home / subscribe / donate / books / t-shirts / search / links / feedback / events / faq


CounterPunch Print Edition Exclusive!

Michael Pollan on Food
"The Next Big Political Movement"

Read Harry Kreisler’s brilliant interview with Pollan. There are many pearls, starting with why “nutrition” is bunk. Also, from the annals of classical espionage: Igor Atamanenko on How the Americans were bugged through a Trojan Horse. Get your new edition today by subscribing online or calling 1-800-840-3683 Contributions to CounterPunch are tax-deductible. Click here to make a donation. If you find our site useful please: Subscribe Now! CounterPunch books and t-shirts make great presents.

Order CounterPunch By Email For Only $35 a Year !

Today's Stories

May 17, 2010

Pam Martens
The Big Plunge: SEC Admits to Inadequate Tools to Conduct Investigation

May 14 - 16, 2010

Alexander Cockburn
Closet Politics

James Bovard
Operation Tarmac

Chase Madar
How Liberal Law Professors Kill

Sharon Smith
Regulatory Paralysis and the Financial Crisis

T. P. Wilkinson
The Return of the Ancien Régime: Greeks, Germans and Bankers

Marjorie Cohn
Kagan's Disturbing Record: She's No Thurgood Marshall

Ismael Hossein-Zadeh
The Vicious Circle of Debt and Depression

Mike Whitney
Why Rescue Bankers?

Gareth Porter
Afghanistan's Great Divide

Jordan Flaherty
Racist Revenge in Jena

Naseer Aruri
Is There Hope for a Two-State Solution?

Gary Leupp
Japan's Obama

Ramzy Baroud
Yemen's Sorrowful Options

Rannie Amiri
Israel's Master of Deception

Joe Bageant
The Fearless Plain

Jed Brandt
Nepal's First Days of May

Nadia Hijab
Israel's Disappeared

Saul Landau
GM's Shell Game

John Stanton
HTS: More Feared Than the CIA?

Greg Moses
A Public Option for Jobs

Missy Beattie
New Justice, Still No Justice

Christopher Brauchli
Lieberman's Strip Tease

Jayne Lyn Stahl
No Papers Required for CIA Hit List

Linh Dinh
Virtual Living

Tolu Olorunda
Disney and the End of Innocence

David Ker Thomson
Thinning the Grove: Getting Rid of Dead Wood in the Academy

Tom Turnipseed
A Slick and Slimy Killer

Harry Browne
World Cup: Forever England

Fatemeh Keshavarz
The Goals of Ahmadinejad

Jim Goodman
Marketing Biotech

Ron Jacobs
Socialism, Now More Than Ever?

David Macaray
My Kind of Blue

Charles R. Larson
Bollywood Does America

David Yearsley
The Smiths, Radiohead, the Gorillaz and Other Favs of the the New Brit PM

Poets' Basement
Five by Maxwell Clark

May 13, 2010

Franklin C. Spinney
Bound to Fail: the Inevitable Collapse of McChrystal's Afgan War Plan

Mike Whitney
Capitalism Without Capital

Bill Quigley
Housing as a Human Right

William Blum
We've Seen the Likes of the Teabaggers Before

Joshua Frank
Dirty Subsidies: Extractive Industries Make Out in Obamatime

John Ross
East Coast Breakdown

Mark Weisbrot
The European Union's Dangerous

David Swanson
Obama Scraps Iraq Withdrawal Plan

Charles M. Young
More Cynicism: From Diogenes to Casino Jack

Brian J. Foley
Jesus for the Supreme Court?

Website of the Day
Finally Some Clarity in the War on Terror

 

May 12, 2010

Pam Martens
The May 6 Stock Crash Revisited

Billy Wharton
The Salazar Quotient: How Big Oil Bought the Interior Dept.

Debbie Nathan
Borderlands: What Jews Know About Immigration

Gary Leupp
Threatening Pakistan

George Wuerthner
Let Wolves be Wolves: Predators and the Manly Men

David DeGraw
Financial Reform Report Card: What Side is Your Senator On?

Harvey Wasserman BP's Dead Zone

Dina Jadallah
The Nakba and the Two-State Solution

Marshall Auerback
Latvia and the Neoliberals

Ethan Nadelmann
Obama's Drug War Strategy: Still a Long Way to Go

Website of the Day
NYPD Forced to Apologize to Debbie Nathan

May 11, 2010

Michael Hudson
The People v. the Bankers

Dean Baker
Lending and the Big Banks

Patrick Cockburn
The Vicious War That Sent Shahzad to Times Square

Alan Farago
Wrecking the Gulf: Risk and Consequences

Gareth Porter
McChrystal's Afghan War Plan Unravels

Nadia Hijab
Bending the Rules for Israel

Deepak Tripathi
American Afflictions

Chris Floyd
The Poetry of Death

Walter Brasch
The South Learned; Arizona Hasn't

Nikolas Kozloff
Talking the Amazon with James Cameron

Website of the Day
Chomsky: No Time to Read Onion Piece About Him

May 10, 2010

Andrew Cockburn
Why We Should Keep the Fed Away From the Consumer: the Hurt Incident

Marjorie Cohn
Kagan Will Move the Court Further to the Right

Jeffrey Blankfort
The Last Democratic Primary Worth Watching

Anthony DiMaggio
The Trashing of ACORN

Bill Quigley
Targeting Al-Awlaki

Mike Whitney
A Lost Decade Ahead for Housing

Greg Moses
Generation Payback

Eric Toussaint
The Market, the New Faith

Stanley Heller
May 12, Iraq Genocide Memorial Day

Martha Rosenberg
Do You Have "Shift Work Sleep Disorder"? The Drug Industry Hopes So

Website of the Day
Turley on Kagan

May 7 - 9, 2010

Alexander Cockburn
You Drill, You Spill

Elizabeth Gould /
Paul Fitzgerald

Crossing the Zero Line in Afghanistan

Peter Lee
China in the Catbird Seat: Iran, China and Israel's Weapons of Mass Disruption

Marshall Auerback
The US is Not Greece

Mike Whitney
Glitch in the System

Russell Mokhiber
How Oil Companies Cheat

Brian Cloughley
Cementing Relationships: How the US and Israel Draw Ever Closer Together

Gary Leupp
The Latest Official Report on Afghanistan

Ramzy Baroud
The Price of Courage

David Rosen
Come Out, George, Come Out: New Scandal Rocks Christian Right

Saul Landau
When Will the Real Terrorists Stand Up?

Tim Wise
Pardon You: Reparations and the Politics of Blame

P. Sainath
Farmers' Suicides: Their Final Letters

Patrick Cockburn
Shia Power in Iraq

Ron Jacobs
Days of Rage

Timothy MacBain
Privacy Reform: the Sound of No Hands Clapping

Bill Hatch
Bet Against California ... You Can't Go Wrong

Jeff Ballinger
IKEA's Workers Not at the Table

Missy Beattie
Catastrophically Ashamed

Jed Brandt
Nepal's May First and After

W. John Green
Green is for Go in Colombia

Mark Weisbrot
Venezuela and Greece: Compare and Contrast

Eric Toussaint
Bolivarian Venezuela at the Crossroads

Tom Turnipseed
Blowback in Times Square

Harry Browne
World Cup 2010: The Dutch and the Germans

Christopher Brauchli
You Say You Want to Teach Some Evolution, Well, You Know ...

Farzana Versey
Literary Dissent

David Ker Thomson
Up: the Exploration of Cheap Space

Charles R. Larson
Hocus Bogus

David Yearsley
I Take in Rossini's "Armida" With My Favorite Uncle

Poets' Basement
Bhat, Holt and Orloski

Website of the Weekend
This Can't be Happening

May 6, 2010

Harry Kreisler
Talking with Chalmers Johnson

Nikolas Kozloff
Anatomy of an Oil Disaster

Ray McGovern
Loose Lips on Iran

Rannie Amiri
Hezbollah and the Policy of "Scud Ambiguity"

Roberto Rodriguez
Welcome to Operation Streamline: Scenes From Apartheid Arizona

Christopher Ketcham
Pardon the Troublemaker

Ashley Smith
Why Gates is Wrong About Reparations

Jayne Lyn Stahl
Faisal McBomber

Richard Ward
A Gusher From the Newspaper of Record

Website of the Day
They Fucked with the Wrong Mexican!

May 5, 2010

Dean Baker
The Greek Crisis

Mike Whitney
Toxic Transfer: Bernanke's Biggest Bailout

Russell Mokhiber
The 3-6-3 Rule: How to Put Bankers Back on the Golf Course, Where They'll Do Less Harm

Uri Avnery
A Cloud Over Jerusalem

Linh Dinh
This Oil Ride: a Chronology

David Macaray
Blaming Labor

Shamus Cooke
The Economics of Immigration Reform

Sheldon Richman
Immigration, Civil Liberties and the Drug War

James Rothenberg
Two Parties, One Politics

Bouthaina Shaaban
I Wish My People Would Learn

Billy Wharton
Killer-Coke Hits the Screens

Website of the Day
Torture Not Treatment

May 4, 2010

Pam Martens
Why a Criminal Case Against Goldman Sachs Matters and Why Charges Could Stick

Afshin Rattansi
No Hope for Britain

Nikolas Kozloff
The Political Might of BP

Darwin Bond-Graham
Oil and Wetlands: Is Arcadia Lost?

Jonathan Cook
Israel's Operation Imam

Ellen Brown
Derivatives Come to the Movies

Jayne Lyn Stahl
Chipping Away at Abortion Rights

Wajahat Ali
The Arrest of Faisal Shazad

Tanya Golash-Boza
Paterson's Deportation Review Panel

Franklin Lamb
Warehousing Palestinians

Website of the Day
The Fart Chart

 

May 3, 2010

Karl Grossman
Oil Spin

Mike Whitney
The Subprime Conspiracy

Anthony DiMaggio
The Return of Hooverian Economics

Gabriel Kolko
35 Years Since the Fall of Saigon

Alan Farago
Killing the Gulf of Mexico

David Underhill
Waiting on the Blob: At the Mouth of Mobile Bay

Nikolas Kozloff
The Oily History of Offshore Operations

Dave Lindorff
When the Hurricane Comes: Oil, Wind and Water

Conn Hallinan
Tales of Chrysler and Cocaine

Jed Brandt
May Day in Nepal

Website of the Day
Limbaugh: Environmental "Whackos" Resonpsible for Oil Spill

April 30 - May 2, 2010

Alexander Cockburn
Volcanoes, Weather and Computer Models

Harry Kreisler
Talking to Elizabeth Warren

Kathy Kelly /
Dan Pearson
Atrocities in Afghanistan: a Troubling Timeline

Bill Quigley
It's Not Just Arizona

Peter Linebaugh
May Day & SDS & SNCC Jubilee

Mike Whitney
Goldman in the Dock

Jed Brandt
May Day in Kathmandu

Mark Weisbrot
The IMF's Road to Ruin: From Latvia to Greece

Saul Landau
Countering Murder with Courage

Carl Finamore
Monopoly in the Sky

P. Sainath
The Color of Water

Mark N. Hoffman
Policing the West: From France to Arizona

Mikita Brottman
Technophobia in Academia

David Vine
The Environmental Protection of Military Bases?

David Macaray
Subverting Union Democracy

Ramzy Baroud
The South Reduced

Ann Wright
Gaza Death Zone

Joshua Frank
Shareholders Revolt Against Coal Ash

Harry Browne
World Cup: Why African Teams Never Quite Make It

Walden Bello
The Poverty Trap

Mervyn Claxton
Emergency Food Production in Haiti: Getting It Right

Joe Allen
Oliver's Story

Douglas Hamilton
A Town Called Marinaleda

Missy Beattie
Laura's Story: Deadly Intersections

David Rosen
The Slaughter in the Congo

David Ker Thomson Against Birth: Yours Was an Accident

Laura Flanders
Catastrophes Every Day for Profit

Charles R. Larson
The Last Slave Narrative?

David Yearsley
An Evening of Christian McBride

Poets' Basement
Anderson, Bready and Gibbons

Website of the Weekend
The Weight You Carry

April 29, 2010

Andrew Cockburn
The Prospects for Real Financial Reform Remain Remote

Karl Grossman Spill, Baby, Spill: Blow Out in the Gulf

Saul Landau
Real War Games

Alan Maass
Jim DeMint and Me

Phillip Doe
Stealing Rivers in Colorado

Brian Cloughley
Tangled Webs: From My Lai to Khataba

Paul Abowd
The Future of Detroit's Schools

Ron Jacobs
We Don't Need No Stinkin' Papers!

Binoy Kampmark
The Coming British Elections

Website of the Day
Scenes From the American Police State: Ask a Cop for His Badge Number, Get Arrested

April 28, 2010

Mike Whitney
The Interrogation of Lloyd Blankfein

Dean Baker
The Flight of the Deficit Hawks

Joanne Mariner
The Legality of Drone Warfare

Bruce E. Levine
The Astonishing Rise of Mental Illness in America: a Conversation with Robert Whitaker

John Ross
The Big Scam: How Washington Hooked Mexico on the Drug War

Dave Lindorff
Slick Politics: the Consequences of Drill, Baby, Drill

Tanya Golash-Boza
Criminalizing the Undocumented

Walter Brasch
Exploiting Low-Paid Workers at a Vo-Tech School

Steven Higgs
The State of Vaccine-Autism Research

Tom Clifford
Power Politics in Prague

Website of the Day
When Will Sen. Dodd Take "Yes" for an Answer?

April 27, 2010

Patrick Cockburn
Iraq Rocked by Court Verdict

Mike Whitney
What Really Triggered the Financial Crisis?

Ralph Nader
The Great Gap in Financial Reform

Ray McGovern
Is Iran Really a
Threat?

Cecil Brown
Goodbye, White Friends: White People Aren't Into Black People Anymore

Roberto Rodriguez
Arizona: This is What Apartheid Looks Like

Francis Shor
Death Squads in Afghanistan

Julie Hilden
The Case of the Crush Videos: Animal Cruelty and the Supreme Court

Steven Higgs
The Age of Autism

John Halle
A Cure for the Deficit Obsession

Website of the Day
Fulfilling the Dream

April 26, 2010

Greg Moses
Mormons for Racial Profiling?

Daniel Kovalik
Colombia's Deadly "Democracy"

Mark Weisbrot
Will a Congressional Rebellion Bring the Afghan War to an End?

Jonathan Cook
Israel's Big and Small Apartheids

Patrick Cockburn
US Intervenes in Iraqi Election Row

James Bovard
The Politics of the Tea Partyers

Stewart J. Lawrence
A Tale of Two Senators: McCain and Reid

Jayne Lyn Stahl
The Good, the Bad and the ... "Misguided"?

David Ker Thomson: A Cross Border Beating: the Disturbing Case of Dr. Peter Watts

Darwin Bond-Graham
Deepshit Horizon

Just Jerusalem Activists
Letter to Elie Wiesel: Your Jerusalem v. the Real Jerusalem

Website of the Day
Criminal Adultery?

April 23 - 25, 2010

Alexander Cockburn
Marijuana, Boom and Bust

Steve Hendricks
The Unquiet Grave: Indian Country, the FBI and the Death of Anna Mae Aquash

Mike Whitney
Lehman's Liar's Loans and Other Cons

Carl Ginsburg
The Envy of the World

Jeffrey St. Clair
Black Hole, Black Death: How Much is a Miner's Life Worth?

Andy Worthington
Guantanamo and Habeas Corpus

Karl Grossman
The Consequences of Chernobyl

Nelson P. Valdés
Hillary's "Feelings" About Cuba and the Castros

Scott Boehm
The Trial of Baltasar Garzón

David Macaray From Labor Champion to Wall Street Flack: Dick Gephardt Disgraces Himself ... Again

Dave Lindorff
Demonizing Iran

Saul Landau
The Decline of the Church?

Carles Muntaner
Samaranch: the Death of a Catalan Fascist

Ellen Brown
Computerized Front-Running

Alvaro Huerta
Razing Arizona: Enough with the Draconian Anti-Immigrant Laws

David Swanson
Death by Imperial Profile

Mark Brenner
Where are the Pitchforks?

Jefferson Chase
Why Obama's Middle East Peace Plan Will Fail

Fred Gardner
The POT Conference

Brenda Norrell
Playing Soccer With Evo Morales

Ira Glunts
The Shill on the Hill

Kamran Mofid / Steve Szeghi Economics in Crisis

Laura Flanders
Is the SEC Up to the Job?

Sheldon Richman
The Washington-Wall Street Kabuki Dance

Binoy Kampmark
Re-Regulating the Market

Paul Buchheit
Shut Up, Tea Partiers, We're On the Same Side ... Sort Of

Missy Beattie
War is Failure

Bianca Mucyenyi / Yves Engler
China and Cars

Harry Browne
World Cup: Can Spain Win at Last?

David Ker Thomson
Atlantis Under

Farzana Versey
Grin and Bear It: Profiting From the Prophet

Randy Shields
Kitten Stompers at the Supreme Court

Charles R. Larson
On the Streets, On the Skids

Ron Jacobs
When the Music Could Only Do So Much

David Yearsley
Sorry, Ms. Hahn, Your Notes are All Too Good

Poets' Basement
Ahmad, Yankevich and Moser

Website of the Weekend
The Ahava Protest

April 22, 2010

Stan Cox
Cold War: Militarism, Torture ... and Air Conditioning?

James Bovard
The Slippery Definition of Extremism

Patrick Cockburn
Vicious War on Pakistan's N.W. Frontier

Mike Whitney
The Real State of the Housing Market

Kim Ives
For $10 Billion in Promises, Haiti Surrenders Its Sovereignty

Christopher Ketcham
The Real Socialist Threat is the Military

Brian Tokar
The Advent of Green Consumerism: 40 Years of Earth Days

Jed Brandt
High Noon in Nepal

Norman Solomon
Who Let the Blue Dogs Out?

Martha Rosenberg
The Strange Return of Hormone Replacement Therapy

Website of the Day
Conservatives Gay-Bash Sen. Lindsay Graham

April 21, 2010

Andrew Cockburn
Wall Street's Bad Dream

Vijay Prashad
My Investment in Israel: Are You an Anti-Semite?

Esam Al-Amin
Israel's Enabler in the U. S.

Evelyn Pringle
Inventing Disorders: the Psychiatric Drugging of Children

Marshall Auerback
Economic Plague in the Euro Zone

Julien Mercille
Another Drug Record for Afghanistan

Leonard Peltier
Indigenous People and the Environment

David Macaray
Nike's Crimes

Robert Fantina
The New Christian Right and Christianity

Heather Gray
Texas Rewrites History

Harvey Wasserman
Nuking Earth Day

Website of the Day
Scenes From the American Police State: TSA and the Applesauce Caper

April 20, 2010

James Bovard
A Lethal Hypocrisy: Bill Clinton on Violence and Government

Dean Baker
The Multiple Scams of Goldman Sachs

Bill Quigley
The Guantanamo Deception

Alan Farago
Eating the Dead in the Everglades

Evelyn Pringle
An American Phenomenon: the Psychiatric Drugging of Infants and Toddlers

Bouthaina Shaaban
Writing in an Age of Despair

Joanne Mariner
Fairness in Sanctions?

Eric Walberg
Iran's Disarmament Conference

Franklin Lamb
The Case for Palestinian Rights in Lebanon

Billy Wharton
Anti-Apartheid in 8 1/2 Hours

Website of the Day
Deficit Summit Pushback

April 19, 2010

Pam Martens
The Death of a Salesman

Mike Whitney
Goldman Sachs' Bloody Nose

Gareth Porter
Kandahar Campaign Doomed Before It Begins?

Jeb Sprague
Death in the Desert

Gregory Harms
The Procedural Relationship

Michael Leonardi
Emergency in Afghanistan: Raiding a Hospital

Dave Lindorff
Good Riddance, Daryl Gates

Greg Moses
Tax Day Tea Party Tosses Markets Overboard

Robert Jensen
The Diversity Dead-End

Gary Leupp
The Icelandic Volcano Speaks

Website of the Day
Dead Cat Walking

April 16-18, 2010

Cockburn / St. Clair
This Will be Obama's Legacy

Alan Nasser
Social Security in the Bullseye

Russell Mokhiber
Prosecuting Massey for Homicide

Ray McGovern
Lie to Congress; Get a Fourth Star

Gareth Porter
McChrystal Backtracks in Kandahar

Mike Whitney
High-Frequency Trading as High-Tech Robbery

Mark Weisbrot
The China Charade

Paul Krassner
Kent State Anniversary Blues

Steve Early
The Cost of Labor Civil War

David Rosen
The New York Times vs. the Pope: a Case of Selective Journalism

Nadia Hijab
How Obama Must Deal With Israeli Avoidance Methods

Ramzy Baroud
Dispatch From China: Number 15 Has Left the Building

Tom Turnipseed
Big Coal; Big Lies

Dr. Margaret Flowers, MD
Frontline Fronts for Corporations, Not the Public

Rannie Amiri
Egypt's Presidential Elections: Kuwait Casts Its Vote

John Ross
Time-Traveling Down the Mississippi

Richard Grossman
On the Supreme Court

Missy Beattie
Fatal Math

David Michael Green
Of Mice and Men

Emily J. Kirk, John M. Kirk and Norman Girvan
Selective Commendation, Selective Indignation

David Macaray Down With Democracy

David Ker Thomson
Atlantis: Beyond the Sinking Feeling

Alexia Eastwood
The Return of Economic Man

Charles R. Larson
A Thirsty World

David Yearsley
Bach and Taxes

Kim Nicolini
"Fish Tank:" Class Claustrophobia

Poets' Basement
Birnbaum, Chaet and D'Alessio

Website of the Weekend
The Palestine Chronicle Needs (and Deserves) Your Support

April 15, 2010

Jonathan Cook
Israel Targets Ha'aretz

Mike Whitney
Housing Crashes Again

Clancy Sigal
SNCC: Same Lesson, 50 Years On

Alan Singer
Upper Big Branch Mine and the Race to the Bottom

Tolu Olorunda
The Youth Scare

John Stanton
Human Terrain Systems and Military Intelligence

Laura Flanders
Tax Grousing

Bill Piper
Don't Just Smoke a Joint on 4/20

David Rovics
Breaking Ranks

Website of the Day
Inside Microsoft's Chinese Sweatshop

April 14, 2010

Dean Baker
The New War on Social Security

Robert Sandels
Convincing Cubans: Your Tax Dollars at Work

Julien Mercile
Nuclear Insanities

Patrick Bond
The Loan That Could Break South Africa's Back

Julie Hilden
The Case of the Decoy Prom

Kevin Zeese
An Avoidable Tragedy: Holding Massey, and Its CEO, Criminally Liable for Miner Deaths

Ron Jacobs
End of the Revolution

Benjamin Dangl
The Carlsberg Strike: "We Need Our Beer!"

Binoy Kampmark
Rudd's Refugee Woes

Susan Galleymore
The Virtues of Compost

Website of the Day
Petition: Remove Blankenship From Chamber of Commerce

April 13, 2010

Gareth Porter Shooting in the Dark

Zoltan Grossman
The Global War on Tribes

Mike Whitney
Will WaMu Pay for Its Crimes?

Corey D.B. Walker
SNCC at 50

Nadia Hijab
Parsing Petraeus

Jonathan Cook
Mossad Operation Threatened Against Reporter

Joshua Frank
The Privatization of Wildlife: How Ted Turner Scored Yellowstone's Bison

Will Allen /
Ronnie Cummins

Is This Factory Farming's Tobacco Moment?

Dave Lindorff
Where Your Taxes Go

Cal Winslow
No Knock-Out Blow in SEIU's Courtroom Showdown

Website of the Day
Cost of War

April 12, 2010

Conn Hallinan
Behind the Afghan Fraud

Ralph Nader
The Black Death

Adrienne Pine
WOLA vs. Honduran Democracy

Uri Avnery
The Big Gamble

Gary Leupp
The Pope's Cover-Up: a Timeline

Mike Whitney
Is the Fed Helping the Big Banks to Cook Their Books?

Franklin Lamb
Hiba's Story

Jayne Lyn Stahl
The Savaging of Dawn Johnsen

Jeff Klein
Martin Kramer, Harvard and the Eugenics of Zion

Stephanie Westbrook
Marketing the F-35

Website of the Day
The Coal Miner's Grave

April 9 - 11, 2010

Alexander Cockburn
The Cover-Ups That Exploded

David Price
Silent Coup: How the CIA is Welcoming Itself Back Onto American University Campuses

Dean Baker
The Big Break-Up

Michael  Hudson
The Looming European Debt Wars

Jonathan Cook
The Dark Underbelly of Israel's Security State

Mike Whitney
Give Greenspan an Oscar

Saul Landau
The Most Dangerous Man in the World

Jean Casella /
James Ridgeway

The Machinery of Death

Rannie Amiri
A New Wind Blows in Egypt

Gila Svirsky
How Israel Gagged on Its Own Gag Order

Alan Farago
Why They Call It King Coal

Dave Lindorff
How Massey Energy Does Business

David Macaray
The Price Tag on Safety

William L. Anderson
The Railroading of Tonya Craft

Harry Browne Maradona and Messi: Immortality Beckons

Missy Beattie
Mourning Has Broken: Death and the Bottom Line

Mark Weisbrot
The Losing Battle Against National Self-Determination

Binoy Kampmark
Nuclear Charades in Prague

Farzana Versey
The White House Whitewash Job

Charles R. Larson
Eccentric Obsessions

David Yearsley
Storm Over Cameron Carpenter

Kim Nicolini
Hot Chicks Who Rock

Poets' Basement Three Poems by Jared Carter

Website of the Weekend
Birding Oregon

April 8, 2010

James Bovard
Subverting Freedom

Andrew Cockburn
Financial Reform Bids Collapse Into Farce

Mike Ely
Blasted in a West Virginia Mine

Gareth Porter
Killings and Cover-Ups in Afghanistan

David Swanson
Murder is the New Torture

Christopher Brauchli
The Pope's PR Problem

Richard Neville
Dracula's Army

Website of the Day
Economist Need Their Own Uncertainty Principle

April 7, 2010

Jonathan Cook
What Makes an Israeli

Dean Baker
The Myth of Market Fundamentalism

Julien Mercille
Is Iran Producing Medical Isotopes?

Julie Hilden
The Case of the Topless Teenager: a Legal Win for Sexting Teens

Robert Elias
The Foreign Policy of Baseball

Ron Jacobs
Misrepresenting the Left

Linda Greene
Pushing WellPoint Back to Nonprofit?

David Macaray
Labor's Family Tree

Joshua Brollier
Kick Up the Volume on Palestine

Randy Shields
America on Vacation

Website of the Day
Of Coal Mines and Methane

May 17, 2010

Demons, Scapegoats and the Pakistani Connection

The Case of Faisal Shahzad

By AYESHA IJAZ KHAN

When British Pakistani, Amir Khan, rose to fame as a promising young boxer, overnight he became the symbol of a modern multicultural Britain.  This is unsurprising.  Everyone likes to own a good thing.  But the equally British (born and bred) 7/7 bombers, Mohammed Sidique Khan, Shehzad Tanweer and Hasib Hussain, were quickly disowned by Britain and passed off as Pakistani.  Though their links to Pakistan were tenuous, a few stamps on the passport signifying infrequent visits to relatives, just as Amir Khan, Baroness Syeda Warsi, or any other member of an immigrant or expatriate family would have, the Pakistan connection was nevertheless played up.    

The case of Faisal Shahzad, the inexpert Times Square bomber, has once again raised the spectre of the Pakistan connection.  A recently naturalized US citizen, Faisal Shahzad has more links to Pakistan than the 7/7 bombers.  Nevertheless, he has lived in America for the last several years, was educated there, married a woman who was brought up in America and had as many links to his new country as he did to the old.  Whether or not he was trained in Pakistan’s tribal areas is yet to be conclusively confirmed.  Reports differ with Attorney General Eric Holder and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton focusing on a strong possibility of a Pakistan connection, General David Petraeus rejects the claim however, suggesting that Faisal was acting as a “lone wolf”.    

If I were to hazard a guess, I would agree with General Petraeus for the simple reason that had he been trained in Waziristan, most likely the bomb would have worked.  Ask the Pakistanis who suffer such murderous explosions on a regular basis.  The only ones that have failed to result in large civilian casualties are the ones where courageous Pakistani policemen, suspecting suicide missions, apprehended the bombers prior to detonation, thus taking the brunt of the bombing at the police check posts and giving their own lives to protect ordinary citizens.  This is not to suggest that a potential link to Waziristan should be overlooked or prematurely dismissed.  All leads must be pursued and any incident which threatens innocent life deserves to be thoroughly investigated.  Pakistan must cooperate in the inquiry process, as it is doing, however the element of increased home-grown terrorism merits equal scrutiny.

It is no secret that radical clerics based in Europe and America have played a part in recruiting disgruntled youth to the cause of terrorism.  American citizen, Anwar al-Awlaki, assumed to have inspired the Christmas Day underwear bomber as well as the Fort Hood shooter, may be the most notorious of the home-grown militant clerics, but certainly cannot be the only one.  Just as Pakistan has neglected to regulate what is being preached in its mosques and madrassas, Britain and the US are also guilty of disinterest in the communal development of their immigrant Muslim communities.  As a result, oil-rich Muslim countries have stepped in to fund mosques and Islamic centres that encourage preaching suitable to their culture and interests, often at the expense of relegating women to secondary status and transferring much of the anti-American/anti-western sentiment found on the Muslim street to these communal places of worship.

I have prayed in mosques around the world and in non-Arabic speaking Muslim countries, like Pakistan or Turkey, it would be unheard of to broadcast the sermon ahead of the Friday prayer in any language other than the local one.  So, for example, in Pakistan, the sermon is in Urdu, in Turkey, it is in Turkish, but at Regent’s Park Mosque in Central London or at Paris’ Grand Mosque, the sermon is in Arabic.  Not only does this deprive the non-Arabic speaking Muslim community of participating fully in the religious service, but it also prevents adequate oversight of what is being said in the sermon.  Instead of encouraging their respective Muslim communities to become a part of mainstream society, Europe, in particular, facilitates their marginalisation.  America, on the other hand, may be slightly better at including its Muslims into the mainstream, primarily because of the fact that the average Muslim immigrants to the US have historically been much better educated than the ones in Europe, but after 9/11, the most harrowing cases of profiling against Muslims coupled with a foreign policy that resulted in mass destruction of Muslim life and property has led Muslims in America to be far more fearful, reserved, suspicious and resentful of the country in which they live.

Terrorism is a global problem and solutions too must be global in their reach.  America and Britain have already alienated their growing Muslim populations by going to war in Iraq and Afghanistan.  Further name-calling, such as referring to Pakistan as the “epicentre of global terrorism,” or browbeating a country that is suffering tragically from terrorism to “do more” is not looked upon positively within Pakistan or within its large immigrant populations in Britain and America.

In spite of the generous Kerry-Lugar aid package, anti-Americanism is on the rise in Pakistan as well as its immigrant communities.  And although sentiments in Pakistan may be more fervently against America, they are by no means unique.  According to a Pew Global Research poll, less than 30% of the population held a favourable image of the US in five key Muslim countries, namely Indonesia, Egypt, Pakistan, Jordan and Turkey.  Anti-Americanism can stem from several different factors, including America’s historic support for dictatorial regimes and monarchies in Muslim countries, wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, human rights violations at Guantanamo Bay and other detention centres set up at the behest of the US around the world, profiling and harassment of Muslims within the US, denial of visas to students and visitors without refunding exorbitant visa fees charged in the process, as well as envy of a superpower.  And thus even though the US has provided extensive aid to Pakistan, Jordan and Egypt as part of governmental agreements and also helped rather generously in times of natural calamities like the 2005 earthquake in Pakistan or the 2004 tsunami in Indonesia, this good seems to have been overshadowed by the bad.

The good news is that anti-Americanism alone cannot lead to violence.  Many passionately anti-American Muslims will never pick up a gun, much less explode a bomb in Times Square.  A propensity for violence requires either a criminal mind or serious indoctrination and training.  But while the centres for indoctrination and training are sought out and eliminated both in places like Pakistan as well as in Europe and America, it is enormously important not to alienate the Muslim community at large.  Each case must be taken on its own facts and while links and connections must be explored, it must also be remembered that cooperation from Muslim countries and immigrant communities may be a lot more forthcoming if the US is willing to accept its own shortcomings by apologizing for them and compensating those who were wrongfully detained at Guantanamo Bay and elsewhere.  Moreover cases in which former CIA operatives may have switched sides, such as the December 2009 bombing in Khost where a Jordinian double agent took the lives of 8 CIA personnel, necessitate greater transparency and probity.

Pakistan is generally not averse to investigating terrorist links and there has been good cooperation between Pakistan and the US/Britain in not just pursuing leads from terrorist activities but also in preventing potential terrorism.  However, it is very unfortunate that in cases when terror suspects from Pakistan are found to be innocent, as in the case of the four boys who had been apprehended in England last year, no apology is forthcoming.  Not only were the four Pakistani boys whose parents had spent their life savings on sending their sons to Britain for a good education wrongly held but also deported without being allowed to complete their studies once it was found that they were innocent of the charges held against them.

Such incidents naturally fuel anti-western sentiment and play very well for those who like to quote the Quran out of context and claim that Muslims will never get a fair deal from the non-Muslim West, thus giving rise to far-fetched conspiracy theories.  It is equally disturbing however that a large section of the press in Europe and America does not seem to care about fostering greater understanding and cooperation on these issues and is more focused on creating demons and scapegoats.

The writer is a London-based political commentator and has previously worked for American and Pakistani law firms.  Website:  www.ayeshaijazkhan.com

 

 

WORDS THAT STICK


 

Now Available from CounterPunch Books!

How the Economy
Was Lost
By Paul Craig Roberts

Yellowstone Drift:
Floating the Past
in Real Time

by John Holt
Introduction by Doug Peacock

Click here to Buy!
Born Under a Bad Sky:
Notes from the Dark Side

of the Earth
By Jeffrey St. Clair

2010 Country Mamas of Petrolia
Calendar Now Available!

Waiting for Lightning
to Strike:
The Fundamentals

of Black Politics
Kevin Alexander Gray

Click Here to Buy!

"The Case Against Israel"
Michael Neumann's Devastating Rebuttal of Alan Dershowitz

Click Here to Buy!

RED STATE REBELS:
Tales of Grassroots Resistance from the Heartland

Edited by
Jeffrey St. Clair
and Joshua Frank


How the Press Led
the US into War


Buy End Times Now!
The Secret Language
of the Crossroads:
HOW THE IRISH
INVENTED SLANG
By Daniel Cassidy
WINNER OF THE
AMERICAN BOOK AWARD!


Click Here to Buy!

The Inside Story of the Shannon Five's Smashing Victory Over the
Bush War Machine

By Harry Browne


Saul Landau's Bush and Botox World with a Foreword by Gore Vidal

Click Here to Order!
 Grand Theft Pentagon
How They Made a Killing on the War on Terrorism

Spell Albuquerque:
Memoir of a
"Difficult Student"

By Tennessee Reed

 

 

 

"Powerful and shocking ..
see this film"
-- Joseph Stiglitz on American Casino

 

  

 

 


The Occupation
by Patrick Cockburn

  
Humanitarian Imperialism
By Jean Bricmont
 
  
CITY BEAUTIFUL
By Tennessee Reed