virus: 11 years in solitary - rampant memes?

From: Jei (jei@cc.hut.fi)
Date: Sat Jan 24 2004 - 13:17:01 MST

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    This is the guy, Mordechai Vanunu, that I couldn't remember earlier.
    And it was 11 years in solitary confinement - memes must wreack havoc
    in that time. Seems they also do for people in Guantanamo, considering
    the suicide rate is 5%.

    http://usa.mediamonitors.net/content/view/full/4232/

    Israel's Nuclear Arms and the Bush Administration
    by George S. Hishmeh
    (Saturday 24 January 2004)

    "Israel’s continued disregard of international inspections will continue to
    drive countries in the region to acquire chemical and biological weapons, if
    not nuclear arms."

    Overview:

    According to the United States Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), Israel is
    the fifth largest nuclear power in the world. The CIA estimates Israel’s
    nuclear weapons to number between 200 and 400. According to published
    research on Israel’s nuclear program, Israel’s arsenal enables it to
    obliterate all imaginable targets in most Arab countries." Furthermore, a
    1993 official report to the U.S. Congress states that Israel has "undeclared
    offensive chemical warfare capabilities" and is "generally reported as
    having an undeclared offensive biological warfare program." Yet despite
    Israel’s nuclear might, polls have shown that only 18.3 percent of Israelis
    have a sense of national security. Moreover, one in four Israelis believe
    that the country should give up its nuclear arsenal.

    On the international level, there has been continuous apprehension over
    Israel’s "alleged" nuclear program. Israel has purposely remained ambiguous
    about its nuclear program, maintaining that it would not be the first to
    introduce" nuclear weapons in the region. Successive U.S. governments have
    refused to raise the issue with Israel and have remained silent as
    international demands on Israel to tell the truth increase.

    But with the growing tensions in the Middle East and the Bush
    administration’s "crusade" to rid the Middle East of weapons of mass
    destruction, can the United States justify its insistence that Iran, Libya
    and Syria allow inspections while allowing Israel to disregard international
    inspections?

    Revealing the Secret - Mordechai Vanunu:

    Details of Israel’s secret nuclear program were brought to light 18 years
    ago by Mordechai Vanunu, the Israeli scientist at Israel’s top-secret Dimona
    reactor. Vanunu, who has served 17 years in an Israeli prison—11 of which
    were in harsh solitary confinement—took photographs of the sensitive areas
    of the reactor complex and smuggled them to the United Kingdom were they
    were published in the London Sunday Times. The revelations were the first
    confirmation that Israel had an extensive nuclear program. Vanunu’s
    scheduled release in less than three months is sure to spark speculation
    over whether the whistle-blower still holds secrets that would add to
    international apprehension over Israel’s nuclear program.

    The Israeli nuclear program is rarely discussed in the United States, and
    less so in Israel. The United Nations General Assembly and the International
    Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) General Conference have adopted 13 resolutions
    since 1987 appealing to Israel to join the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
    With the resolutions being non-binding, Israel has ignored them.

    The United States, United Nations, and Israel’s Weapons:

    In May 1963, U.S. President John F. Kennedy told then-Israeli Prime Minister
    David Ben Gurion that the Dimona reactor "seriously jeopardized U.S.-Israeli
    relations." According to published materials, it was clear to the United
    States that Israel was building an atomic bomb to the "vexation of Kennedy,
    for whom nuclear non-proliferation was a touchstone." However, the Israelis
    were "splendidly" evasive on the subject, setting off a flurry of diplomatic
    activity with Washington demanding to inspect the site. Today, the United
    States carefully avoids addressing Israel’s nuclear program and whether it
    is in favor of international inspections of Israel’s nuclear stockpile. When
    asked specifically about Israel, U.S. officials simply reiterate that the
    United States "has a long-standing position of universal adherence to the
    treaty on non-proliferation of nuclear weapons."

    Most disconcerting however, is the Bush administration’s relentless approach
    on nuclear and chemical weapons in Iran and Libya, even Syria, while it
    refuses to raise the issue with Israel. Israel’s nuclear program has
    advanced rapidly since its initiation in the 1950s. Today, Israel is capable
    of launching a nuclear attack by air, land and sea with its Dolphin Class
    submarines from Germany specifically equipped with modified cruise missiles.
    The German submarines are said to be the most advanced diesel submarines in
    the world with only the United States capable of destroying them.

    Representatives of the United Nations have also expressed concern over
    Israel’s nuclear program. In late 2003, Mohammed Al Baradei told Israel’s
    Haaretz newspaper that he believed Israel had nuclear weapons and that the
    stockpile should be eliminated in order to promote peace in the Middle East.
    He stressed that Israel has never tried to deny or disprove the assumption
    that it has nuclear capability.

    Nuclear Weapons or Peace:

    The most puzzling decision has been the Bush administration’s lukewarm
    reaction, to put it mildly, to Syria’s recent proposal at the United Nations
    Security Council to make the Middle East an area free of weapons of mass
    destruction. The Syrian proposal also included a call for all countries in
    the Middle East to join the Non-Proliferation Treaty. To this day, Israel
    remains the only country in the region that has yet to subscribe to this
    international accord.

    Israel’s continued disregard of international inspections will continue to
    drive countries in the region to acquire chemical and biological weapons, if
    not nuclear arms. Efforts to reach a stable and lasting peace between
    countries that rely on having superior arms for leverage on the negotiating
    table will fail. The best way to avoid calamity may be in linking nuclear
    non-proliferation with an all-encompassing Middle East settlement.

    http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2004/01/23/1074732600084.html

    Guantanamo: a symbol of US loss of values

       By Richard Cohen
       January 24, 2004
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       The US does not believe the old rules apply in the war against terror.

       If you are about my age, you grew up on combat movies in which some
       American POW told an enemy interrogator that he would supply only his
       name, rank and serial number.

       In the next breath, the American would cite the Geneva Convention in
       demanding fair treatment of prisoners. Then, that sounded as American
       as apple pie. Now, we're getting that pie in our face.

       The reason, of course, is that the United States continues to hold
       hundreds of suspected Taliban and al-Qaeda fighters at a special
       military prison facility at the Guantanamo Bay naval base in Cuba.

       I emphasise the word "suspected," because already more than 80 of the
       original 660 detainees have been released - a few to be jailed in
       their home countries, most just to go free.

       It's not clear if the Geneva Convention applies - or can apply - to
       detainees who are not conventional prisoners of war.

       After all, al-Qaeda is a terrorist organisation, not a state, and it
       is not likely it will ever sign an armistice agreement ending
       hostilities.

       It's hard to believe that an al-Qaeda fighter, freed from Guantanamo,
       would simply collect some doughnuts from the Red Cross and go home.
       The nature of war has changed.

       But not, I would hope, the nature of the United States. Yet for more
       than two years now, the United States has been holding detainees
       without the benefit of counsel when, the law of averages says, some of
       them are bound to be innocent.

       One of them might be David Hicks, a 28-year-old Australian who was
       captured in Afghanistan in December 2001. It was not until last month
       that Hicks was visited by his lawyer - the first time any Guantanamo
       detainee had seen a lawyer.

       It could be that Hicks, like some of the other detainees, was just in
       the wrong place at the wrong time.

       The word Guantanamo has become shorthand throughout the world for
       American arrogance.

       Whatever the case, this is where lawyers prove useful - and why
       defendants in the United States are guaranteed the right to counsel.

       Given enough time and enough pressure, even the innocent will confess
       to something - anything just to end the isolation and deprivation.

       From all accounts, Guantanamo is not a particularly harsh place. US
       authorities don't go in for physical torture and all the Muslims are
       allowed to pray.

       But the isolation, the sheer hopelessness of the situation, has taken
       its toll. Vanity Fair magazine reported last month that 20 per cent on
       the detainees are on anti-depressants and that by the end of the year,
       32 of them had attempted suicide. In the end, jail is jail.

       In any sort of sweep such as the kind the US and its allies conducted
       in Afghanistan, the innocent are bound to be found among the guilty.

       That's a mathematical truth - especially when Afghan warlords were
       given bounties for captured Taliban. What did they care if they hauled
       in some innocent characters? It is these people, the innocent or the
       merely deluded, who are bound to be in Guantanamo - and have been for
       at least two years now.

       To an amazing degree, the word Guantanamo has become shorthand
       throughout the world for American arrogance and unilateralism. We
       insist that our POWs and others be treated by universally accepted
       rules - the Geneva Convention, for instance. But when we capture some
       people, we say the old rules don't apply.

       No one better articulated American arrogance than Defence Secretary
       Donald Rumsfeld who, when asked in January 2002 why the Geneva
       Convention did not apply to the detainees, replied that he did not
       have "the slightest concern" about the treatment after what they had
       done.

       The Economist magazine, hardly an anti-American news weekly, called
       Rumsfeld's remarks "unworthy of a nation which has cherished the rule
       of law from its very birth".

       My own education in this matter came last October when I went to visit
       the former president of Germany, Richard von Weizsaecker, at his home
       in Berlin. Weizsaecker - both pro-American and adamant in insisting
       that Germany face its past - answered all my questions but then
       brought up one himself: Guantanamo: "What is the rule of law and what
       is a human right?"

       These are excellent questions - directed not at me, but at the
       President and Congress alike. Both have been awfully slow to respond.
       To Weizsaecker, Guantanamo represents an America that has turned its
       back on its values. Anyone who watched the old war movies can only
       agree.

       Richard Cohen is a columnist with The Washington Post.

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