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Author Topic: U.S. Global Imperialism Dossier (Still in Progress)  (Read 425 times)
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The Wiseman
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Posts: 1293


Dead Press


« on: January 07, 2008, 05:51:31 PM »

http://anticafta.tripod.com/id301.html

Miscellaneous

A Timeline of CIA Atrocities

Shocked and Horrified

Instances of Use of United States Forces Abroad 1798-1993

A Chronology of U.S. Imperialism

US Imperialism: A Century of Slaughter

Videos:

Video on School of the Americas

Guatemala
(Death toll of U.S.-backed coup, interventions, and U.S. backed-dictatorships/death squads 1954-1980s: 200,000)

Instances of Use of United States Forces Abroad 1798-1993

1920 - U.S. forces protected the American Legation and other American interests, such as the cable station, during a period of fighting between Unionists and the Government of Guatemala.

US-Guatemala (1901-2002)

1901-1944  Guatemala suffers under a succession of dictators. During the period, the United Fruit Company (UFCO), which is exempt from taxes, exerts significant influence within the country.

1944-1954  The dictator Jorge Ubico is overthrown and Guatemala enjoys what is known as the “ten years of spring” with two popularly elected and reformist presidents. The second president during this era, President Jacobo Arbenz (1951-1954), permits free expression, legalizes unions, allows diverse political parties, and initiates basic socioeconomic reforms. One key program is a moderate land reform effort aimed at alleviating the suffering of the rural poor, by which only plantations of very high acreage are affected, and only in cases where a certain percentage of such acreage is in fact lying unused. In these extreme cases, the unused portions of the land are not expropriated, but simply purchased by the Guatemalan government at the same value declared on the owner’s tax forms.The property is then resold at low rates to peasant cooperatives. To set an example, President Arbenz starts with his own lands.

1953  The land redistribution collides with the interests of the United Fruit Company (UFCO), for whom 85 precent of the 550,000 acres they own are uncultivated. The US government demands extra compensation for the United Fruit Company over what has already been given.

1953  Charles R. Burrows of the Bureau of Inter-American Affairs writes: “Guatemala has become an increasing threat to the stability of Honduras and El Salvador. Its agrarian reform is a powerful propaganda weapon; its broad social program of aiding the workers and peasants in a victorious struggle against the upper classes and large foreign enterprises has a strong appeal to the populations of Central American neighbors where similar conditions prevail.”

1954  CIA covert Operation PB Success successfully removes Arbenz from power. The CIA director at this time, Allen Dulles, was formerly the president of the United Fruit Fruit Company (UFCO) and the previous CIA director and under-secretary of state, General Walter Bedell Smith, is on the company’s board of directors. Smith will become UFCO’s president following the overthrow. Allen Dulles’ brother, John Dulles, who is Secretary of State, previously worked as a lawyer defending the United Fruit Company.

1954  Following the CIA coup, Guatemala plunges into a civil war and 40 years of american-trained death squads, torture, disappearances, mass executions, with an estimated toll of 100,000 victims.

Books/Articles/Excerpts:
Killing Hope by William Blum: Guatemala 1953-1954

State Terrorism and the United States: From Counterinsurgency to the War on Terrorism by Frederick H. Gareau Guatemala: A Country Incommunicado

A "killing field" in the Americas: US policy in Guatemala

Guatemala: A Brief History

Killing Hope by William Blum: Guatemala 1962-1980s

Guatemalan Death Squad Dossier

Making Guatemala a Killing Field by Noam Chomky

History of Guatemala's Death Squads

CIA and Assassinations: The Guatemala 1954 Documents

Guatemala: Between Justice and Terror

The Persistence of Terror  - Guatemala

Israel and Guatemala

U.S. Policy in Guatemala, 1966-1996

The Press Has Blood On Its Hands - in Guatemala

Retaliation in Guatemala

Lessons on Justice from Guatemala

Unearthing Guatemala's Macabre Past

Guatemala Bleeds; US Press Shrugs

Extrajudicial Executions and Clandestine Graves in Guatemala

Guatemalan Refugees: A Difficult Return

Economy

World Bank Mining Project in Guatemala

Land Reform and Conflict In Guatemala

Guatemala and CAFTA

Global Bully Goes To Guatemala

Nicaragua
(Death toll from terrorist Contra war on Nicaragua 1981-1990: 30,000)

Books/Articles/Excerpts:

Killing Hope by William Blum: Nicaragua 1981-1990

The Greatest Story Never Told: A People's History of the American Empire 1945-1999 by Michael K. Smith: The Eighties

A People's History of the United States by Howard Zinn: Carter-Reagan-Bush: The Bipartiasan Consensus

What Uncle Sam Really Wants by Noam Chomsky

Secrets, Lies, and Democracy by Noam Chomsky: Nicaragua

Necessary Illusions by Noam Chomsky

Another Look at Daneil Ortega and the Sandinista Struggle

Central America: The Next Phase by Noam Chomsky

Is Peace at Hand? by Noam Chomsky

Post-Sandinista Nicaragua: The Legacy of the Revolution

The Decline of the Democratic Ideal by Noam Chomsky

Nicaragua: Nearly Gone & Almost Forgotten

Economy

Neo--Liberal Nicaragua: A New Banana Republic

Nicaragua On A Dollar A Day...Forever?

Why the G8 Debt Relief Plan Won't Help Nicaragua's Poor

CAFTA Thumbscrews

Sweatshops In Nicaragua

Video
Nicaragua: A Nation's Right to Survive

Chile
(Death toll from U.S.-backed Pinochet coup and 17 year rule 1973-1990: 30,000)

Articles/Books/Excerpts:

Chile's Arrest of Pinochet and the Condor Killers in the US

Killing Hope by William Blum: Chile 1964-1973

Secrets, Lies, and Democracy by Noam Chomsky: Chile

After Pinochet, Prosecute Kissinger

U.S. In Chile

How The CIA Took Aim At Allende

Declassified documents reveal the US government's role in the Pinochet Coup

How We Destroy The Oldest Democracy In South America And Turn A Peace Loving Nation Into A Slaughterhouse

Allende's Leftist Regime

Remembering Allende

Virtual Truth Commision Report on Chile

Pinochet, Stripped

Accountability on Chile

Lessons of a Catastrophe [Chile]

The Pinochet Case

Chile Declassified

Economy:

Invisible Hand and Iron Fist: Pinochet and Chile

Is Chile a Neoliberal Success?

Chile and Neoliberalism

Links:

http://www.trentu.ca/~mneumann/pinochet.html
http://www.desaparecidos.org/chile/eng.html
http://www.tni.org/pinochet/index.htm
http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/42a/index-dg.html
http://www.remember-chile.org.uk/
http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/latin_america/chile.htm
http://hrw.org/doc/?t=americas_pub&c=chile

Video:

Sept. 11, 1973: A CIA-backed Military Coup Overthrows Salvador Allende, the Democratically Elected President of Chile

"The Trials of Henry Kissinger": As the Former Secretary of State Faces Possible Extradition to Chile for His Role in the 1973 Coup, a New Film Provides Fresh Evidence of War Crimes

Picture:





Panama
(Death toll from U.S. invasion 1989: 9,000)

Instances of Use of United States Forces Abroad 1798-1993

Quote
1856 -- Panama, Republic of New Grenada -- September 19 to 22. U.S. forces landed to protect American interests during an insurrection.

1860 -- Colombia, Bay of Panama -- September 27 to October 8. Naval forces landed to protect American interests during a revolution.

1865 -- Panama -- March 9 and 10. U.S. forces protected the lives and property of American residents during a revolution.

1873 -- Colombia (Bay of Panama) -- May 7 to 22, September 23 to October 9. U.S. forces protected American interests during hostilities over possession of the government of the State of Panama.

1885 -- Panama (Colon) -- January 18 and 19. U.S. forces were used to guard the valuables in transit over the Panama Railroad, and the safes and vaults of the company during revolutionary activity. In March, April, and May in the cities of Colon and Panama, the forces helped reestablish freedom of transit during revolutionary activity.

1901 -- Colombia (State of Panama) -- November 20 to December 4. U.S. forces protected American property on the Isthmus and kept transit lines open during serious revolutionary disturbances.

1902 -- Colombia (State of Panama) -- September 17 to November 18. The United States placed armed guards on all trains crossing the Isthmus to keep the railroad line open, and stationed ships on both sides of Panama to prevent the landing of Colombian troops.

1903-14 -- Panama. U.S. forces sought to protect American interests and lives during and following the revolution for independence from Colombia over construction of the Isthmian Canal. With brief intermissions, United States Marines were stationed on the Isthmus from November 4, 1903, to January 21 1914 to guard American interests.

1904 -- Panama -- November 17 to 24. U.S. forces protected American lives and property at Ancon at the time of a threatened insurrection.

1912 -- Panama. Troops, on request of both political parties, supervised elections outside the Canal Zone.

1918-20 -- Panama. U.S. forces were used for police duty according to treaty stipulations, at Chiriqui, during election disturbances and subsequent unrest.

1925 -- Panama -- October 12 to 23. Strikes and rent riots led to the landing of about 600 American troops to keep order and protect American interests.

1988 -- Panama. In mid-March and April 1988, during a period of instability in Panama and as pressure grew for Panamanian military leader General Manuel Noriega to resign, the United States sent 1,000 troops to Panama, to "further safeguard the canal, U.S. lives, property and interests in the area." The forces supplemented 10,000 U.S. military personnel already in Panama.

Articles/Books/Excerpts:

Iraq: a Lesson from Panama Imperialism and Struggle for Sovereignty

The Invasion of Panama

Panama's Lessons

Panama: Background of U.S. invasion of 1989

The CIA's Greatest Hits: Panama

Panama's Resistance To U.S. Imperialism

U. S. Imperialism, Hands Off Latin America

Part VI: 1981-Present excerpted from the book Confession of an Economic Hit Man by John Perkins

The Resume of Manuel Noriega: The Most Famous Graduate of the School of Americas

U.S. Officials and Major Drug Traffickers: Manuel Noriega

The Panama Canal and the Legacy of Gunboat Diplomacy

Video:

The Panama Deception

Panama Invasion

Brazil
(Death toll from U.S. client military dictatorship and coup 1964-1985: 1,700 found in a mass grave but the total figure is unknown due to destruction of archives)

Articles:

Declassified Documents Shed Light on U.S. Role in Military Coup

Brazil:1961-1964

Justice vs. Vatican

Subverting Brazil and Cuba

Clerics, Exiles, and Academics: Opposition to the Brazilian Military Dictatorship in the United States, 1969–1974

Dictatorship Era Files Rankle Brazilians

El Salvador
(Death toll from US-backed dictatorship and death squads 1980-1994: 80,000)

Articles/Books/Excerpts:

Killing Hope by William Blum
El Salvador 1980-1994 Human rights, Washington Style

The Covert War Against the Central America Movement by Ross Gelbpan
 
What Uncle Sam Really Wants by Noam Chomsky
The Crucifxion of El Salvador

Necessary Illusions by Noam Chomsky
The Evil Scourge of Terrorism

Cry of the People: The struggle for human rights in Latin America and the Catholic Church in conflict with US policy
Be a Patriot (in El Salvador) and Kill A Priest

The CIAs Greatest Hits
El Salvador

Death Squads in El Salvador: A Pattern of U.S. Complicity

Letters from El Salvador: At the Edges of Empire

Oscar Romero: El Salvador

The Empire and Ourselves by Noam Chomsky

Central America: The Next Phase by Noam Chomsky

Cuba

Articles

U.S. Aggression and Propaganda Against Cuba
 
U.S. Policy Towards Cuba: From Neocolony to State of Siege

The United States, Cuba and this thing called Democracy

Luis Posada Carriles: The Declassified Record

Fifty years of US terrorism against Cuba

1895-98 - Jose Marti leads a second war of independence; US declares war on Spain.

1898 - US defeats Spain, which gives up all claims to Cuba and cedes it to the US.

A People's History of the United States: The Empire and the People

US tutelage

1902 - Cuba becomes independent with Tomas Estrada Palma as its president; however, the Platt Amendment keeps the island under US protection and gives the US the right to intervene in Cuban affairs.

U.S. Assumed Military Control of Cuba under provisions of the Platt Amendment

1906-09 - Estrada resigns and the US occupies Cuba following a rebellion led by Jose Miguel Gomez.

1909 - Jose Miguel Gomez becomes president following elections supervised by the US, but is soon tarred by corruption.

1912 - US forces return to Cuba to help put down black protests against discrimination.

Our Rightful Share: The Afro-Cuban Struggle for Equality

1924 - Gerado Machado institutes vigorous measures, forwarding mining, agriculture and public works, but subsequently establishing a brutal dictatorship.

1925 - Socialist Party founded, forming the basis of the Communist Party.

1933 - Machado overthrown in a coup led by Sergeant Fulgencio Batista.

1934 - The US abandons its right to intervene in Cuba's internal affairs, revises Cuba's sugar quota and changes tariffs to favour Cuba.

1944 - Batista retires and is succeeded by the civilian Ramon Gray San Martin.

1952 - Batista seizes power again and presides over an oppressive and corrupt regime.

1953 - Fidel Castro leads an unsuccessful revolt against the Batista regime.

1956 - Castro lands in eastern Cuba from Mexico and takes to the Sierra Maestra mountains where, aided by Ernesto "Che" Guevara, he wages a guerrilla war.

1958 - The US withdraws military aid to Batista.

Triumph of the revolution

Cuba 1959 to 1980s

1959 - Castro leads a 9,000-strong guerrilla army into Havana, forcing Batista to flee. Castro becomes prime minister, his brother, Raul, becomes his deputy and Guevara becomes third in command.

1960 - All US businesses in Cuba are nationalised without compensation; US breaks off diplomatic relations with Havana.

It was the U.S. government which refused to receive compensation

1961 - US sponsors an abortive invasion by Cuban exiles at the Bay of Pigs; Castro proclaims Cuba a communist state and begins to ally it with the USSR.

The Ultrasensitive Bay of Pigs

The Cuban Missle Crisis: An Indepth Chronology

1962 - Cuban missile crisis ignites when, fearing a US invasion, Castro agrees to allow the USSR to deploy nuclear missiles on the island. The crisis was subsequently resolved when the USSR agreed to remove the missiles in return for the withdrawal of US nuclear missiles from Turkey.

1965 - Cuba's sole political party renamed the Cuban Communist Party.

1972 - Cuba becomes a full member of the Soviet-based Council for Mutual Economic Assistance.

Interventions in Africa

1976 - Cuban Communist Party approves a new socialist constitution; Castro elected president.

1976-81 - Cuba sends troops first to help Angola's left-wing MPLA withstand a joint onslaught by South Africa, Unita and the FNLA and, later, to help the Ethiopian regime defeat the Eritreans and Somalis.

Secret Cuban Documents on History of African Involvement

1980 - Around 125,000 Cubans, many of them released convicts, flee to the US.

1982 - Cuba, together with other Latin American states, gives Argentina moral support in its dispute with Britain over the Falkland islands.

1988 - Cuba agrees to withdraw its troops from Angola following an agreement with South Africa.

Remembering Cuba’s Sacrifice for African Liberation 

1991 - Soviet military advisers leave Cuba following the collapse of the USSR.

1993 - The US tightens its embargo on Cuba, which introduces some market reforms in order to stem the deterioration of its economy. These include the legalisation of the US dollar, the transformation of many state farms into semi-autonomous cooperatives, and the legalisation of limited individual private enterprise.

The Economic Sanctions Against Cuba: The Failure of a Cruel and Irrational Policy

The Impact Of The U.S. Embargo On The Health And Nutrition In Cuba

U.S. Imperialism in Cuba: Sanctions Reconsidered

Out-Platting Platt: From Colonization to Globalization

Haiti
(Death toll from U.S. occupation 1915-1934: 15,000)
(Death toll from U.S.-backed Duvalier dynasty 1957-1986: 100,000)
(Death toll from U.S.-backed coup against Aristide 1991-1994: 4,000)
(Death toll from U.S.-backed coup against Aristide and UN occupation 2004- : tens of thousands)


Instances of Use of United States Forces Abroad 1798-1993

Quote
1888 -- Haiti -- December 20. A display of force persuaded the Haitian Government to give up an American steamer which had been seized on the charge of breach of blockade.

1891 -- Haiti. U.S. forces sought to protect American lives and property on Navassa Island.

1914 -- Haiti -- January 29 to February 9, February 20 to 21, October 19. Intermittently U.S. naval forces protected American nationals in a time of rioting and revolution.

1915-34 -- Haiti -- July 28, 1915, to August 15, 1934. U.S. forces maintained order during a period of chronic and threatened insurrection.

200 Years of U.S. Imperialism: Haiti Under Siege

1801 - A former black slave who became a guerrilla leader, Toussaint Louverture, conquers Haiti, abolishing slavery and proclaiming himself governor-general of an autonomous government over all Hispaniola.

1802 - French force led by Napoleon's brother-in-law, Charles Leclerc, fails to conquer Haitian interior.

Independence

1804 - Haiti becomes independent; former slave Jean-Jacques Dessalines declares himself emperor.

A history of U.S. embargoes

1806 - Dessalines assassinated and Haiti divided into a black-controlled north and a mulatto-ruled south

1818-43 - Pierre Boyer unifies Haiti, but excludes blacks from power.

1915 - US invades Haiti following black-mulatto friction, which it thought endangered its property and investments in the country.

Leaders promised fast results in Haiti and Iraq—then met hard going

The first U.S. occupation of Haiti

Occupational Hazards: The First US Takeover of Haiti set the Stage for Later Interventions

The U.S. Occupation of Haiti (1915-1934)

Early 20th Century: U.S. Occupation of Haiti

1934 - US withdraws troops from Haiti, but maintains fiscal control until 1947.

Duvalier dictatorships

1956 - Voodoo physician Francois "Papa Doc" Duvalier seizes power in military coup and is elected president a year later.

Post World War II: U.S. Supports Successive Dictatorships

The CIA's Greatest Hits: Haiti

Friendly Dictators

Quote
FRANCOIS & JEAN CLAUDE DUVALIER
Presidents of Haiti

In 1957 Francois "Papa Doc" Duvalier became Haiti's President-For-Life, establishing a strategic relationship with the US that lasted until 1971, when he was succeeded by his son Jean Claude "Baby Doc" Duvalier. During the 30 years that they ruled with an iron hand, 60,000 Haitians were killed and countless more were tortured by the Duvaliers' Tonton Macoutes death squads. While Haiti became the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, the Duvaliers enriched themselves by stealing foreign aid money. In 1980, for instance, the International Monetary Fund granted Haiti a $22 million budget supplement. Within weeks, $16 million was "unaccounted for". Baby Doc made Haiti into a trans-shipment point for Colombian cocaine. Nevertheless, as long as Papa and Baby Doc were anti-communists, they could do no wrong in the US government's eyes. Their regime finally ended in 1986, when Baby Doc fled angry mobs of Haitians for asylum in France, with a fortune estimated at $400 million. It has been estimated that under Baby Doc's rule 40,000 Haitians were murdered.

1964 - Duvalier declares himself president-for-life and establishes a dictatorship with the help of the Tontons Macoute militia.

1971 - Duvalier dies and is succeeded by his 19-year-old son, Jean-Claude, or "Baby Doc", who also declares himself president-for-life.

1986 - Baby Doc flees Haiti in the wake of mounting popular discontent and is replaced by Lieutenant-General Henri Namphy as head of a governing council.

1988 - Leslie Manigat becomes president, but is ousted in a coup led by Brigadier-General Prosper Avril, who installs a civilian government under military control.

Democracy, coup and intervention

1990 - Jean-Bertrand Aristide elected president.

1991 - Aristide ousted in a coup led by Brigadier-General Raoul Cedras, triggering sanctions by the US and the Organisation of American States.

Haiti 1986-1994: Who will rid me of this turbulent priest?

Haiti’s Nightmare: The Cocaine Coup & The CIA Connection

Noam Chomsky Traces Underpinnings Of Aristide's Ouster Back To 1991-1994 Coup

The Attempted Character Assassination of Aristide

1993 - UN imposes sanctions after the military regime rejects an accord facilitating Aristide's return.

1994 - Military regime relinquishes power in the face of an imminent US invasion; US forces oversee a transition to a civilian government; Aristide returns.

Emmanuel Constant: The United States Must Practice What It Preaches About Not Harboring Terrorists

1995 - UN peacekeepers begin to replace US troops; Aristide supporters win parliamentary elections; Rene Preval elected in December to replace Aristide as president.

1996 - Preval sworn in as president.

1997-99 - Serious political deadlock; new government named.

1999 - Preval declares that parliament's term has expired and begins ruling by decree following a series of disagreements with deputies.

Aristide's second term

2000 November - Aristide elected president for a second non-consecutive term, amid allegations of irregularities.

2001 July - Presidential spokesman accuses former army officers of trying to overthrow the government after armed men attack three locations, killing four police officers.

2001 December - 30 armed men try to seize the National Palace in an apparent coup attempt; 12 people are killed in the raid, which the government blames on former army members.

2002 July - Haiti is approved as a full member of the Caribbean Community (Caricom) trade bloc.

2003 April - Voodoo recognised as a religion, on a par with other faiths.

2004 January-February - Celebrations marking 200 years of independence are marred by violent uprising against President Aristide. Rebels seize towns and cities; dozens are killed. Mr Aristide is forced into exile; an interim government takes over.

The Overthrow of Haiti’s Aristide: A Coup Made in the USA

Bringing Hell To Haiti - Part 1

Bringing Hell To Haiti - Part 2

Aristide Interview with Democracy Now!

Haiti: US Backing Overthrow of President

How Washington set the stage for Haiti’s uprising

Why they had to crush Aristide

Haiti's Democracy In Flames

The Coup Connection

Free Markets and Death Squads

Who Removed Aristide

2004 May - Severe floods in south, and in parts of neighbouring Dominican Republic, leave more than 2,000 dead or disappeared.

2004 June - First UN peacekeepers arrive, to take over security duties from US-led force and to help flood survivors.

UN Supports Death Squads

In Haiti Kill the Poor, Leave Right-Wing Death Squads Untouched

The UN in Haiti: Part of the problem, not the solution

U.N. Troops Accused of July 6th Massacre in Haiti's Cite Soleil

UN Peacekeeping Paramilitarism [in Haiti]

2004 July - International donors pledge more than $1bn in aid.

2004 September - Nearly 3,000 killed in flooding in the north, in the wake of tropical storm Jeanne.

late 2004 - Rising levels of deadly political and gang violence in the capital; armed gangs loyal to former President Aristide are said to be responsible for many killings.

2005 April - Prominent rebel leader Ravix Remissainthe is killed by police in the capital.

2005 July - Hurricane Dennis kills at least 45 people.

2006 February - General elections, the first since former President Aristide was overthrown in 2004. Rene Preval is declared the winner of the presidential vote after a deal is reached over spoiled ballot papers.

2006 June - A democratically-elected government headed by Prime Minister Jacques-Edouard Alexis takes office.

2006 September - Launch of a UN-run scheme to disarm gang members in return for grants, job training.

2006 October - US partially lifts an arms embargo, imposed in 1991.

2007 January - UN troops launch tough new offensive against armed gangs in Cite Soleil, one of the capital's largest and most violent shantytowns.

UN Occupation of Haiti Continues

U.N. occupation of Haiti intensifies
Logged

If you hate America so much, why don't you leave?

Leave America? That would potentially put me on the other end of U.S. foreign policy. No thanks.
The Wiseman
Mercenary
******
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Posts: 1293


Dead Press


« Reply #1 on: January 07, 2008, 05:52:08 PM »

Domican Republic
(Death toll from U.S.-backed dictatorship 1916-1924: several thousand Hatians)
(Death toll from U.S.-backed Trujillo dictatorship 1930-1961: 20,000)
(Death toll of U.S. coup and intervention against Juan Bosch in 1965: 4,000
(Death toll from U.S.-backed Balaguer dictatorship 1966-1978: 4,000)


Instances of Use of United States Forces Abroad 1798-1993

Quote
1903 - A detachment of marines was landed to protect American interests in the city of Santo Domingo during a revolutionary outbreak.

1904-American and British naval forces established an area in which no fighting would be allowed and protected American interests in Puerto Plata and Sosua and Santo Domingo City during revolutionary fighting.

1914-During a revolutionary movement, United States naval forces by gunfire stopped the bombardment of Puerto Plata, and by threat of force maintained Santo Domingo City as a neutral zone.

1916-24-American naval forces maintained order during a period of chronic and threatened insurrection.

A Timeline of CIA Atrocities

Quote
1961-The CIA assassinates Rafael Trujillo, a murderous dictator Washington has supported since 1930. Trujillo’s business interests have grown so large (about 60 percent of the economy) that they have begun competing with American business interests.

1965-The CIA overthrows the democratically elected Juan Bosch in a military coup. The CIA installs a repressive, right-wing junta.

Articles/Books/Excerpts:

Dominican Republic 1960-1966: Saving Democracy from Communism by Getting Rid of Democracy

The US Invasion of the Dominican Republic:1965

The Dominican Republic: U.S. Model for Third World Development

The Greatest CIA Hits: The Dominican Republic

Dominican Republic - USAID, IMF Pt.1

April 1965 and the unfinished Dominican revolution

US Capitalism and the Multinationals

A Popular President Toppled by the U.S.

Patterns of Intervention

The Democratic Party and the Third World 1961-68

Exporting the Facade

Dominicans Recall U.S. Invasion; Balaguer's Party in Trouble

Argentina
(Death toll from US backed dictatorship/death squads 1976-1983: 20,000)

Books
State Terrorism and the United States: From Counterinsurgency to the War on Terrorism by Frederick H. Gareau
Argentina's Dirty War

Articles

Kissinger and the "Dirty War"

Dirty Peace in Argentina

Argentina's Dapper State-Terrorist

Dirty Deeds: Spain wants to extradite Argentina's former dictators

Argentine military felt secure: U.S. backed quashing of leftists

Economy

Argentina and the IMF

Economic Debacle in Argentina The IMF Strikes Again

The Long Climb [Argentina] An energized Argentine democracy is holding its own against the IMF, but for how long?

Pakistan and Argentina

Argentine's Making a Life After Capitalism

Before they killed us with guns, now they kill us with hunger

Another IMF Crash

Who Shot Argentina?

Argentina: The Epidemic Spreads in Latin America

The Sacking of Argentina

Argentina's Revolt

Disasters of Neoliberalism: Argentina in Flames

The Costs of Orthodoxy: Argentina was the poster child for austerity and obedience to the IMF formula

Argentina: Between Disintegration and Revolution

A Rich Country Goes Bust Again: Those Who Ruined Argentina

Don't Cry for the IMF, Argentina

Indonesia
(Death toll from the 1965-1966 military coup of Sukarto: 1 million)

Books/Articles/Excerpts:

The Mass Killings In Indonesia: 40 Years Later

Philippines
(Death toll from U.S. invasion 1898-1904: 1 million)
(Death toll from CIA-backed counter-insurgency against the Huk rebellion: 9-11,000)
(Death toll from U.S. client Marcos dictatorship 1965-1986: 60,000-175,000)
(Death toll from U.S. client Arroyo regime 2001- : 1,000)


Articles:

The Philippines Revolution: What Are The Alternatives To Neoliberalism?

The Folly of Empire Book Excerpt: The Phillipines

Regime Change or Imperialism?

A Brief History of the Philippines from a Filipino Perspective

An Urgent Appeal to the Permanent Peoples’ Tribunal (PPT) of the Lelio Basso International Foundation for the Rights and Liberation of People (Foundation)

Philippines: The Killing Fields Of Asia

The Case of the Philippines: Militarization is Not an Answer for Economic Development or Reconstruction

The Phillipines Model

U.S. Imperialism: A Century of Slaughter

Dark Legacy: Human rights under the Marcos regime

The Philippines: The Marcos Years

Pictures from the U.S. invasion of the Phillipines:




General Jacob H. Smith's infamous order "KILL EVERY ONE OVER TEN" was the caption in the New York Journal cartoon on May 5, 1902. The Old Glory draped an American shield on which a vulture replaced the bald eagle. The bottom caption exclaimed, "Criminals Because They Were Born Ten Years Before We Took the Philippines". Published in the New York Journal-American, May 5, 1902.

Vietnam
(Death toll from US-backed French counter-insurgency 1950-1954: 400,000)
(Death toll from U.S. invasion, escalation, and occupation 1956-1975: 5.1 million)


Images of the War

Articles/Books/Excerpts:

A People's History of the United States by Howard Zinn
The Impossible Victory: Vietnam

What Uncle Sam Really Wants by Noam Chomsky
Inoculating Southeast Asia

Class Warfare by Noam Chomsky
Robert McNamara

After the Cataclysm by Noam Chomsky & Edward Herman
Selections

Rogue States by Noam Chomsky
The Legacy of War

Manufacturing Consent by Edward Herman & Noam Chomsky
Conclusions

The Greatest Story Never Told: A People's History of the American Empire 1945-1999 by Michael K. Smith
Years of Upheaval
The Seventies

Distant Voices by John Pilger
Have a Nice War [Vietnam], Return to Ground Zero [Cambodia], A Faustian Pact [Pol Pot & Cambodia]

An Intimate History of Killing: Face to Face Killing in 20th-century warfare - Joanna Bourke

Intervention and Revolution: The United States in the Third World by Richard J. Barnet
America in Vietnam: The Four Interventions

Heroes by John Pilger
Vietnam

Howard Zinn on War by Howard Zinn
Vietnam: A Matter of Perspective

Voices of a People's History of the United States by Howard Zinn and Anthony Arnove
World War I and McCarthyism, Vietnam and Beyond: The Historic Resistance

Deadly Deceits by Ralph McGehee
CIA in Vietnam

Vietnam: The War the U.S. Lost

The Legacy of Agent Orange [in Vietnam]

High Time for Responsibility

Vietnam: The Final Battle

Review of Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers

Declaration on the Long-Term Consequences of War in Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam

The Vietnam War and the Myth of a Liberal Media

Behind Colin Powell's Legend

Cambodia

A Visit to Laos

In North Vietnam

The Pentagon Papers and U.S. Imperialism In Southeast Asia

The Meaning of Vietnam

How Government Became Wolves

Mayday: The Case For Civil Disobedience

In Defense of the Student Movement

Bertrand Russel War Crimes Tribunal on Vietnam: Foreword by Noam Chomsky

Bertrand Russell War Crimes Tribunal on Vietnam: After Pinkville by Noam Chomsky

On The Backgrounds of the Pacific War

On Resistance

Videos:

Economy:

Nike Does It To Vietnam

McDonald's / Disney Linked to Six Cent-an-Hour Sweatshop in Vietnam

Pictures



My Lai Massacre









Another Pic from the My Lai Massacre





East Timor
(Death toll from US-backed Indonesian invasion and occupation 1975-1999: 275,000 or over 1/3 the population)

Articles/Books/Excerpts:

Killing Hope by William Blum
East Timor 1975 And 200,000 More

Distant Voices by John Pilger
Born in Tears (East Timor)Arms for the Generals [Indonesia]

The Trial of Henry Kissinger by Christopher Hitchins
East Timor

Rogue States by Noam Chomsky
East Timor Retrospective, Plan Columbia

East Timor: Genocide in Paradise by Matthew Jardine
U.S. Support for Indonesia

Genocide in East Timor: Made in the USA

East Timor: Questions and Answers by Stephen R. Shalom, Noam Chomsky, and Michael Albert

Ending 20 Years of Occupation: East Timor and U.S. Foreign Policy

How The New York Times Protects Indonesian Terror In East Timor

New Exception to the Rulers, Part 2 by Amy Goodman

APEC, the United States & East Timor

Accomplices to Terror

US Complicity in Timor

End The Atrocity in East Timor by Noam Chomsky

Economy

Australia's Oil Grab (East Timor)

Taming the "Banana Republic: The United States in East Timor

Video

Death of a Nation: The East Timor Conspiracy

Ethiopia

Articles:

Sowing the Seeds of Famine in Ethiopia

State Terror in Ethiopia: Another Secret War for Oil?

Somalia
(Death toll from U.S.-supported Said Barre regime: 100,000)
(Death toll from U.S. intervention in 1992: 7,000-10,000)
(Death toll from U.S. supported Ethiopian invasion: tens of thousands)


Articles:

The Long and Hidden History of the U.S in Somalia

Condoleezza Stokes Flames of U.S. Wars in Africa 

In Somalia, a reckless U.S. proxy war

More Blood For Oil

Somalia and Ethiopia: a new front in the ‘long war’

Ethiopia has become an Anglo-American proxy in the Horn of Africa

Warlordism, Ethiopian Invasion, Dictatorship, & America’s Role

Somalia: The Other (Hidden) War for Oil

Who’s sawing off the Horn of Africa?

Somalia: 'Hard Truths for Hard Times'

Rwanda

Articles/Excerpts/Books:

Rwanda: Installing a US Protectorate in Central Africa: The US was behind the Rwandan Genocide

Rwanda's Secret War: U.S-backed Destabilization of Central Africa

The Use of Rwanda's External Debt (1990-1994): The Responsibility of Donors and Creditors

HOTEL RWANDA: Hollywood and the Holocaust in Central Africa

The Geopolitics behind the Rwandan Genocide: Paul Kagame accused of War Crimes

Revisiting the ‘Rwandan Genocide’

The Rwandan Genocide

The Genocide and War in Rwanda

Sudan

Ten Reasons Why “Save Darfur” is a PR Scam

Darfurism, Uganda and the U.S. War in Africa: The Spectre of Continental Genocide

U.S. Terrorism in the Sudan

The Democratic Republic of the Congo
(Death toll of Congo Conflict backed by U.S. corporations 1998- :5.4 Million)

U.S. Military and Corporate Recolonization of Congo

The Looting of the Congo

Over Five Million Dead in Congo? How Truth is Hidden, Even When it Seems to Be Told

‘Blood Minerals’ in the Kivu Provinces of the Democratic Republic of Congo

Congo's Tragedy and Western Complicity

Mining in the Ituri Province of the Congo

Genocide and Covert Operations in Africa 1993-1999

Behind the Numbers: Untold Suffering in the Congo

1200s - Rise of Kongo empire, centred in modern northern Angola and including extreme western Congo and territories round lakes Kisale and Upemba in central Katanga (now Shaba).

1482 - Portuguese navigator Diogo Cao becomes the first European to visit the Congo; Portuguese set up ties with the king of Kongo.

Kongo Kingdom

Full History

16th-17th centuries - British, Dutch, Portuguese and French merchants engage in slave trade through Kongo intermediaries.

The Trans-Atlantic slave trade

1870s - Belgian King Leopold II sets up a private venture to colonise Kongo.

Leopold breif Bio

1874-77 - British explorer Henry Stanley navigates Congo river to the Atlantic Ocean.

Belgian colonisation

1879-87 - Leopold commissions Stanley to establish the king's authority in the Congo basin.

Belgium's imperialist rape of Africa

1884-85 - European powers at the Conference of Berlin recognise Leopold's claim to the Congo basin.

The butcher of Congo

1885 - Leopold announces the establishment of the Congo Free State, headed by himself.

1891-92 - Belgians conquer Katanga.

1892-94 - Eastern Congo wrested from the control of East African Arab and Swahili-speaking traders.

1908 - Belgian state annexes Congo amid protests over killings and atrocities carried out on a mass scale by Leopold's agents. Millions of Congolese are said to have been killed or worked to death during Leopold's control of the territory.

Report of the British Consul, Roger Casement, on the Administration of the Congo Free State

1955 - Belgian Professor Antoin van Bilsen publishes a "30-Year Plan" for granting the Congo increased self-government.

1959 - Belgium begins to lose control over events in the Congo following serious nationalist riots in Leopoldville (now Kinshasa).

The democratic republic of Congo

Post-independence turmoil

1960 June - Congo becomes independent with Patrice Lumumba as prime minister and Joseph Kasavubu as president.

Patrice Lumumba and revolution in the Congo

1960 July - Congolese army mutinies; Moise Tshombe declares Katanga independent; Belgian troops sent in ostensibly to protect Belgian citizens and mining interests; UN Security Council votes to send in troops to help establish order, but the troops are not allowed to intervene in internal affairs.

1960 September - Kasavubu dismisses Lumumba as prime minister.

1960 December - Lumumba arrested.

1961 February - Lumumba murdered, reportedly with US and Belgian complicity.

The unquiet death of Patrice Lumumba

The CIA's Family Jewels: Plan for Assassination of Patrice Lumumba

The Role of the U.S. and U.S. Corporations in the Assassination of Patrice Lumumba

Lumumba: Lost Prince of an African Renaissance?

1961 August - UN troops begin disarming Katangese soldiers.

1963 - Tshombe agrees to end Katanga's secession.

1964 - President Kasavubu appoints Tshombe prime minister.

Mobutu years

1965 - Kasavubu and Tshombe ousted in a coup led by Joseph Mobutu.

1971 - Joseph Mobutu renames the country Zaire and himself Mobutu Sese Seko; also Katanga becomes Shaba and the river Congo becomes the river Zaire.

US support Mobutu

1973-74 - Mobutu nationalises many foreign-owned firms and forces European investors out of the country.

1977 - Mobutu invites foreign investors back, without much success; French, Belgian and Moroccan troops help repulse attack on Katanga by Angolan-based rebels.

Zaire 1975-1978: Mobutu and the CIA, a marriage made in heaven

1989 - Zaire defaults on loans from Belgium, resulting in a cancellation of development programmes and increased deterioration of the economy.

1990 - Mobutu agrees to end the ban on multiparty politics and appoints a transitional government, but retains substantial powers.

1991 - Following riots in Kinshasa by unpaid soldiers, Mobutu agrees to a coalition government with opposition leaders, but retains control of the security apparatus and important ministries.

1993 - Rival pro- and anti-Mobutu governments created.

1994 - Mobutu agrees to the appointment of Kengo Wa Dondo, an advocate of austerity and free-market reforms, as prime minister.

1996-97 - Tutsi rebels capture much of eastern Zaire while Mobutu is abroad for medical treatment.

Mobuto Was Chaos

Nigeria

Articles:

Boycott Shell/Free Nigeria Campaign

Shell In Nigeria

Nigeria Deception

Shell Oil Rules Nigeria

Flames of Shell in Nigeria: Oil, Nigeria, and the Ogoni

Crimes of Shell in Nigeria

Remember Shell, Boycott Shell

Drilling and Killing - Shell and Chevron in Nigeria

Factsheet on the Odoni Struggle

Nigeria: Shell of a State

Climate Justice From the Niger Delta to Cancer Alley

Nigeria: In a Land of Oil and Agony

Nigeria and Oil

Oil Companies Complicit in Nigerian Abuses

Days of Atonement: Searching for Justice In Nigeria

Assassins in Foreign Lands: Nigerian HR Activist Oronto Douglas

Video:

Nigeria and Big Oil

Delta-Oil's Dirty Business

Shell in Nigeria

Angola
(Death toll from U.S.-backed civil war in Angola 1976-1992: 300,000)

1300s - Kongo kingdom consolidates in the north.

1483 - Portuguese arrive.

1575 - Portuguese found Luanda.

17th and 18th centuries - Angola becomes a major Portuguese trading arena for slaves. Between 1580 and 1680 a million plus are shipped to Brazil.

1836 - Slave trade officially abolished by the Portuguese government.

1885-1930 - Portugal consolidates colonial control over Angola, local resistance persists.

Angola under the Portuguese: The Myth and the Reality

1951 - Angola's status changes from colony to overseas province.

1956 - The early beginnings of the socialist guerrilla independence movement, the People's Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA), based in northern Congo.

1950s-1961 - Nationalist movement develops, guerrilla war begins.

1961 - Forced labour abolished after revolts on coffee plantations leave 50,000 dead. The fight for independence is bolstered.

1974 - Revolution in Portugal, colonial empire collapses.

Independence   

1975 - Angola gains independence but power struggle ensues between MPLA, backed by Cuba, and the FNLA plus Unita, backed by South Africa and the USA.

Killing Hope by William Blum: Angola 1975-1980s

The CIAs Greatest Hits: Angola

Secret Third World Wars by John Stockwell

In Search of Enemies by John Stockwell

1976 - MPLA gains upper hand.

1979 - MPLA leader Agostinho Neto dies. Jose Eduardo dos Santos takes over as president.

Secret Collaboration: U.S. and South Africa Foment Terrorist Wars

1987 - South African forces enter Angola to support Unita.

Remembering Cuba’s Sacrifice for African Liberation

The Secret Wars of the CIA by John Stockwell

1988 - South Africa, Angola, Cuba sign agreement on withdrawal of Cuba's 50,000 troops from Angola by mid-1991. South African army withdraws.

1989 - Dos Santos, Unita leader Jonas Savimbi agree cease-fire, which collapses soon afterwards and guerrilla activity resumes.

Towards peace

1991 April - MPLA drops Marxism-Leninism in favour of social democracy.

1991 May - Dos Santos, Savimbi sign peace deal in Lisbon which results in a new multiparty constitution.

1992 September - Presidential and parliamentary polls certified by UN monitors as generally free and fair. Dos Santo gains more votes than Savimbi, who rejects results and resumes guerrilla war.

1993 - UN imposes sanctions against Unita. The US acknowledges the MPLA.

1994 - Government, Unita sign Lusaka Protocol peace accord.

1995 - Dos Santos, Savimbi meet, confirm commitment to peace. First of 7,000 UN peacekeepers arrive.

1996 - Dos Santos, Savimbi agree to form unity government join forces into national army.

1997 April - Unified government inaugurated, with Savimbi declining post in unity government and failing to attend inauguration ceremony.

1997 May - Tension mounts, with few Unita troops having integrated into army.

1998 - Full-scale fighting resumes. UN plane shot down. Angola intervenes in civil war in Democratic Republic of Congo on the side of President Laurent-Desire Kabila.

1999 - UN ends its peacekeeping mission.

2002 February - Savimbi killed by government troops.

Angola After Savimbi

2002 April - Government, Unita sign ceasefire.

Demobilisation

2002 May - Unita's military commander says 85% of his troops have gathered at demobilisation camps. There are concerns that food shortages in the camps could threaten the peace process.

2002 June - UN appeals for aid for thousands of refugees heading home after the ceasefire.

2002 August - Unita scraps its armed wing. "The war has ended," proclaims Angola's defence minister.

2003 January - President Dos Santos appoints Fernando da Piedade Dias dos Santos, known as Nando, as prime minister. The post had been vacant for more than three years.

2003 February - UN mission overseeing the peace process winds up.

2003 June - Unita - now a political party - elects Isaias Samakuva as its new leader.

2004 April onwards - Tens of thousands of illegal foreign diamond miners are expelled in a crackdown on illegal mining and trafficking. In December the government says 300,000 foreign diamond dealers have been expelled.

2004 September - Oil production reaches one million barrels per day.

2005 March-May - Marburg virus, which is deadlier than Ebola, kills more than 300 people, most of them in the north.

2005 June - Cholera epidemic claims 1,900 lives, mainly in Luanda.

2006 August - The government signs a peace deal with a separatist group in the northern enclave of Cabinda.

2006 October - The UN refugee agency begins "final repatriation" of Angolans who fled the civil war to the neighbouring DR Congo. Some 60,000 are still due to return under the scheme which began in 2003 and which has repatriated 180,000 people.

2007 February - President dos Santos says parliamentary elections will be held in 2008 and presidential polls in 2009.

Making a Killing: The Business of War

A Rough Trade: The Role of Governments and Companies in the Angolan Conflict

The human cost of international inaction on Angolan sanctions

The devastating story of oil and banking in Angola’s privatised war

A Crude Awakening

Africa's Oil Tycoons

Mozambique
(Death toll from CIA and South African-backed RENAMO terrorist group 1975-1992: 1 million)

What Imperialism Has Done To Mozambique

U.S. Supports "One of the Most Brutal Holocausts Since World War II"

Mozambique: The Right to Survive

Bleeding Mozambique

Massacre Deep in the African Bush: Rebels are blamed for the worst atrocity of a savage eleven-year war

What Aparthied Has Done To Affordable Transportation
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Leave America? That would potentially put me on the other end of U.S. foreign policy. No thanks.
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« Reply #2 on: January 13, 2008, 07:50:11 AM »

thats an extensive list.  respect for posting it.
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« Reply #3 on: January 23, 2008, 12:58:59 AM »

Iran
(Death toll from U.S./British-backed 1953 coup and 26 year rule of the Shah-70,000)
(Death toll from U.S.-backed Iraqi war on Iran-1 million)

Articles/Books/Excerpts:


Killing Hope by William Blum: 1953

Necessary Illusions by Noam Chomsky: Heroes and Devils

Boomerang: How our covert wars have created enemies
across the Middle East and brought terror to America. by Mark Zepezauer
Iran


The CIAs Greatest Hits by Mark Zepezauer: Iran

Geopolitics of Oil

What Kermit Roosevelt Didn't Say

We Had A Democracy Once, But You Crushed It

Declassified CIA Documents on 1953 Coup

A Matter of Perspective: The United States and Iran

Videos:

Hot Spots: Iran

How to Overthrow A Government Pt. 1: The 1953 U.S. Coup in Iran

"Life of Dr. Mossadegh" -- A Look at the Iranian Leader Overthrown By the U.S.

50 Years After the CIA’s First Overthrow of a Democratically Elected Foreign Government We Take a Look at the 1953 US Backed Coup in Iran

Afganistan

Afganistan: Its All About Oil!

Afghanistan, bin Laden and the hypocrisy of American imperialism

The truth about Afghanistan

How US Oil Interests Play out in US Bombing of Afghanistan

The CIA's Intervention in Afghanistan: Interview with Zbigniew Brzezinski, President Jimmy Carter's National Security Adviser

Afghanistan: 1979-1992 America's Jihad

Lebanon

Sabra and Shatila massacres—why do we ignore them?

Ariel Sharon, From Sabra/Shatila to Jenin

"Limited War" in Lebanon

Sometimes the Dog Wags the Tail

Israel, Oil and the "planned demolition" of Lebanon

Iraq
(Death toll of 1963 CIA-backed Baathist coup: 5,000)
(Death toll of U.S.-backed Iran-Iraq war 1980-1988: 1 million)
(Death toll of first U.S. Gulf War on Iraq 1991: 200,000)
(Death toll of U.S.-backed sanctions on Iraq: 1.5 million)
(Death toll of U.S. war and occupation of Iraq: 1.2 million)


1904-2003: Brief History of Iraq

Iraq-Occupied Land Parts 1-10

A timeline of key events in Iraqi history and class struggle in the 20th century.

1900
Iraq doesn't exist. Since the sixteenth century the area that will later become Iraq has formed part of the Turkish-based Ottoman Empire. The Empire's rule is based in the cities; the countryside remains dominated by rural tribal groups, some of them nomadic.

1912
Turkish Petroleum Company formed by British, Dutch and German interests acquires concessions to prospect for oil in the Ottoman provinces of Baghdad and Mosul (both later part of Iraq).

The Turkish Petroleum Company

Oil in Iraq: The Byzantine Beginnings

1914-18
Turkey sides with Germany in the First World War. To protect its strategic interests and potential oil fields, Britain occupies Basra in November 1914, eventually capturing Baghdad in 1917. By the end of the war, most of the provinces of Iraq are occupied by British forces although some areas remain "unpacified". Colonial direct rule is established in "British Mesopotamia", with the top levels of the administration in British hands.

Iraq Oil and British Foreign Policy after World War I

Britain's Priority: Control of Oil Reserves

The Primacy of Oil in Britain’s Iraq Policy

Iraq, 1917

1919
Throughout 1919 and 1920 there are constant risings in northern Iraq, with British military officers and officials being killed. The different tribes in this area share a common Kurdish language and culture, but at this stage there is little demand for a separate Kurdish nation state. The issue is rather resistance to any external state authority.

The RAF bomb Kurdish areas. Wing-Commander Arthur Harris (later known as "Bomber Harris" for his role in the destruction of Dresden in World War Two) boasts: "The Arab and the Kurd now know what real bombing means in casualties and damage. Within 45 minutes a full-size village can be practically wiped out and a third of its inhabitants killed or injured".

Colonel Gerald Leachman, a leading British officer declares that the only way to deal with the tribes is "wholesale slaughter". The RAF Middle Eastern Command request chemical weapons to use "against recalcitrant Arabs as (an) experiment". Winston Churchill, Secretary of State for War comments "I am strongly in favour of using poisonous gas against uncivilised tribes.. It is not necessary only to use the most deadly gases: gases can be used which cause great inconvenience and would spread a lively terror and yet would leave no serious permanent effects of most of those affected". Others argue that the suggested gas would in fact "kill children and sickly persons" and permanently damage eyesight. At this stage, technical problems prevent the use of gas, but later it is deployed.

Gassing of the Kurds by the British

British Use of Chemical Weapons in Iraq

1920
In the post-war carve up of the spoils of conquest between the victorious imperialist powers, Britain gets Iraq (as well as Palestine), France gets Syria and Lebanon. The borders of the new state of Iraq are set by the great powers, setting the scene for a century of border conflicts (e.g the Iran/Iraq war).

The British authorities impose tight controls, collecting taxes more rigorously than their predecessors and operating forced labour schemes. In June 1920 an armed revolt against British rule ("the Revolution of 1920") spreads across southern and central Iraq. For three months Britain loses control of large areas of the countryside. British military posts are overrun, and 450 British troops are killed (1500 are injured).

1921
By February the rebellion has been crushed, with 9000 rebels killed or wounded by British forces. Whole villages are destroyed by British artillery, and suspected rebels shot without trial. The air power of the RAF plays a major role; what this involves is shown by one report of "an air raid in which men, women and children had been machine gunned as they fled from a village".

Britain decides to replace direct colonial rule with an Arab administration which it hopes will serve British interests. At the head of the new state structure, Britain creates a monarchy with Faysal as Iraq's first King. Although senior positions are now filled by Iraqis, ultimate control remains with their British advisers'.

1924
Britain's Labour Government sanctions the use of the RAF against the Kurds, dropping bombs and gas, including on Sulliemania in December. The effects are described by Lord Thompson as "appalling" with panic stricken tribespeoplefleeing "into the desert where hundreds more must have perished of thirst".

British Air Power and Colonial Control in Iraq: 1920 – 1925

Baghdad and British Bombers

The Kurdish Problem and the Mosul Boundary: 1918-1925

1927
The British-controlled Iraq Petroleum Company (successor to the TPC) opens its first substantial oil well at Baba Gurgur, north of Kirkuk. Tons of oil decimate the local countryside before the well is capped.

1930
The Anglo-Iraq Treaty paves the way for independence. However the Treaty provides for Britain to maintain two air bases, and for British influence on Iraq's foreign policy until 1957. In negotiations the British government contends that Kuwait "is a small expendable state which could be sacrificed without too much concern if the power struggles of the period demanded it".

Kurdish uprisings, prompted by fears of their place in the new state, are put down with the help of the RAF.

1931
General strike against the Municipal Fees Law which imposes draconian new taxes (three times heavier than before) and for unemployment compensation. Thousands of workers and artisans, including 3,000 petroleum workers, take part and there are clashes with the police. The RAF flies over urban centres to intimidate strikers and their supporters.

1932
Iraq is admitted to the League of Nations, becoming formally independent - although Britain remains in a powerful influence.

1933
The Artisans Association' (a union) organise a month long boycott of the British-owned Baghdad Electric Light and Power Company. After this, unions and workers' organisations are banned and forced underground for the next ten years with their leaders imprisoned.

King Faysal dies and is succeeded by his son Ghazi.

1934
Iraq Petroleum Company begins commercial export of oil from the Kirkuk fields.

1935-36
Sporadic tribal rebellions, mainly in the south of the country. Causes include the government's attempt to introduce conscription (the focus of a revolt by the minority Yazidi community), the dispossession of peasants as tribally-owned lands are placed in private hands, and the decreasing power of tribal leaders. The revolts are crushed by air force bombing and summary executions.

1936-37
General Bakr Sidqi, an admirer of Mussolini installs a military government and launches repression against the left. There are protest strikes throughout the country including at the Iraq Petroleum Company in Kirkuk and at the National Cigarette Factory in Baghdad.

1939
King Ghazi is killed in a car crash. Many Iraqis believe that there has been a conspiracy, as the King had become outspokenly anti-British. During an angry demonstration in Mosul, the British Consul is killed.

1940
Rashid Ali becomes Prime Minister after a coup, at the expense of pro-British politicians. The new government takes a position of neutrality in the Second World War, refusing to support Britain unless it grants independence to British-controlled Syria and Palestine. Links are established with the German government.

1941
British troops land at Basra. The Iraqi government demands that they leave the country. Instead Britain re-invades Iraq and after the thirty days war' restores its supporters to power. During the British occupation, martial law is declared. Arab nationalist leaders are hanged or imprisoned, with up to 1,000 being interned without trial. Despite this, British forces do not intervene when Rashid supporters stage a pogrom in the Jewish area of Baghdad, killing 150 Jews.

1943
Bread strikes prompted by food shortages and prices rises are put down by the police.

1946
Strike by oil workers at the British-controlled Iraq Petroleum Company in Kirkuk demanding higher wages and other benefits. Workers clash with police, and ten are killed when police open fire on a mass meeting on 12 July. The following month there is a strike by oil workers in the Iranian port of Abadan and Britain moves more troops to Basra (near to the Iranian border). The Iraqi government suppresses opposition papers criticising this move, prompting strikes by the printers and railway workers. The cabinet is forced to resign.

1946-47
Strikes and demonstrations against the proposed establishment of the Zionist state of Israel at the expense of the dispossessed Palestinians.

1948
The Iraqi government negotiates a new treaty with Britain which would have extended Britain's say in military policy until 1973. British troops would be withdrawn from Iraqi soil, but would have the right to return in event of war. On January 16, the day after the Treaty is agreed at Portsmouth, police shoot dead four students on a demonstrations against the treaty. This prompts an uprising that becomes known as al-Wathba (the leap). Militant demonstrations and riots spread across the country, directed not just against the proposed Treaty but against bread shortages and rising prices. Several more people are killed a few days later when police open fire on a mass march of railway workers and slum dwellers. On 27 January 300 to 400 people are killed by the police and military as demonstrators erect barricades of burning cars in the street. The cabinet resigns and the Treaty is repudiated.

In May 3,000 workers at IPC's K3 pumping station near Haditha strike for higher wages bringing the station to a halt. After two and a half weeks, the government and IPC cut off supplies of food and water to the strikers, who then decide to march on Baghdad, 250 km away. On what becomes known as the great march' (al-Masira al-Kubra), strikers are fed and sheltered by people in the small towns and villages en route before being arrested at Fallujah, 70 km from Baghdad.

The British military mission is withdrawn from Iraq. Martial law is declared, ostensibly because of the war in Palestine, and demonstrations are banned.

1949
Communist Party leaders are publicly hanged in Baghdad, their bodies left hanging for several hours as a warning to opponents of the regime.

1952
Port workers strike for increased wages, more housing and better working conditions. Strikers take over the Basra generator, cutting off water and electricity in the city. Strikers are killed when police move in.

In October students go on strike over changes in examination rules. The movement spreads to mass riots in most urban centres, known as al-Intifada (the tremor). In Baghdad a police station and the American Information Office are burned to the ground. A military government takes over, declaring martial law. There is a curfew, mass arrests and the banning of some newspapers. 18 demonstrators are killed in military action.

1954
Government decrees permit the Council of Ministers to deport persons convicted of communism, anarchism and working for a foreign government. The police are given new powers to stop meetings.

1956
Egypt nationalises the Suez Canal. Britain, Israel and France launch a military attack on Egypt. The government closes all colleges and secondary schools in Baghdad as huge demonstrations, strikes and riots spread. Two rioters are sentenced to death following clashes with the police in the southern town of al-Havy. Martial law is imposed.

1958
Popular unrest throughout the country, including in Diwaniyah where in June 43 police and an unknown number of demonstrators are killed in a three hour battle.

A month later the "14 July Revolution" brings to an end the old regime. A coup led by members of the Free Officers seizes power, denounces imperialism and proclaims a republic. The royal family are shot. Crowds take to the streets and a number of US businessmen and Jordanian ministers staying at the Baghdad Hotel are killed. People take food from the shops without paying, thinking that money is now obsolete. To prevent the revolution spreading out of their control, the new government imposes a curfew. After a brief power struggle within the new regime, Abd al-Karim Quasim becomes prime minister (as well as commander in chief of the armed forces) and continues to rule with the support of the Iraqi Communist Party (ICP) and other leftists.

Although Islamic influence remains strong, there are public expressions of anti-clericalism including the public burning of the Koran.

Without waiting for Quasim to deliver on his promises of land reform, peasants in the south take matters into their own hands. In al-Kut and al-'Amarah they loot landlords' property, burn down their houses, and destroy accounts and land registers.

Fearing the spread of rebellion throughout the Middle East, the United States sends 14,000 marines to Lebanon. Plans for a joint US/British invasion of Iraq come to nothing because "nobody could be found in Iraq to collaborate with".

1959
Baathists and nationalists form underground anti-communist hit squads, assassinating not just ICP members but other radical workers. By 1961 up to 300 people have been murdered in this way in Baghdad and around 400 in Mosul.

In Mosul, Arab nationalist officers stage an unsuccessful coup against the government, prompted largely by anti-communism. Popular resistance goes beyond suppressing the coup: the rich are attacked and their houses looted. There are similar scenes in Kirkuk where 90 generals, capitalists are landlords are killed in violent clashes ( excesses' later denounced by the ICP).

1960
Quasim cracks down on radical opposition. 6000 militant workers are sacked. Several Communist Party members are sentenced to death after for their role in the Kirkuk clashes. Despite this the ICP leadership continues to support the government, urged on by Moscow.

1961
War breaks out between the government and Kurds lasting intermittently until 1975. In the first year, 500 places are bombed by the Iraqi Air Force and 80,000 people displaced.

Kuwait, under British control since 1899, becomes independent. Iraq stakes a claim that Kuwait should be part of Iraq. Britain responds by sending troops to Kuwait.

1963
Quasim's government is overthrown in a January coup which brings to power the Baathists for the first time. The Arab nationalist Baath party favours the joining together of Iraq, Egypt and Syria in one Arab nation. In the same year, the Baath also come to power in Syria, although the Syrian and Iraqi parties subsequently split.

The Baath strengthen links with the United States, suspected by many of encouraging the coup. During the coup, demonstrators are mown down by tanks, initiating a period of ruthless persecution during which up to 10,000 people are imprisoned, many of them tortured. The CIA help to supply intelligence on communists and radicals to be rounded up. In addition to the 149 officially executed, up to 5000 are killed in the terror, many buried alive in mass graves. The new government continues the war on the Kurds, bombarding them with tanks, artillery and from the air, and bulldozing villages.
In November the Baath are removed from power in another coup by supporters of the Egyptian Arab nationalist, Nasser.

CIA coups in Iraq in 1963 & 1968 helped put Saddam Hussein in power

Regime Change: How the CIA put Saddam's Party in Power

Ex-U.S. Official Says CIA Aided Baathists

A Tyrant 40 Years in the Making

Saddam Was key in early CIA plot

CIA Lists Provide Basis for Iraqi Bloodbath

Saddam's Hidden History

Creating Saddam

How west helped Saddam gain power and decimate the Iraqi elite

1967
After a split in the Communist Party, a group lead by Aziz al-Hajj launches guerrilla warfare against the state, influenced by Che Guevara and Maoism. There are assassinations of individual capitalists and wide-scale armed confrontations.

1968
The Baath Party power returns to power after a coup in July. It creates a state apparatus systematically dominated by the Baath party that enables it to remain in power for at least the next thirty years.

The Baath militia, the National Guard, crack down on demonstrations and strikes. In November, two strikers are shot dead at a vegetable oil factory near Baghdad, and three are killed on a demonstration to commemorate the Russian Revolution.

1969
The regime begins rounding up suspected communists. The guerrilla movement is defeated, with many of its members tortured to death. Aziz al-Hajj betrays them by recanting on television, subsequently becoming Iraqi ambassador to France.

The air force bombs Kurdish areas, but the military stalemate remains until the following year when Saddam Hussein negotiates an agreement with the Kurdish Democratic Party. In exchange for limited autonomy, the KDP leadership agrees to integrate its peshmerga fighters into the Iraqi army.

1973
The Iraqi oil industry is nationalised.

Britain Says US Planned to Seize Oil in '73 Crisis

The Oil Companies vs. Iraq: Leadup to Nationalization, 1958-1973

Oil Companies Hold Down Production in Iraq

1974
After pressure from the Soviet Union, the Iraqi Communist Party joins the pro-government National Progressive Front along with the Baath, but the Baath remain in sole control of the state.

War breaks out again in Kurdistan as the agreement with the KDP breaks down. The KDP is deprived of its traditional allies in the CP and the Soviet Union, now supporting the Baath. Instead it seeks and receives aid from the USA and the Shah of Iran. The Baathists launch napalm attacks on the Kurdish towns of Halabja and Kalalze.

1975
The Iraqi military continues bombing civilian areas in Kurdistan, killing 130 at Qala'Duza, 43 in Halabja and 29 in Galala in April.

Iraq negotiates an agreement with Iran, withdrawing help from Iranian Kurds and other anti-Shah forces in return for Iran stopping support to the Iraqi KDP. Iran takes back the military equipment it had given to the KDP, leaving the field open for the Iraqi army to conquer Kurdistan

1978
Wholesale arrests of ICP members it criticises the regime. Twelve are executed for political activity in the army. All non-Baathist political activity in the army (such as reading a political newspaper), or by former members of the armed forces is banned under sentence of death. With universal conscription, this means that all adult males are threatened with death for political activity.

1979
Saddam Hussein becomes president of the republic, having increasingly concentrated power in his hands during the preceding eleven years.

1980
War breaks out between Iraq and the new Iranian regime lead by Ayatollah Khomeni. The conflict centres on border disputes and the prospect of the Islamic revolution spreading to Iraq. Iran shells the Iraqi cities of Khanaqin and Mandali; Iraq launches a bombing mission over Tehran.

1982
Popular anti-government uprising in Kurdish areas. The government decrees that deserters from the army (anyone who has gone absent without leave for more than five days) will be executed.

In the southern marsh regions, the Iraqi army launches a massive military operation with the help of heavy artillery, missiles and aircraft to flush out the thousands of deserters and their supporters in the area. Rebels do not only run away from the war, but organise sabotage actions such as blowing up an arsenal near the town of Amara. In the village of Douru armed inhabitants resist the police to prevent house-to-house searches for deserters. At Kasem in the same area armed rebels clash with the military. Villages supporting the rebels are destroyed and their inhabitants massacred.

1984
American support for Iraq in the war is reflected in the restoration of diplomatic relations between the two countries. Iraq has received military planes from France, and missiles from the Soviet Union. Saudi Arabia and Kuwait fund the Iraqi war effort. Western and Eastern blocs are united in a wish to see Iraq curtail the influence of Iran and Islamic fundamentalism.

Jalal al-Talabani's Patriotic Union of Kurdistan calls a truce with its troops fighting alongside the Baath.

Shaking Hands with Saddam Hussein: The U.S. Tilts toward Iraq, 1980-1984

The Riegle Report

Saddam Hussein, Donald Rumsfeld, and the Golden Spurs

Saddam's Hidden History

Saddam: Made in the USA

US Military Assistance to Saddam Hussein during the Iran-Iraq War

U.S. Diplomatic and Commercial Relationships with Iraq, 1980 - 2 August 1990

1987
In May there is an uprising in the Kurdish town of Halabja led by the many deserters from the army living in the town. According to one eye witness "the governmental forces were toppled. The people had taken over and the police and army had to go into hiding, only being able to move around in tanks and armoured divisions". Hundreds of people are killed when the rebellion is crushed.

1988
Armed deserters take over the town of Sirwan (near Halabja). The Iraqi air force destroys the town with bombs and rockets. Halabja is bombed by Iran, and then on 13 March the Iraqi government attacks the town with chemical weapons killing at least 5,000 civilians. Poor people attempting to flee the town for Iran before the massacre are stopped from doing so by Kurdish nationalist peshmerga. Throughout this period of insurgency there is widespread suspicion of the Kurdish nationalist parties because of their history of collaboration with the state and their lack of support for working class revolts.

The Americans send a naval force to the Gulf after attacks on oil tankers. It effectively takes the Iraqi side, shooting down an Iranian passenger jet killing nearly 300 people, and attacking Iranian oil platforms, killing another 200. In August Iran and Iraq agree a ceasefire bringing to an end the first Gulf War. The British government secretly agrees to relax controls on arms exports to Iraq.

1990
In July, the British government approves the company Matrix Churchill exporting engineering equipment to Iraq, knowing that they are to be used to manufacture shells and missiles. The following month, Iraq invades Kuwait.

1991
In January the US military, with support from Britain and the other 'Coalition Forces' launches Operation Desert Storm, a massive attack on Iraq and its forces in Kuwait. The conflict is less of a war than what John Pilger calls "a one-sided bloodfest". The allied forces suffer only 131 deaths (many of them killed by 'friendly fire'), compared with up to 250,000 Iraqi dead.

Despite General Norman Schwarzkopf's public statement that the allies will not attack Iraqis in retreat, Iraqi conscripts are slaughtered even after the unconditional withdrawal from Kuwait has begun. The day before the 'war' comes to an end, troops (and civilians) retreating from Kuwait City on the Basra highway are massacred in what US pilots gleefully call a 'duck shoot'. For miles near the Mutla Ridge, the road is filled with charred bodies and tangled wreckage. An eye witness writes that "In many instances the human form has been reduced to nothing more than a shapeless black lump, the colour of coal, the texture of ash" (Stephen Sackur).

Many civilians are also killed, most famously at the Amiriya bunker in Baghdad where hundreds of people sheltering from allied bombs are killed when it receives a direct hit from two missiles.

In February and March, popular uprisings against the Iraqi government spread across the country. It starts at Basra in southern Iraq, where the spark is rebels using a tank to fire at the huge pictures of Saddam Hussein in the city. Inspired by rebellion in the south, people in Kurdish areas join in. Police stations, army bases and other government buildings are wrecked and torched. Shops are looted. Food warehouses are occupied and the food distributed. In Sulliemania in the north, rebels smash up the prison and set all the prisoners free and then storm the secret police HQ where many have been tortured and killed. Baathist officials and secret police are shot. In some areas, self-organised workers' councils (shoras) are set up to run things. They set up their own radio stations, medical posts (to collect blood donations for the hospital), and militia to resist government forces.

In Baghdad itself, there are mass desertions from the main barracks during the war, with officers who try to stop them being shot. Two areas of the city, Al Sourah and Al Sho'ela fall into the effective control of deserters and their supporters.

After a brutal repression of the rebellion in the South (made easier by the earlier Allied massacre of mutinous conscripts on the Basra highway), Government forces focus on Kurdistan. They reoccupy Sulliemania in April, but the city is deserted with almost all the inhabitants having fled to the mountains.

The Western media present the uprisings as the work of Kurdish nationalists in the north and Shiite Muslims in the south, but they are in fact mass revolts of the poor. In fact the main Kurdish nationalist parties (the KDP and the PUK) oppose radical aspects of the uprisings and try to destroy the shora movement. True to form they announce a new negotiated agreement with Saddam Hussein soon after the uprisings are crushed.

Noam Chomsky on the 1991 US and UK war with Iraq following Iraq's invasion of Kuwait

Iraq 1990-1991: Desert holocaust

Ten Years After (Iraq)

The Massacre of Withdrawing Soldiers on "The Highway of Death"

The Gulf War: Origins and Motivations

"Slaughter" Is Something Other Countries Do

1991-2003

Although military action ceases, the war on people in Iraq is continued through other means - sanctions. The destruction of water pumping stations and sewage filtration plants by allied bombing is compounded by sanctions which prevent them being repaired. This amounts to germ warfare, as the inevitable consequences are epidemics of dysentery, typhoid and cholera. In 1997, the UN estimates that 1.2 million people, including 750,000 children below the age of five, have died because of the scarcity of food and medicine.

Paying The Price: Killing The Children Of Iraq

Sanctions, Genocide, and War Crimes

The US-UK Engineered Genocidal Sanctions against Iraq 1990–2003

Iraqi Sanctions: Myth and Fact

The Secret Behind the Sanctions: How the U.S. Intentionally Destroyed Iraq's Water Supply

1996
The US launches 27 cruise missiles against Iraq.

1998
In February there is a massive military build up by American and British forces in the Gulf, threatening a new war on Iraq. On this occasion, armed conflict is avoid ed after a last minute deal on UN Weapons Inspectors.

On October 1, Iraqi authorities under the command of Gen. Sabah Farhan al-Duri execute 119 Iraqis and three Egyptians in Abu Ghraib prison near Baghdad. Twenty-nine of those killed are members of the armed forces, and fifty had been imprisoned for their participation in the March 1991 uprisings that followed the Gulf War. This mass execution is apparently a continuation of the "prison-cleansing" campaign launched by the government a year earlier which saw an estimated 2500 prisoners executed.

In December, following the expulsion of Weapons Inspectors from Iraq (and during the middle of President Clinton's impeachment crisis) the US launches Operation Desert Fox. Over a four day period, 400 cruise missiles are launched on Iraq, along with 600 air attack sorties. British aircraft also take part in airstrikes. According to Iraq, thousands are killed and wounded in these attacks.

Crisis in 1998

Bombing Iraq - A Response

Iraq Was Being Bombed During 12 Years of Sanctions


1999
In March Grand Ayatollah Mohammed Sadiq-al Sadr, the most senior Shi'ite religious leader in Iraq, is killed, with the suspicion falling on government agents. A major uprising in Basra is suppressed with hundreds of deaths, many killed in mass executions.

Western military attacks continue, ostensibly against Iraqi air defenses. On April 11, two people are killed when Western warplanes bomb targets in Quadissiya province. On 27 April, four people are killed by US planes near Mosulin in the northern no-fly zone. On May 9, four people are killed in Basra province, including three in a farmer's house in Qurna. On May 12, 12 people are killed in the northern city of Mosul.

The War in Iraq

GDF Report: War and Occupation in Iraq

Mortality/Atrocities/War Crimes

More Than 1 Million Iraqis Murdered

1.2 Million Iraqis Dead

Poll: Civilian Death Toll in Iraq May Top 1 Million

Controversial Cockpit Video On The Strafing of Civilians in Fallujah

Italian TV Documentary On The Use of Chemical Weapons in the Massacre of Fallujah

Countless My Lai Massacres in Iraq

Iraqi Girl tells of US Attack in Haditha
 
John Simpson reports on the Haditha killings

The 10,000th Haditha

How The U.S. Murdered A City

US forces 'used chemical weapons' during assault on city of Fallujah

The Legacy of Fallujah

Bad Apples from a Rotten Tree: Military Training and Atrocities

Blackwater in Baghdad: It Was A Horror Movie

Lack of social services

Rising to the humanitarian challenge in Iraq

Refugees and displaced

Millions Trapped in Their Own Country

Oil for Iraqi Citizens

Resistance

Extraordinary interview with pro-resistance Iraqi Nationalist

Iraqi Marxist Insurgent Group Declared

An Interview with Dr. Mohammad al-Obaidi of Iraq's Peoples' Struggle Movement

They Met The Iraqi Resistance

A New Message From The Iraq Resistance

The Political Council of the Iraqi Resistance

Torture and Iraqi prisons

Torture in Iraq

Torture As National Policy

Torture's Part of the Territory

Permanent bases

Iraq as a Pentagon Construction Site

14 `enduring bases' set in Iraq

Iraq's US/UK Permanent Bases

Oil privatization and Neoliberalism

How the Bush Administration's Iraqi Oil Grab Went Awry

Confidential Document on Iraq Oil Lobbying

Draft Iraqi Oil and Gas Law

Crude Designs: The Rip-Off of Iraq’s Oil Wealth

Why Did We Invade Iraq Anyway?

Greenspan, Kissinger: Oil Drives US in Iraq, Iran

Poll: Iraqis Oppose Oil Privatization

Hard to Deny: Iraq Is All About the Oil

Iraq’s Neoliberal Constitution

Iraq under US Occupation: Neoliberal Reforms

Baghdad year zero: Pillaging Iraq in pursuit of a neocon utopia

U.S.-backed death squads

Torture, Paramilitarism, Occupation and Genocide

The Salvador Option

Iraq's Death Squads

Iraq: Government Death Squads Ravaging Baghdad

Silence of the Lambs? Proof of US orchestration of Death Squads Killings in Iraq

Iraq: The Genocide Option

Who Is Behind The Death Squads In Iraq

Military Spending, the Military Industrial Complex, and War Profiteering

Bechtel: Profiting from Destruction

The Top 100 Private Contractors in Iraq and Afghanistan, 2004–2006

Cost of War and U.S. Occupation of Iraq

A Quick and Dirty Guide to War Profiteering in the Bush Administration

The Rip-off in Iraq: You Will Not Believe How Low the War Profiteers Have Gone

The Bush Administration's apparent motto: "Leave no defense contractor behind"

War Profiteering and the Concentration of Income and Wealth in America

Iraq For Sale

Why the US Is Not Leaving Iraq: The Booming Business of War Profiteers

War and Disaster Profiteers

Sectarianism

The Myth of Sectarianism

U.S. occupation at Root of Violence in Iraq

Iraqi Opinion

The US Occupation and Popular Opinion in Iraq

Iraq Poll (September 2007)

Blackwater and Private Mercenaries

The New Private Warriors

Blackwater: Shadow Army

Blackwater, Oil and the Colonial Enterprise

Our Mercenaries in Iraq

A Very Private War

Blackwater's Bu$ine$$

The Pro-War Media and Pretexts for War

The Downing Street Memo

20 Lies About The War

Holocaust Denial, American Style

War Made Easy - Norman Solomon

Ten Fallacies about the Violence in Iraq

Mirage of Improvement in Iraq

Genocide in Iraq: The Numbers Tell the Horrific Story of a Lying Government and Complicit Corporate Media

Normalizing the Unthinkable

War Games: America's Media Leads the Charge

Albania
(Operation Valuable/Fiend attempts to subvert the communist Exha regime 1949-1953: Thousands of Albanian agents and citizens killed)

Articles/Books/Excerpts:

Killing Hope by William Blum: Bulgaria 1990/Albania 1991: Teaching communists what democracy is all about

The CIA and Greater Albania: The Origins of the US Role in the Balkans

CIA and British M16 in Albania

Who is US Special Representative to Kosovo Frank G. Wisner?



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If you hate America so much, why don't you leave?

Leave America? That would potentially put me on the other end of U.S. foreign policy. No thanks.
borisdaspider
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Change me! Nah


« Reply #4 on: January 25, 2008, 09:21:33 PM »

fair play wiseman, we have had our differences but full respect for this thread. keep it going +rep mate
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« Reply #5 on: March 05, 2008, 02:17:18 PM »

I've been organizing and adding more on my site as time goes on.

http://anticafta.tripod.com/id301.html
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« Reply #6 on: March 07, 2008, 11:38:01 AM »

Wow, I'm gonna be spending hours with this
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I typed what I typed above because I'm high
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Mobile-friendly version Immortal Technique Biography

Born Felipe Andres Coronel on the 19th of February 1978, hip-hop artist Immortal Technique is a controversial figure in the U.S. His songs speak of the need for social justice and equality among all races, with special emphasis on the people of color or Latin Americans, but they also cover topics such as the fight against unfair imprisonments or militarism and many others.

His biography is hence quite intriguing, to say the least, and, just like the best anti aging cream is probably going to be lingering over the shelves of all cosmetic stores for many years to come, Immortal Technique’s songs are going to remain hot, fresh and sought after for a really long time. Due to the fact they speak about topics which are to be considered taboos, his lyrics continue to be listened to with the exterior shutters down in most homes.

Immortal technique was born in Peru, in El Hospital Militar de Lima; several years later, his family moved to America in order to escape the harsh living conditions in Peru. Even though they could not afford to buy any terrain a vendre there, they managed to move to Harlem in the ‘80s. Immortal Technique went to Hunter High School, but just like a hip replacement recall is never of good omen, his grades and behavior weren’t any good during high school either. He was the school bully, he harassed other students and he was not afraid to get involved in scandals with drug dealers from around the area. And while his interactions with these drug dealers were not as numerous as used cars in Phoenix are, they still managed to leave an ugly mark on his biography.

Plus, his graffiti did not actually resemble any Dreamweaver templates, but he was famous for his controversial acts of vandalism. His violence against others almost got him expelled in 1996, but he somehow managed to finish high school and even attend college at Pennsylvania State University. This time, his college experience only lasted for two years; he was then charged and convicted and he was eventually imprisoned in Pennsylvania.

In prison, just like a SEO San Antonio company would focus on booting a web site’s ranking, Immortal Technique also focused on boosting his own social ranking. He began studying the policy of religious history, and, finding the inspiration he needed, he began putting his thoughts in lyrics. In 1999 he was paroled and, even though he was first considered some sort of Agen Bola, as no one had heard of him at first, he began to attend freestyle battles he started winning.

From there on, his career started to bloom, as he gave birth to albums such as “Revolutionary Vol 1” in 2002, “Revolutionary Vol 2” in 2004 and “Revolutionary Vol 3” in 2008. He also became a political activist and started to sing about political injustice (check out his opinion on the imprisonment of Mumia Abu-Jamal or the songs on George W. Bush). Despite of the fact that his albums might not have gotten the type of positive reviews African mango reviews are usually comprised of, this has not stopped him from getting involved in future projects, including an important film collaboration. He might not approve the work of the CNA Financial Corporation, but we all need to eat, right?




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Recently I've been in the market for used cars. Which I'm sure many of you know how long that process can take. Having to go from dealer to dealer and look at one car after another. What a painstaking process! Its a good thing I don't have to take a personality test after the whole process. I'm sure I'd have some pretty skewed results. After finally settling down and buying a new Audi A4, I found out I had a bigger problem on my hands. Where am I gonna park the car during winter? I decided I had to contact a local contractor and get remodeling estimates to redo our garage which had been having problems with leaks all last winter. After getting some rather expensive estimates back from contractors our family finally decided to move to a different area of New York, we took a look at jamestown ny homes which was recommended by a close friend of mine. Have you ever just had that feeling after looking at a town? You just knew it was the one. Well thankfully we had a lot of wonderful homes to look at that were priced perfectly. We eventually decided to go with a home with a nice garage for the new car, a gym witih a full pull up bar, and best of all my wife could stop taking her proactol and finally begin to use our at home gym!

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The History and Growth of Rap Music

If you are a music enthusiast, then it is very likely that you have come across a genre of music called rap music. Rap music is area that has very clear distinguishing features most notably the rapid and rhythmic chanting of the lyrics perfectly timed to the beat and musical accompaniment that forms the base of the song. Rap music traces its roots to the development of the hiphop subculture which predominantly carries four complementary musical styles namely: rapping, dancing and in particular break dancing, scratching or more popularity known as DJing, and graffiti writing which others dub as vandalism. Another sub-element of this genre is beat-boxing which also features heavily in the repertoire of many rap artists. If you thought this was an easy musical genre to characterize, then you were poorly informed: consider, many research papers and doctoral dissertations have been written on the subject of rap music and its accompanying stylistic elements.

The history of rap music, or hip-hop music, is composed of a series of rapid development phases that have all culminated in the popular rap versions of today. Before rap music took off in the 1990s, it was predominantly referred to as disco rap in the late 1970s. The three rappers who had a hand in coining the term “rap music” were DJ Hollywood, Lovebug Starski, and Keith Cowboy, the last one being officially credited with the term hip-hop. Rap music original began with improvisations and freestyle singing to add an element of unpredictability to the songs in parties and other gatherings. Even in the 1960s to 1970s, the initial elements of rap music where already sown in urban subcultures particularly in New York City where adhoc performances in the streets led to a coalescing of influences in the wake of the Civil Rights era. Like the iPhone 5 release date, it had a slow and steady rise building into an explosion of creativity and style that has made it into what it has become today.

At this very early stage of rap development, it was particularly tied to emcee-ing more than it was associated to any specific song. It predominantly tied songs together as an adlib in between. It was born out of the creative inputs of DJs who had to work with self-imposed musical constraints such as the 4/4 time beat and sampling or sequencing sections of other songs to create a smooth flow of uninterrupted musical stimuli. These were eventually married with electronic equipment such as drums and synthesizers, and ultimate melodies to give it that bite and identity. In a sense, rap music artists were basically like a video game designer who had to figure out each artistic component at every turn until it developed into a more coherent musical genre that became the rap music we know today.

The first recorded version of rap music came alive in the early 1980s when DJs decided to make records out of their freestyle MCing. This necessitated the documentation of song lyrics so they do not change during each and every rendition. The age of the stromanbieter for rap music was gone paving the way for more organized chaos. Still, the freestyle and improvisation element remained a part of many DJ interludes as the song goes through certain sections that did not require too much rap singing.

Likewise, as a consequence of the hip-hop records, the influence of rap began to spread faster than ever before. Artists no longer had to travel far to get their music heard. Now, records from New York City and Philadelphia can be reproduced and transported to cities like Los Angeles, New Orleans, Dallas, Baltimore, Washington, D.C., and Seattle among others for people to appreciate and enjoy. This was primarily the reason for rap music’s rapid growth. Like Christmas mini lights, cities formed the nodes through which rap music would spread to other parts of the country. From small beginnings to grand achievements, the birth certificate translation to true stardom took a matter of years for rap music to be realized. Since then, its take-off and rise has been meteoric.

In this regard, it is almost impossible to talk about rap music but not discuss the golden age of rap. This was the era from the late 1980s to the mid 1990s when rap grew at an astounding rate fueled by the creative contributions of many artists from all over the continental United States and in many parts of the world. The primary trait of the Golden Age or Rap was that it was an almost unbroken wave of transformative music with every single pushing the boundaries of the genre. From this age and in the succeeding Gansta Rap age came names like Run-D.M.C., Dr. Dre, Ice T, MC Hammer, The Wu-tang Clan, Snoop Dogg, and The Notorious B.I.G. among others. The list of names can virtually fill a Sharepoint Hive without any problems.

According to social studies published in 2005, teenagers and children are more familiar with hip-hop and rap music more than any other musical genre. Up to 65% of all children from ages 8 to 18 hear hip-hop music on a daily basis, making it their routinary keratin hair treatment session, almost to the point that it has become an intrinsic part of their lives. With the diversification of the genre to include the more stylish R&B or rhythm and blues, it is not difficult to explain how rap music has continued to pervade radio station, TV and movie song line-ups. The marriage of rap and jazz which paved the way for R&B is itself a phenomenon that warrants all sorts of social analysis.

And with its very strong following, it is safe to say that rap music is here to stay. Years from now, when you open your TV on a bright Saturday morning, there’s a big chance you would be watching the next stage in the evolution of rap music, and there’s an even better chance you would be dancing or singing to that tune.

Immortal Technique Rapper Biography

Immortal technique is the stage name for which rapper Felipe Andres Coronel is popularly known. His lyrics characterized by its unique mixture of socialist commentary of social class hierarchy, religion, wealth, poverty to contemporary issues touching on governmental and institutional racism. Perhaps you may have come across information about this popular icon as you undertake research for that mba online, or for whatever course you are undertaking, be it bachelors in criminal justice, performing arts degree, governance systems, online nurse practitioner programs, history, or any other course for which you have to do online research.

The rapper was born on the 19th day of February 1978 in Lima, Peru. During the internal conflicts that took place in their country at the time, his parents migrated to Harlem, New York. Probably, in the process of migration to the country, they may have used boats at least once in the journey. Like many American teenagers, the rapper was engaged in various acts against the law that led to his arrest several times, which in one his public interviews admitted that they were selfish and at best childish acts. After completing his incarceration terms, he took up a political science course in a bid to mend his seemingly torn life, while living with his father.

After completing his studies, he was not lucky enough to secure a job in his field of study owing to the unemployment situation prevailing in the entire United States. Like many American fresh graduates who take up it jobs, nursing jobs, waiter and nursing jobs among many other common jobs that may not necessarily need a specialist, he took up a working in a restaurant to earn a buck from which he could live on.

Through his deep interest in championing for equality between the elite and the under privileged in society, and being not a Mesothelioma Lawyer, the rapper begun his music career basing his lyrics on such issues as injustice, exploitation and mistreatment of the poor. This is captured clearly in his desire to keep control over his production, since he strongly believes that in the music industry, the producers normally make a large profit while the artist for who credit belongs, normally end ups earning peanut amounts at the end of the day.

His popular sediments are captured in his albums that include the revolutionary, both volume one and two, and the 3rd world and the middle passage album. the rapper is increasingly involved in prison visits and working with migrant rights activists, though which he speaks to youths and the unprivileged in the society trazer amor de volta. His investments are largely in farmland in Latin America, which like soweto properties is an unpopular investment option for many celebrity figures. His advice to the youth is not much on taking up an aacsb online mba or an online criminal justice degree, but rather it is based on exploiting ones talents and living soberly within the law.

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