Operation kickback? Posted: Saturday, April 24, 2004
The "Iraqization" Scam This might seem like a bit of a contradiction—with Bush intensifying his war rhetoric, yet staying committed to the handover plan. There is no irony, however, because the "handover" plan does not involve the United States pulling out. About 100,000 U.S. troops will remain in Iraq after the so-called handover, and the coalition will still assert its influence from the U.S. embassy.
Tweedledee and Tweedledum Kerry and Bush Melt into One
Charade in the Sands. Bush Stashes WMD in Iraq
"Submit or Die"
Fallujah Residents Report US Forces Engaged in Collective Punishment
Joint Chiefs Chairman: War Going Well
At Least 30 Killed in Iraq Attacks More than 33 Iraqis killed in day of attacks 2 U.S. Servicemembers Die in Boat Blasts Deadly Boat Attacks Target Iraq Oil, Close Facility Five U.S. Soldiers Killed in Iraq Attack Seven US soldiers die in Iraq
The CIA Killed Pat Tillman
Bush fails history
Politics and entertainment: Killing us softly The other day I was in the grocery store waiting to check out, with my local newspaper in hand. The front page carried a graphic photograph of a United States Marine breaking down a door in "a house-to-house search for weapons and insurgents in Fallujah, Iraq" (Chicago Tribune, 13 April, 2004, p.1), where American occupation forces were conducting a murderous exercise in imperial over-retaliation. This noble operation has killed a large number of unarmed civilians, including many children.
At least the illusions are gone
Intelligence requires smarts
The Battle For Iraq, From The Inside
Operation kickback?
Algeria 1830: Legacy of an Occupation
White South Africans fail to win asylum in US
Two U.S. Oil Workers Killed in Nigeria
Bush's believe it or not
GM crops to be prohibited on Venezuelan soil
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