Archive for November, 2019

UK covered up war crimes in Afghanistan and Iraq – World Socialist Web Site

By Jean Shaoul 22 November 2019

BBC TVs flagship Panorama programme has broadcast interviews and evidence revealing that the Ministry of Defence (MoD) repeatedly covered up war crimes committed by Britains armed forces during the occupations of Afghanistan and Iraq.

Panorama cited evidence surrounding the killing by UK troops of innocent and unarmed civilians that could in no way be described as accidental or collateral damage. The International Criminal Court (ICC) said it took the findings very seriously and would independently assess the evidence provided by Panorama.

The ICC has already concluded from a previous review in 2014 that there is credible evidence that British troops committed war crimes in Iraq, particularly surrounding the abuse of detainees, including murders by a soldier from the SAS special forces, as well as deaths in custody, beatings, torture and sexual abuse by members of the Black Watch. It was the first time the ICC had opened an inquiry into a Western state, with almost all ICC indictees being African heads of state or officials, while the United Statesnot a signatory to the Rome Statute that established the ICC in 2002and the other imperialist powers get off scot-free.

Allegations of mistreatment by British troops emerged in the years after the invasion of Iraq, including videos of soldiers carrying out wanton acts of cruelty. The case of Baha Mousa, a hotel worker in Basra who died after being tortured and beaten by troops while in custody in a British base in 2003, is the most well known. After six years of public campaigning, six soldiers finally appeared before a court martial, before being acquitted of wrongdoing. One soldier pleaded guilty and served just one year in jail. Most of the cases of alleged abuse and torture, which continue to mount, have never even reached a court hearing.

The Iraq Historic Allegations Team (IHAT) was set up to investigate 3,405 war crimes allegedly committed by British troops during the occupation of Iraq between 2003 and 2009. Operation Northmoor, a smaller scale inquiry, received 675 allegations relating to Afghanistan. Both found evidence of widespread abuse and mistreatment at the hands of British forces. This included the killing of unarmed civilians and children.

The corporate media immediately went into action, branding the investigations as witch-hunts. Theresa Mays government closed down both investigations in 2017 without any prosecutions, using the excuse that Phil Shiner, a lawyer who had taken more than 1,000 cases to IHAT, had paid fixers in Iraq to find clients. May pledged, We will never againin any future conflictlet those activist, left-wing human rights lawyers harangue and harass the bravest of the brave.

But now the BBC, working with the Sunday Times, has uncovered new information about alleged killings in British custody and their coverup. It cited the case, investigated by IHAT, of the shooting of Raid al-Mosawi, an Iraqi policeman, in an alleyway as he left the family home by a British soldier on patrol in Basra in 2003. Within 24 hours, the soldiers commanding officer, Major Christopher Suss-Francksen, citing the evidence of an eyewitness, concluded that the shooting was lawful because the Iraqi police officer had fired first and the soldier had acted in self-defence.

After two years of inquiries that included interviewing 80 British soldiers, including the soldier who had supposedly witnessed the shooting, IHAT stated that the soldier flatly contradicted Suss-Franckens report. The soldier said he was not an eyewitness but had heard one shot and one shot only, suggesting that al-Mosawi had not fired at all. Other soldiers confirmed this.

The detectives concluded the soldier who shot al-Mosawi should be prosecuted for killing him and that Suss-Francksen should be charged with covering up what happened. No such prosecutions have taken place.

Panorama reported one investigator as saying that there had been dozens of allegations concerning the killing of unarmed civilians in Afghanistan, including by UK soldiers. While he conceded that civilians are killed in war, he said, Yes, there are accidents. But killing in cold blood is not part of normal warfare.

The two media organisations focused on the civilian police investigationsoverseen by the MoDopened after allegations of abuses emerged in civil court proceedings in London, where victims families were demanding redress. Their interviews with several unnamed former civilian police officers led the BBC and Sunday Times to conclude that government ministers and the MoD exerted political pressure to end the investigations to protect Britains reputation.

The investigators said, There was more and more pressure coming from the Ministry of Defence to get cases closed as quickly as possible. Another said that what happened was disgusting and that the families of victims were not getting justice. He asked, How can you hold your head up as a British person? Another said, The Ministry of Defence had no intention of prosecuting any soldier of whatever rank he was unless it was absolutely necessary, and they couldnt wriggle their way out of it.

The MoD also lodged a series of complaints against the lawyers bringing the civil suits against it. Commenting in the Sunday Times, Ken Macdonald, a former director of public prosecutions, said it is as though ministers feared the effects of justice. He added, All this may come home to roost. Now, as the ICC, set up to prosecute where individual nations too cowardly, incompetent or unwilling to bring their own citizens to justice turns its eyes towards us, we are forced to confront the unnerving possibility that one of those derelict nations might be our own.

Prime Minister Boris Johnsons spokesman dismissed the BBCs allegations of a coverup by the MoD of the armed forces crimes as untrue, while the MoD described them as unsubstantiated. Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said that all of the allegations that had evidence have been looked at. Despite the lack of prosecutions, the government had got the right balance in ensuring spurious claims were not pursued.

The British generals and the MoD will fight tooth and nail against any attempt to be held to account.

Last May, Penny Mordaunt, defence secretary in Mays government, announced that the Tories would introduce legislation protecting British troops and veterans from investigation over actions on the battlefield abroad after 10 years, except in exceptional circumstances to prevent the repeated or unfair investigations that had followed operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. This is nothing but a carte blanche for future war crimes, including the mass murder of harmless and unarmed civilians. Freedom from prosecution for soldiers is a key plank in Johnsons general election manifesto.

The Panorama revelations make clear that the rampant abuse by the armed forces was not the result of a few bad apples. But the program had nothing to say about the broader implications of the MoDs coverup of criminality, other than pointing out that it was the soldiers on the ground who were not trained to maintain law and order, that were likely to carry the can for the senior staff that gave the orders.

The truth is that the criminality and abuse flow inexorably from the filthy and criminal nature of the operations led by British imperialism over the past decade and must inevitably start from the very top.

The illegal invasion and occupation of Afghanistan and Iraq have been based on the slaughter, maiming and terrorising of their populations and the destruction of their infrastructure for the geopolitical interests of the imperialist powers. UK forces, no less than their US counterparts, have played a full and bloody part in these despicable operations.

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UK covered up war crimes in Afghanistan and Iraq - World Socialist Web Site

Reports of War Crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan Highlight the Failures of Both Wars – CounterPunch

The alleged bid by the British government and army to close down investigations into torture and murder in Iraq and Afghanistan appears to be the latest aspect of a widespread desire in the UK to forget all about these failed wars.Joining the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 is commonly blamed on Tony Blair, but there is little interest in the desperate situation into which British troops were plunged post-invasion, first in southern Iraq and then, three years later, in Helmand province in Afghanistan.

The gravity of the miscalculations in each case is not in doubt. Sir Sherard Cowper-Coles, the British ambassador in Kabul at the time, wrote in his memoirs that the worst mistake made by the Foreign Office in the previous 30 years was the invasion of Iraq, and the second worst was its enthusiastic endorsement of Britains half-baked effort to occupy Helmand in 2006.

The allegation that war crimes were committed to be claimed in a BBC Panorama programme on Monday evening is in keeping with Britains dismal record in these conflicts.

The ICC has said it is considering opening an investigation into the claims, based on leaked documents. The Ministry of Defence (MoD) has said the allegations are unsubstantiated.

After the capture of Baghdad, the British army stayed in the south of Iraq, mostly in and around Basra, apparently under the impression that this would be quieter than the Sunni Arab provinces that had more strongly supported Saddam Hussein.

It swiftly became clear that, while the Shia population of the south was glad to be rid of Saddam, they were not about to accept a British occupation. An ominous sign of this came on 24 June 2003 when six British Royal Military Police were shot dead in a town called Majar al-Kabir near the city of Amara.

They died because they were advising local police at the same moment as British paratroopers were carrying out an aggressive patrol in another part of the same town and had had an exchange of fire in which several locals had died. The RMPs were killed soon afterwards in a revenge attack.

The incident sums up the fatal contradiction facing the British expeditionary force in Iraq. Their numbers and dispositions were suitable for a country in which most of the population was friendly, but if the opposite were true, as it certainly was, then the soldiers were vastly outnumbered and in danger. British officers used to annoy their American counterparts by claiming prior expertise in this type of warfare, drawing on British experience in Malaya and Northern Ireland. A captain in military intelligence stationed for a year in Basra later said that I kept trying to explain without success to my superiors that in Malaya and Northern Ireland we had local allies while in Basra we had none.

The weakness of the British position was exposed in detail by the Chilcot Report in 2016, but its findings were masked by the media obsession with finding a smoking gun that would prove the culpability of Tony Blairand by the shock result of the Brexit referendum that had taken place at the same time.

The report explains that by 2007 the British forces in Basra had run out of ideas and it was humiliating that the UK reached a position in which an agreement with a militia group [the Mahdi Army], which had been actively targeting UK forces, was considered the best option available.

According to Chilcot, the one consistent British strategy between 2003 and complete withdrawal in 2009 was to reduce the level of deployed forces and to do so without offending the US. The means of doing so was to redeploy the troops to Afghanistan, which was supposedly safer, but where they arrived just as the Taliban were restarting their guerrilla war and where 405 British troops were to be killed in the coming years.

Those who may have committed war crimes in these conflicts have been investigated, even if they were not prosecuted. It would be good if those responsible for these doomed military forays should also be held responsible for their actions.

Read more from the original source:
Reports of War Crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan Highlight the Failures of Both Wars - CounterPunch

Afghanistan to New Jersey a world of flavors in the roundup – gastronomicslc.com

Bam Bams BBQ (Siftey)Reviews and write-ups

Heres the low down on all the reviews, ravings and rantings from the past month. Looking for somewhere new to dine this weekend? Start here

Afghan Kitchen (South Salt Lake)https://yaburnedit.net/f/afghan-kitchen-in-south-salt-lake

Amber Restaurant (South Salt Lake)https://www.southsaltlakejournal.com/2019/11/19/290834/amber-restaurant-is-back-with-even-fluffier-rolled-omelets

Bambara (SLC)https://www.saltlakemagazine.com/bambara-salt-lake-city/

Bam Bams BBQ (Orem)https://siftey.com/bam-bams-bbq_utah_restaurant-review/

Beirut Cafe (Murray)https://www.sltrib.com/artsliving/food/2019/10/23/this-lebanese-restaurant/

Big Jake Burger (Ogden)https://www.standard.net/lifestyle/food/shakes-ice-cream-more-shakes-and-the-big-jake-burger/article_2813724f-6912-5c13-85c2-619668dabb10.html

Celeste (Murray)https://www.saltlakemagazine.com/paolo-celeste-salt-lake-city/

Changarro Loco (Ogden)https://www.standard.net/go/ogden-s-changarro-loco-offers-spicy-fruit-cups-big-meat/article_4f8da679-5f1a-5f70-b450-b372d92a1d3d.html

Courchevel (Park City)https://www.saltlakemagazine.com/courcheval-park-city/

Cuppa (Ogden)https://www.standard.net/go/cuppa-cafe-makes-cozy-home-in-ogden/article_73589718-0f2a-56f3-b643-7f6d8efd2cf7.html

Diversion Eatery (SLC)https://www.sltrib.com/artsliving/food/2019/11/06/diversion-salt-lake-citys/

Foodie And Sweetie (SLC)https://www.sltrib.com/artsliving/food/2019/11/19/salt-lake-citys-foodie/

Just Burgers (SLC)https://siftey.com/just-burgers_utah_restaurant-review/

Feldmans Deli (SLC)https://www.cityweekly.net/utah/deli-belly/Content?oid=14328466

Ginger Street (SLC)https://siftey.com/ginger-street_utah_restaurant-review/

Ginger Street (SLC)https://dailyutahchronicle.com/2019/10/30/dine-or-dash-ginger-street/

Mexiquense (Sandy)https://redneckfoodrambles.wordpress.com/2019/11/11/mexiquense-sandy-utah-another-visit/

Mystique Dining (West Jordan)https://www.cityweekly.net/utah/dinner-and-a-poe/Content?oid=14351330

Saola (Cottonwood Heights)https://www.sltrib.com/artsliving/food/2019/10/10/pho-garlic-noodles/

Shooting Star Saloon (Huntsville)https://yaburnedit.net/f/hands-down-best-burger-in-utah-shooting-star-saloon

Simply Sushi (Various locations)https://www.cityweekly.net/utah/on-a-roll/Content?oid=14402830

Soys Sushi Bar And Grill (Murray)https://siftey.com/soys-sushu-bar_utah/

The Store (SLC)https://slceats.com/2019/10/19/the-store-opens-at-the-gateway/

The Tavernacle (SLC)https://www.cityweekly.net/utah/brunched-in-the-face/Content?oid=14433371

Tradition (SLC)https://www.slugmag.com/food-reviews/tradition-comfort-close-to-home/

Tradition (SLC)https://www.cityweekly.net/utah/slow-and-steady/Content?oid=14378170

Trolley Wing Company (SLC)https://www.sltrib.com/artsliving/food/2019/11/13/salt-lake-citys-trolley/

Tin Angel Eccles (SLC)https://www.saltlakemagazine.com/tin-angel-eccles/

Tuk Tuks (West Valley City)https://www.sltrib.com/artsliving/food/2019/11/08/tuk-tuks-west-valley/

Vessel Kitchen (Midvale)https://utahstories.com/2019/10/mission-accomplished-a-visit-to-vessel-kitchen/

Vuduu Pizza (St George)https://siftey.com/vuduu-pizza_utah_restaurant-review/

Wimpy And Fritz (Ogden)https://www.standard.net/lifestyle/food/new-taco-bar-wimpy-and-fritz-opens-inside-the-yes/article_9df26d7b-054e-5dd2-a8d7-e114c6bf519f.html

Adventuresome dininghttps://www.skiutah.com/blog/authors/yeti/dinner-and-then-some-adventure

Best date night dininghttps://utfoodie.com/?p=61

Funeral potato rounduphttps://www.cityweekly.net/utah/putting-the-fun-in-funeral/Content?oid=14464212

Latino dining in Utah Countyhttps://www.heraldextra.com/entertainment/dining/latino-owned-restaurants-bring-taste-of-homeland-to-utah-county/article_87fff17c-8b33-5efe-97dd-caa158fa6eea.html

City Creek Mall dininghttps://www.cityweekly.net/utah/mall-in-the-family/Content?oid=14217828

Pickling at restaurantshttps://www.saltlakemagazine.com/we-can-pickle-that/

SLCs best cheesesteaks ratedhttps://www.saltlakemagazine.com/salt-lakes-top-cheesesteaks/

Top 16 aprs ski spotshttps://www.skiutah.com/blog/authors/adam/the-best-apres-ski-joints-in-utah

Want to discuss this post or the SLC food scene in general? Check out our Facebook group and come talk with other likeminded SLC foodies.

Hi, Im Stuart, nice to meet you! Im the founder, writer and wrangler at Gastronomic SLC and The Utah Review; Im also a former restaurant critic of more than five years, working for the Salt Lake Tribune. Ive worked extensively with other local publications from Utah Stories through to Salt Lake Magazine and Visit Salt Lake.

Im a multiple-award winning journalist and have covered the Utah dining scene for more than a decade. Im largely fueled by Uinta Cutthroat, alliteration and the use of too many big words I dont understand. I ate all the pies.

This article may contain content provided by one of our Partners or Sponsors. These are some of the best businesses in Utah. The current businesses we work with include: Alamexo, The Angry Korean, Avenues Proper, BGR, Bourbon House, BTG Wine Bar, Caffe Molise, Cafe Niche, Campos Coffee, Current Fish & Oyster, Desert Edge Pub, Kyoto, Feldman's Deli, Log Haven, Oasis Cafe, Proper Burger, Proper Brewing Co, Punch Bowl Social, Saffron Valley, SLC Eatery,Stanza Italian Bistro, Taqueria 27, Vine Lore, Whiskey Street, White Horse. For a list of all our past relationships and timelines, please see our historical partnerships page.

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Afghanistan to New Jersey a world of flavors in the roundup - gastronomicslc.com

US Treasury: Afghanistan-based Organization Aiding Daesh – TOLOnews

The US Treasury imposed sanctions against Afghanistan-based Nejaat Social Welfare Organization for using false charitable pretenses while transferring funds and supporting activities of Daesh in Afghanistan, the US Treasury said in a statement released on Monday.

The report said that the Nejaat Social Welfare Organization has materially assisted, sponsored, or provided financial, material, or technological support for, or goods or services to or in support of, ISIS-K( Khorasan).

In mid-2016, the report claimed, an ISIS-K facilitator managed a non-governmental organization called Nejaat, and an ISIS-K recruiter worked at Nejaat and recruited ISIS-K fighters in Kabul and arranged for their travel to Nangarhar Province.

Also according to the report, in late 2016 Afghan leaders of ISIS-K held planning meetings under the cover of a Salafi solidarity meeting sponsored by Nejaat and executive members of Nejaat and prominent Salafi leaders in Afghanistan led the meeting, some of whom were financial supporters of Nejaat.

The report named Rohullah Wakil as one of the executive members of Nejaat who co-led the meeting.

The US Treasury described the organizations raising and distribution of funds for Daesh.

Nejaat collected donations on behalf of ISIS-K from individuals in Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Iraq, and other Middle Eastern countries. Money was then transferred from the Gulf to Asiavia the banking systemwhere an ISIS-K coordinator would collect the transferred funds. Nejaat's offices in Kabul and Jalalabad distributed the funds to ISIS-K commanders.

The US Treasury report named individuals:

Sayed Habib Ahmad Khan

Sayed Habib Ahmad Khan is a leader or official of the Nejaat Social Welfare Organization, whose property and interests in property have been blocked, the Treasury report stated, adding As of 2019, Sayed Habib Ahmad Khan was identified as the director of Nejaat. He is located in Kuwait. The report also described Sayed Habib Ahmad Khan as an ISIS-K facilitator.

Rohullah Wakil

The report states that Rohullah Wakil has materially assisted, sponsored, or provided financial, material, or technological support for, or goods or services to or in support of, ISIS-K and is an executive member of Nejaat who co-led a 2016 Nejaat Salafi solidary meeting which served as a cover for ISIS-K planning.

As a result of the US Treasury action, all financial activity or related dealings with Nejaat and the individuals named in the report are prohibited, and any person or group involved in transactions with Nejaat could be exposed to sanctions or subject to an enforcement action.

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US Treasury: Afghanistan-based Organization Aiding Daesh - TOLOnews

Cristo: The Libertarian Party and its non-aggression policy – Seguin Gazette-Enterprise

A wise king never seeks out war, but he must always be ready for it. ~ Odin

These words of wisdom from the pages of Marvel Comics and the Marvel Cinematic Universe are truer than many choose to believe.

At the time Odin speaks them, Thor (Odins son), is brash and full of himself. Thor is strong, mighty, self-confident and ready to take over his fathers throne so he can force his will upon whomever he wishes.

Many of the people seeking political office these days view our military might the same way Thor saw his fathers. These individuals anticipate ascending to power so they may flex our military might to force our will upon whomever they/we wish.

This way of thinking has been the accepted norm throughout our history but it should not be this way.

In George Washingtons farewell address he wrote: Observe good faith and justice towards all Nations; cultivate peace and harmony with all. ~ George Washington

The Libertarian Party Non-Aggression Platform is reflected by both George Washingtons words and the words of Odin.

As a nation, it is imperative that we seek out a harmonious coexistence with all nations in the world.

We tend to prosper whenever there is a mutually pleasant demeanor between countries.

An environment where fair trade and commerce can be made in addition to safe travel.

This is how nations grow in culture, knowledge and ideas.

The internet has made obtaining information from far away quicker and easier, but actually venturing to a location gives a more hands-on and enriching experience that you can not get from reading off a screen.

Even with all the good and reliable information on the web, there is also lots of unreliable misinformation.

Firsthand knowledge is always the best and that is only attainable through peaceful travel.

Unfortunately, we will not always be able to live in peace with all countries in the world.

Not all leaders are capable of being reasoned with.

This is when Odins quote about war comes into play, ...we must always be ready for it.

A strong military is essential for our nations defense, but the key word is defense.

Whenever a leader sends our military abroad without provocation, we are now on the offense instead of defense.

Non-Aggression is what separates the Libertarian Party from the other two major political parties that have controlled our government for the past 100-plus years.

Under their leadership, we have sent troops abroad on offensive maneuvers under every president.

If not directly, we have had a hand in manipulating the outcome of other countries political landscapes through rebellions and insurrections funded and managed by our CIA.

All of these actions the past hundred years have resulted in the loss of hundreds of thousands of American lives and millions of foreign civilian lives across the globe.

It is time to change. It is time to relearn our history, hearken back to the words of George Washingtons farewell address and observe good faith and justice with all nations while cultivating peace with all.

And, like Odin said, always be prepared for those who do not subscribe to that mentality.

It was a joy that we celebrated Veterans Day this month.

Now, lets make it a point to diminish our need to celebrate Memorial Day in May. God Bless and cultivate peace and harmony with all.

Anthony was the Libertarian candidate for U.S. Congress in district 15 of Texas.

Continue reading here:
Cristo: The Libertarian Party and its non-aggression policy - Seguin Gazette-Enterprise