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From nuclear proliferation to the use of cluster bombs -- coverage of the campaign should focus more on the arms race, less on the horse race.

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Presidential Race Ignores Arms Race

By Amy Goodman, King Features Syndicate. Posted May 22, 2008.


From nuclear proliferation to the use of cluster bombs -- coverage of the campaign should focus more on the arms race, less on the horse race.
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As the U.S. presidential race continues, so does the arms race worldwide. People -- civilians, children -- are being killed and maimed, on a daily basis, by unexploded cluster bombs and land mines. Thousands of nuclear missiles remain at hair-trigger alert. The U.S. government rattles its saber at Iran, alleging a nuclear-weapons program, while at the same time offering uranium to Saudi Arabia. And with the war in Iraq well into its sixth year, one of its architects, Douglas J. Feith, the former undersecretary of defense for policy under Donald Rumsfeld, has predictably penned a revisionist history of the war and the decisions behind it.

Feith said this week: "So while it was a terrible mistake for the administration to rely on the erroneous intelligence about WMD -- and, I mean, it was catastrophic to our credibility -- first of all, it was an honest error and not a lie. But even if you correct it for that error, what we found in Iraq was a serious WMD threat. Even though Saddam Hussein had chosen to not maintain the stockpiles, he had put himself in a position where he could have regenerated those stockpiles in three to five weeks."

In an interview I asked Hans Blix about Feith's comments. He was the United Nations' chief weapons inspector, in charge of the WMD search. Reflecting back five years, he said: "To prove that there is nothing is almost impossible. I think that if we had been in Iraq for a couple of months more, it would have been enough to make it extremely clear to everybody that the chances were real that there were no weapons of mass destruction." Instead of waiting for the inspections, the Pentagon was busy trying to discredit Blix. I asked him about the allegations that the U.S. was bugging his office and home. He said, "I wish to heaven that they had listened a little better to what I had to say, if they did listen."

Blix describes the current state of the world as a "Cold Peace": "It is hard to avoid the impression that -- almost 20 years after the end of the Cold War -- military calculations still dominate the long-term thinking about major global relations. Terrorism is formally made the chief enemy, but precautions are taken against the growing power of China and Russia." President Bush's nuclear-cooperation pact with India, Barack Obama's stated willingness to unilaterally strike nuclear-armed U.S. ally Pakistan, Hillary Clinton's promise to Iran to "totally obliterate" the nation of 70 million (should it attack Israel), and John McCain's hard-line position on Russia, including the deployment of a missile defense in eastern Europe, all point to a reliance on military solutions that Blix sees as a path to conflict and war.

In a remarkable demonstration of hypocrisy, the Bush administration has pledged to deliver enriched uranium to Saudi Arabia. Anti-nuclear activist Harvey Wasserman said: "The idea of giving enriched uranium to the Saudis while threatening war with the Iranians for enriching uranium is astonishing. The idea that the Saudis are going to somehow lower the price of oil on the basis of possibly getting nuclear reactors in the future is just almost staggering to think about."

I asked Blix what is the single most important thing the U.S. could do to support world peace. Sign the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, he said: "Then I think it's very likely that the Chinese, who have not ratified, will follow. If China does it, maybe India does. If India does, Pakistan does, etc. And the treaty would enter into force. It would be a great thing if we outlawed any nuclear-weapons tests in the future."

Nuclear weapons are not the only weapons of mass destruction. As I spoke to Blix, hundreds of people were meeting in Dublin, Ireland, to craft an anti-cluster-bomb treaty, the cause Princess Diana championed in the last years of her life. The Dublin Diplomatic Conference on Cluster Munitions is dedicated "to negotiate a new instrument of international humanitarian law banning cluster munitions that cause unacceptable harm to civilians."

The conference in Dublin has 128 participating nations. Absent is the leading producer of cluster munitions, the United States. Russia and China are also not there.

From nuclear proliferation to the use of cluster bombs -- coverage of the presidential campaign should focus more on the arms race, less on the horse race.

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See more stories tagged with: clinton, arms race, obama, mccain, cluster bombs, nuclear weapon

Amy Goodman is the host of the nationally syndicated radio news program, Democracy Now!

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It's a good beginning.....
Posted by: foreverhope on May 23, 2008 8:41 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
During his first year in the United States Senate Barack co-sponsored and enacted the Lugar-Obama Nuclear Non-proliferation and Conventional Weapons Threat Reduction Act.

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» RE: It's a good beginning..... Posted by: foreverhope
Impeach GWB/CHENEY, end the war, contact Congress, thank Keith Olbermann and so much more!
Posted by: foreverhope on May 23, 2008 2:04 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Democrats.com is the largest independent community of Democratic Party activists, with over 500,000 members.

Democrats.com is the home of the Aggressive Progressives and we have led the fight against George W. Bush since he stole the White House in 2000.

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"In a remarkable demonstration of hypocrisy..."
Posted by: non-person on May 28, 2008 6:47 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Amy Goodman writes for Hearst Communications while pretending to be an "anti-corporate liberal" and pulling down a million-dollar salary from a shady contract with Pacifica.

Here's an interesting question: are the foundations that provide so much support for left-wing news outlets like Alternet and Democracy Now themselves invested in the likes of Lockheed? Are they invested in funds that are invested in Raytheon and Boeing? Probably. I mean, how does some institution like the Packard Foundation, which has a $300 million grant-making budget for 2008, renew that fund? It is based on a total investment budget of some $6.6 billion dollars. Among other things, the foundation controls 10% of Hewlett-Packard stock. Who else is in?

Fidelity FMR $6,960,704,313
Barclays Global Investors UK Holdings Ltd $5,297,742,959
STATE STREET CORPORATION $5,201,037,681
DODGE & COX INC $4,472,889,991
VANGUARD GROUP $3,485,390,943
AXA $2,760,666,38

This is about the same as TimeWarner or NewsCorp - meaning that the same people who hold the purse strings for Alternet also are deeply committed to the status quo vis-a-vis globalization and the power of corporations in American politics.

This is so going to get deleted, isn't it?

This is typical of all foundation-supported left-wing and right-wing news outlets. The left is far better, but often glosses over the real issues due to fear of losing funding.

For example, over the years I've sent letters and notes asking Democracy Now to cover the story of the newly expanded U.S. biowafare program, the anthrax vaccine, the Fall 2001 anthrax attacks aimed at media outlets and Congress, and the linking factor - the world's largest private research corporation, the "nonprofit" Battelle Memorial Institute, aka Dr. Strangelove's Laboratory. Dead silence. Not a single mention - no discussion of the coverup by the FBI, the bogus attempt to frame Steven Hatfill, the lawsuit brought against Battelle by the widow of the Florida newspaper editor who was murdered - nothing. That's odd, I thought.

Who's running this circus? Take a look at Alternet's top donors over the period from 2001-2005 (NATHAN CUMMINGS FDN -850,000, DAVID AND LUCILE PACKARD FOUNDATION - 760,060, FORD FOUNDATION - 733,000, OPEN SOCIETY INSTITUTE - 355,000, ROCKEFELLER FOUNDATION - 300,000...), and then consider the watered-down coverage - no, this site isn't any more "independent" than the rest of the corporate media is, and neither is Amy Goodman. They are far, far better than the right wing nuts represented by the Sarah Richardson, Olin, Scaife and Bradley foundations, at least. Take a look at the Bradley Foundation, for example:

"Other grantees include the Project for the New American Century, which received $200,000. The National Strategy Information Center received $275,000. The Federalist Society for Law and Public Policy Studies received $125,000. The Independent Women's Forum obtained $20,000 for general operations, and Bradley also gave $20,000 to Marquette University for a research project on Norman Podhoretz.

Government organizations also obtained grants. The National Endowment for Democracy received $80,000 for the publication of The Journal of Democracy. The International Republican Institute, which also gets funding from the NED, received $26,000.


There are certain issues that everyone agrees on, though... such as capital liberalization and intellectual property rules for global trade agreements - the actual legal and economic and military framework of the American Empire always goes unquestioned, more or less.

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