, of these 3,255 were returned to military control —
then usually discharged or serving a short incarceration sentence.
There are currently several high profile desertion cases like Jeremy
Hinzman and Brandon Hughes who’ve requested refugee status and
political asylum in Canada — though these requests are likely to be
denied, and if denied it is likely means deportation back to the U.S.
It is also much more difficult to legally immigrate to Canada today
than it was during the Vietnam War. Further, by going into exile, the
U.S. government will consider the expatriate deserter to be a
fugitive. Any return to the U.S. is likely to result in conviction
for desertion.

Breaking the Human-Capital Equation

“In response to the ongoing atrocities being committed against the
Iraqi people by the US military, an Air Force recruitment center in
Woodbridge, NJ became the target of direct action. The Main Street
office had red paint thrown all over its front, including its front
windows and sign. This serves the primary purpose of causing damage
but also symbolically protests the slaughter at the hands of
America’s criminal air force. The blood is on every Americans’
hands… this invasion is an effort by the US government to expand
corporate hegemony over the region. Human rights are being pushed
aside to plunder Iraqi resources and leave a stronger military
stronghold in the region. America’s oil-based consumer economy is
destroying civilizations all over the world for the profits of a
minority.” — Communique from Direct Action Front, April 16 2003

With all these statistics, it’s tempting to reduce human beings to
mere numbers. For the likes of General White, the labor of soldiers
is commodified to such an extent, that the soldiers themselves become
indistinguishable from war-material — human beings are reduced to
just another form of capital. Labor can become so alienated, our
humanity, ethics and conscience is on the auction block. There is a
tendency for people to simply go along with the situation, to buckle
under to the pressure, to accept authority. It feels like a betrayal
to go against the espirit de corps, to breach the job contract, to
break the law. As much as the state and capitalism attempt to reduce
human beings to automatons through the alienation of our labor, one
thing I’ve realized by talking to soldiers, is that some humanity
still exists under the mass-produced uniforms. Some part of them
wants to defy authority and reclaim their lives. While politicians,
corporations and military brass might think of grunts as nothing more
than interchangeable pieces in the war machine, we should not make
the same mistake. They are still human beings, we can still talk to
them, and by doing so… we might be able to help them free
themselves from war.

We can reach out to youth who are feeling pressured to join the
military and show them that there are other paths they could take,
that some jobs just aren’t worth having. Since the military starts
recruiting in schools, we must be active there as well. There is an
exception in the No Child Left Behind Act that allows students and
parents the ability to opt out of their information being provided to
military recruiters, they must simply send a letter to their school
superintendent. Presenting students and parents with a form letter
they can use is an excellent way to start conversations in opposition
to war and militarism.

Also, some anti-recruitment activists have gotten access to schools
by calling for equal access as the military recruiters have, and they
provide presentations on other options for training and education
while exposing the swindle that is the military recruitment. We can
work with student activists groups to kick JROTC out of their
curriculum, and counter the military adventure vans. Forums at
schools should be planned where people can speak out against joining
the military, and veterans can relate both the banalities of the
military as a career and the horrors of war. Targeting recruitment
centers for pickets and protests will help prepare the anti-war
movement for opposition to the draft.

Further, in reaching out to youth, we have to build an
anti-militarist culture. To a certain extent, the U.S. move away from
conscription after the Vietnam war represented how much
anti-militarism had already taken hold in the U.S., and the
pre-emptive protests before war that have happened since the 1990s
are another example of how deeply anti-militarism has become
entrenched. The counter-culture of the hippies has been stereotyped
as anti-militarist, but anti-militarism can be found in many youth
scenes, and that sentiment should be encouraged; much like
anti-racist activists have encouraged anti-racism in youth culture
through combinations of music, fashion, graffiti, periodicals, forums
and rallies.

Getting to potential recruits before they enlist is the best way to
deprive the military of new blood. We should setup pickets outside
recruitment centers, just like we might picket a struck business or a
temporary employment agency that primarily is used to break strikes
through hiring scabs. Joining the military must be seen as even worse
than scabbing. We must impress upon our fellow workers that the
military is the worst job imaginable, that whatever they are offering
it’s not worth killing and dying.

Finally, and potentially the most difficult thing to do is to
convince those already in the military to get out. It is likely that
most soldiers will come to be selectively opposed to the current war,
instead of becoming total conscientious objectors.

The U.S. military, however, doesn’t allow for selective objection —
so for those willing to get out, they’ll either need to claim
conscientious objection, or go AWOL and then desert. We need to
provide soldiers with all the information we can get them to accept.
Even if you can convince a soldier to go AWOL for just a short period
of time, to decide if fighting this war is what they really want to
do, you are providing a window where they, at least, have the option
to think for themselves. Once they are deployed to the Middle East —
even if they change their minds once there — they are in a difficult
situation; you can’t walk home from Iraq.

The protests that attempted to “stop the war before it starts” we’re
unprecedented — and yet, they failed to stop the war. What’s needed
now is a qualitative, not quantitative, shift in our anti-war
activity. Instead of speaking to politicians, we need to start
speaking to more receptive ears — that is the rest of the working
class with a message that speaks to our economic situations and human
needs. There is no war, but the class war.

By breaking the human-capital equation of the military and depriving
the capitalist state of the labor it needs to keep the war-machine
going, we can limit the U.S. ability to wage wars of occupation. If
we are successful in such a campaign, we can deter U.S. imperialist
aggression not just today, but perhaps for an entire generation. The
U.S. may have reached it’s pinnacle as an empire. The war in Iraq may
represent the empire overstretching itself. If we can break the will
of soldiers to fight for the U.S. empire, this might be the last such
war the empire will ever have. The struggle against imperialist war
is a worth fighting.

===============

Stephen “Flint” Arthur is a member of NEFAC-Balitmore, and currently
has a sister in Iraq with the U.S. Army National Guard

===============

This essay is from the newest issue of ‘The Northeastern Anarchist’
(#9, Summer/Fall 2004)… which includes essays on the Iraq war and
military recruitment, anarchist arguments against electoralism, wages
for housework, prisons and fascism, revolutionary organization, a
history of anarchism and anti-imperialism, the Quebec general strike
of 1972, and much more!

The Northeastern Anarchist is the English-language magazine of the
Northeastern Federation of Anarcho-Communists (NEFAC), covering class
struggle anarchist theory, history, strategy, debate and analysis in
an effort to further develop anarcho-communist ideas and practice.

http://www.infoshop.org/inews/stories.php?story=04/08/12/5445550