January 2007


COMMANDER OF INDIAN FEMALE UN POLICE UNIT ARRIVES IN LIBERIA WITH ADVANCE TEAM
New York, Jan 22 2007 6:00PM
The commander of an all-female Indian United Nations police unit has arrived in Liberia as part of an advance team that will pave the way for the landmark deployment of a 125-strong force later this month, the first time the world body has sent an all women specialized police unit to a peacekeeping operation.

Commander Seema Dhundiya, who will head the Formed Police Unit (FPU), arrived in the capital Monrovia on Sunday along with logistics and engineering specialists who will prepare for the rest of her unit, which is expected to arrive around 29 January, said UN Mission in Liberia (UNMIL) spokesman Ben Dotsei Malor.

The FPU contingent will consist of 125 personnel, made up of 103 female officers and 22 male staff serving in logistics roles. The women will be formed into three platoons of 30 women each, comprising one platoon leader and 29 officers, and while the contingent will be based in Monrovia they may be deployed anywhere in the country.

Source: UN News

while the world thought the Allies were battling the evil German/Austro-Hungarian Huns during the total of World War I, not much history makes mention of what they saw as a greater “evil”

In November 1917 the Bolshevik’s took control of Russia from the then provisional government (not the Czar’s as is commonly believed)…

Now, the Huns were evil and scary enough to bring the world into one of the most savage and sickening conflict this world has ever witnessed, bar none…

and hundreds of thousands of people were  being slaughtered… soldiers, men, women, children…

but, lo and behold… came the bigger problem… communism…

in 1917 the Russian Bolsheviks removed themselves from the war in Europe to concentrate on defending the Revolution from Imperial sympathizers and other anti-communist forces within Russia…

this left the Huns with a now vastly more peaceful eastern front… and they could concentrate their forces in the west…

instead of bolstering their forces… what did the allies do…?

well, they sent nearly 100,000 troops to Russia to stop the Communists!!

  • 50,000 Czechoslovaks
  • 28,000 Japanese (later increased to 70,000)
  • 15,500 Americans
  • 4,000 Canadians
  • 12,000 Poles
  • 4,000 Serbs
  • 4,000 Romanians
  • 2,000 Italians
  • 1,600 British
  • 760 French

Source: Wikipedia

That HAD to have caused the war to go on longer than necessary and caused countless more deaths… to ensure that Coca-Cola could still be sold in Mother Russia.

Kinda makes me think of the US starting the war with Iraq when the real threat to the US was in Afghanistan and now Pakistan.

When will the world get its priorities straight?

Well, frankly… THIS is capitalism…

Small molecule offers hope for cancer treatment
Updated Tue. Jan. 16 2007 11:39 PM ET

A small, non-toxic molecule may soon be available as an inexpensive treatment for many forms of cancer, including lung, breast and brain tumours, say University of Alberta researchers.

But there’s a catch: the drug isn’t patented, and pharmaceutical companies may not be interested in funding further research if the treatment won’t make them a profit.

Source: CTV News

-20°C, windchill of -39°C

that’s:

-4°F, windchill of -38°F

fuck me silly with a spike baseball bat!!!

just got to love this…

Official Attacks Top Law Firms Over Detainees
By NEIL A. LEWIS

WASHINGTON, Jan. 12 — The senior Pentagon official in charge of military detainees suspected of terrorism said in an interview this week that he was dismayed that lawyers at many of the nation’s top firms were representing prisoners at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, and that the firms’ corporate clients should consider ending their business ties.

The comments by Charles D. Stimson, the deputy assistant secretary of defense for detainee affairs, produced an instant torrent of anger from lawyers, legal ethics specialists and bar association officials, who said Friday that his comments were repellent and displayed an ignorance of the duties of lawyers to represent people in legal trouble.

“This is prejudicial to the administration of justice,” said Stephen Gillers, a law professor at New York University and an authority on legal ethics. “It’s possible that lawyers willing to undertake what has been long viewed as an admirable chore will decline to do so for fear of antagonizing important clients.

Source: NY Times

Isn’t American style justice supposed to be the pinnacle for all the human race to aspire to…?

HA!! sometimes I can laugh so hard blood spurts out of my eye sockets!

STARVATION AT REMAGEN

After the capture of the Remagen Bridge, the US Army hastily erected dozens of Prisoner of War cages around the bridge-head. The camps were simply open fields surrounded by concertina wire. Those at the Rhine Meadows were situated at Remagen, Bad Kreuznach, Andernach, Buderich, Rheinbach and Sinzig. The German prisoners were hopeful of good treatment from the GIs but in this they were sadly disappointed. Herded into the open spaces like cattle, some were beaten and mistreated. No tents or toilets were supplied. The camps became huge latrines, a sea of urine from one end to the other. They had to sleep in holes in the ground which they dug with their bare hands. In the Bad Kreuznach cage, 560,000 men were interned in an area that could only comfortably hold 45,000. Denied enough food and water, they were forced to eat the grass under their feet and the camps soon became a sea of mud. After the concentration camps were discovered, their treatment became worse as the GIs vented their rage on the hapless prisoners.

In the five camps around Bretzenheim, prisoners had to survive on 600-850 calories per day. With bloated bellies and teeth falling out, they died by the thousands. During the two and a half months (April-May, 1945) when the camps were under American control, a total of 18,100 prisoners died from malnutrition, disease and exposure. This extremely harsh treatment at the hands of the Americans resulted in the deaths of over 50,000 German prisoners-of-war in the Rhine Meadows camps alone in the months just before and after the war ended. It must however be borne in mind that with the best will in the world it proved almost impossible to care for such a huge number of prisoners under the strict terms of the Geneva Convention. The task of guarding these prisoners, numbering around 920,000, fell to the men of the US 106th. Infantry Division. The Remagen cage was set up to accommodate 100,000 men but ended up with twice that number. On the first afternoon 35,000 prisoners were counted through the gate. About 10,000 of these required urgent medical attention which in most cases was completely absent. All roads leading to the camps were clogged with hundreds of trucks bringing in even more prisoners, sent to the rear by the advancing 9th US Army. By April 15, 1945, 1.3 million prisoners were in American hands. At war’s end, 1,056,482 German prisoners were held in US camps in Europe, 692,895 were classified as Prisoners of War and 365,587 classified as DEF’s (Disarmed Enemy Forces)

Tourists, cruising down the Rhine today can pick out a small memorial and plaque built on the site of the former POW cage. In the Remagen cemetery there are 1,200 graves and at Bad Kreuznach, 1,000 graves.

HOW MANY?

Just how many German POWs died in Allied camps? For over forty years we have been told that many hundreds of thousands of German soldiers had died in Soviet prison camps while at the same time keeping quiet about the number of prisoners who had died in American, French and British camps. In 1997, around 1.1 million German soldiers were still officially listed as missing. According to the recently opened Soviet archives, which have been proved to be extremely precise and detailed, the Red Army captured 2,389,560 German soldiers. Of these, 423,168 died in captivity. In October, 1951, the West German government stated in the United Nations that 1.1 million soldiers had not returned home. In other words, we were led to believe they had died in Soviet camps. If we subtract the proven number of deaths in Soviet camps from the missing in Germany we arrive at the figure of around 677,000. Where are these men?. They must have been interned by the western Allies, the greatest majority being held in American and French camps where they died in their thousands through deliberate starvation, disease and hard work.

The standards set by the Geneva Convention were, in most cases, totally ignored by the Americans and French in relation to their treatment of German prisoners-of-war. The French deliberately starved many of their POWs in order to force them to join the French Foreign Legion. Thousands of Legionaires who fought in the Vietnam conflict were Germans, handed over by the Americans to the French in 1945/46 to work as slave labourers in the rebuilding of France’s war damaged cities. Conditions in the French camps were just as bad if not worse than in the American camps. It is estimated that at least 167,000 German soldiers died in French captivity between 1945 and 1948.


Source: George Duncan’s – Massacres and Atrocities of WW2

don’t know and don’t care who wrote this or what side of the political spectrum he/she sits…

but it is a good look at the idea or revolution and rebellion

Source: ADP

from:

Afghan war needs troops

Taliban expected to push against thin U.S., NATO forces
Sun Reporter

U.S. battlefield commanders here are contemptuous of many of NATO’s military operations.

“We are staying in the areas we seize, through the winter,” said Tata. “NATO in the south, it goes in and then leaves, and the Taliban comes in.”

A senior U.S. Special Forces officer said the Canadians, even though they have tanks and light armored vehicles, refuse to dismount on foot patrols, which are considered more risky but more productive in establishing relationships with the local population.

British troops “established a series of strong points and then wouldn’t go out on patrol,” said another American officer. “It got almost comical when the Taliban would do drive-by shootings.”

One Special Forces officer, an adviser with the Afghan army, told of asking the Canadians for help in regaining the initiative in battle. “They refused to cross the river” to help, the officer said in a cold fury. “It is disturbing.”

funny…

Canada has lost 44 soldiers (detailed in the article itself) in Afghanistan and US military commanders can insinuate cowardice…?

Source: The Baltimore Sun

Jamil Hussein

The parents of Ehren Watada MUST be good people… cause they did good…

you did good folks… never doubt that! he is a good man… and THERE is a legacy!

Please visit this site (http://thankyoult.org/) and support Ehren and his family

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