Fries now French again

No more freedom for fries, or so Congress has decreed. The congressmen who backed the original name-change are not commenting, but I wonder if the right-wing bloggers who backed the name change against cheese-eating surrender monkeys will not take up the cause.

Could this be a sign of a return from Bizarro World for American politicians?

HRW: Israel carried out war crimes in Lebanon

It may have taken them a while to say so (although there have been some really good statements since), but Human Rights Watch has come out with an unequivocal condemnation of Israeli strikes of civilian homes, saying they were deliberate and amounted to war crimes and calling for those responsible to be held accountable(bold mine):

(Beirut, August 3, 2006) – Israeli forces have systematically failed to distinguish between combatants and civilians in their military campaign against Hezbollah in Lebanon, Human Rights Watch said in report released today. The pattern of attacks in more than 20 cases investigated by Human Rights Watch researchers in Lebanon indicates that the failures cannot be dismissed as mere accidents and cannot be blamed on wrongful Hezbollah practices. In some cases, these attacks constitute war crimes.

One of the most important outcomes of this is that HRW follows through and not only condemns Israel for its war crimes, but also counts for it to be held accountable by international institutions and urges the US and UK, which supply weaponry used by Israel, to cease doing so. More on the report and its conclusions below.

Continue reading HRW: Israel carried out war crimes in Lebanon

Goodbye, NYT

You know, I don’t think I’ve read a single Thomas Friedman column since the NYT’s TimeSelect put it behind the paywall. I suspect that has led me to lead a healthier lifestyle, stopped my hairline from receding and increased my productivity by about 20%. Reading this Fisking of recent Friedman prose on the excellent Tabsir reminded me what I’m not missing. Over the recent weeks as I’ve practically given up on reading any of the New York Times because of how bad and biased their coverage of the war on Lebanon has been. (Just read the Angry Arab, who has been following it. I worry about his health.) My girlfriend just changed her homepage setting from the Times to the Post. I think now I will unsubscribe from their email alerts, and avoid reading it altogether. Apart from David Pogue’s technology column, anyway. That’s it: I will just think of NYT as a decent lifestyle publication, just ignore the news.

P.S. I heard they will be publishing a translation Bernard Henry-Levy’s moronic article in Le Monde this weekend. Classic: they publish him when he’s being saccharine about Israel even though they trashed him with glee for his book American Vertigo.

As many as it takes

I realize that I’ve now uploaded to Flickr some 400 pictures of the attack on Lebanon. At this point, one might simply go numb. After all, the scenes are repetitive: destroyed buildings, mangled bodies, crying children, shell-shocked faces of the wounded, resigned looks of refugees. But I always take time to look at each picture and find out who it is, what might have happened. So we won’t forget. As Hanady (who sends the pics from Beirut) says:

Yes, more pictures. loads of pictures. Hundreds of pictures . As many pictures as people get killed. As many pictures as the number of people who flee their homes, become refugees. As many pictures as there are people who carry their children and walk , under the sun , on the rubbles , under their air raids , their shells, their bombs, their bullets, their prayers for more blood. As many pictuers as it will take, no to stop any of this , not to give children their lifes back , not to give those people their homes back , not to stop others , all poor who never lost their DIGNITY, from turning into beggars in the streets of Beirut. Just as many as it takes to undermine any attempts to try and convince any of us this should be forgotten, that this should be forgiven. Any attempts to convince anybody that Israel is a democracy , that Israel deserves any better than what it has to offer.

The latest pics are in this set.

Ayta Shaab Afp
An Elderly Villager Is Helped By A Relative As They Make Their Way To Safer Ground After Spending More Than A Week In A Shelter At The Southern Village Of Aitaroun Ap

من أحمد فؤاد نجم إلى حسني مبارك

Nora Younis posts poet Ahmed Fouad Negm’s birthday wishes to President Hosni Mubarak: من أحمد فؤاد نجم إلى حسني مبارك

Update: I now hear that the poem was not actually written by Negm. There is an email going around, written by his daughter, saying that while he agreed with the contents it was not him to who wrote, and urging the real author to have the courage to claim authorship. A literary friend who told me this also pointed out that the poem had grammatical mistakes and was rather inelegant, another reason why it wouldn’t be Negm’s.

Unexpected support (15)

August 2, 2006

In the midst of this whole mess, the last place I expected to find people who liked America was west Baghdad.

West Baghdad, roughly speaking, is the Sunni part of a very mixed city, and has the distinction of being the home to a pretty nasty insurgency for the last few years – you wanna get kidnapped, go to west Baghdad, where they also shoot men for wearing shorts and women for not wearing veils.

US troops turned the place over to the Iraqi army back in December, all part of that process of Bush calls our stepping down as the Iraqis step up… Except it all went to hell so badly that in April the US army had to move back in – I don’t think that was mentioned in the state of the union address.

Now, the whole capital’s going to hell in a handbasket and the same process is being repeated across the city as more US troops are being rushed in. Six weeks into the new prime minister’s security plan, it’s worse than ever here and the Iraqi forces have shown themselves unable to control their own capital.

Doesn’t bode well.

This time it’s not the insurgents that are messing things up, however, it’s the death squads, the militias, the sectarian killings. People don’t spend much time targeting the Americans out here any more, they’re too busy killing each other.

Before going on a patrol, the burly sergeant (they’re always burly it seems) was giving the patrol briefing which includes reading down the “sigacts” report. What? Significant activities. So we stood there in 120 degree (45C) weather next to our humvees listening to a list of who’d been shooting who and where bombs and bodies had been turning up across the west Baghdad area.

One bit caught my attention. Up in the north, a Sunni and Shiite neighborhood were shooting mortars at each other every night. I later heard this goes on in some southern neighborhoods as well. As someone in the office later pointed out, if two neighborhoods are shelling each other, can’t we call it a civil war?

So we all piled into the humvees and went on patrol through the “mean” streets of west Baghdad, and the first thing I noticed was just how nice some of these streets were. There were leafy palm trees everywhere, in one area a few people had even trimmed their hedges into topiary shapes. Brightly colored bougainvilleas spilled down garden walls into the street.

Trash, however, lay piled uncollected in any vacant lot and every block had a massive generator, festooned with wires, serving the block.

At every street corner, people had dragged rocks, bits of concrete barrier and whole palm trunks to block off their streets. The inhabitants told me it was to protect against nighttime intruders and stop drive by shootings.

The commercial streets, the public spaces, in these neighborhoods were shattered. Rows of shops with their metal shutters closed at all hours of the days. There were twisted metal frames that were once cars packed with explosives, and never any people.

It was like a reversion to medieval Islamic cities were the gates of alleys and quarters would be locked at night, dividing cities up into a series of isolated strongholds – much the way Baghdad now seemed to fragmenting.

The US soldiers obligingly stopped periodically during one patrol and allowed me to clamber out and talk to people. What they said surprised me so much that I later sent some of the Sunnis from the office to the same neighborhood to check it out.

These people wanted the Americans around. They trusted the Americans – at least not to kill them for their id cards, as one guy put it. You know the situation in Baghdad is bad when the American occupiers are preferred, better yet, considered fair and just.

And this is after the allegations marines shooting up civilians in Haditha and a soldier raping a woman and killing her family.

You knew what happened after you were arrested by an American. When you were taken away by the police, you just weren’t heard from again.

The focus is no longer the Americans in Baghdad, they have drifted off to the sidelines as the neighborhoods arm themselves for the internecine battles.

There were some scary moments. One day, at the dining hall, I was sitting have lunch with this bunch of US army officers, when one captain suddenly announces how attractive he finds Condoleezza Rice.

I mean what do you say to that? There was a uncomfortable silence as we digested the remark, rather hoping it was a one-off. Instead, it gave him the opening to start describing how great he thought her legs were, and how attracted he was to smart women.

Being stuck on a base in Iraq is hard on everyone.

I met this one old Iraqi guy in a particularly nice west Baghdad neighborhood called Jamaa, or university, he talked about how his neighbors are just melting away.

“That guy was a professor, he now lives in Malaysia, I’m not sure where that guy moved, and that guy over there lives in Jordan after he was kidnapped and ransomed,” he said gesturing to the leafy houses across the street with their unkempt lawns.

Everyone in this neighborhood of professors, doctors and lawyers fears kidnapping. He described how his neighbor was snatched right in the street by a pair of black BMWs. The ransom was half a million dollars

“I have two doors, one in front, one in back – I always leave the house from the back door,” he said, a diminutive little man wearing just an undershirt in the summer heat. He showed me his garden, a mini Versaille of statuary and ornamental benches.

The neighborhoods got a little shabbier later when I accompanied a patrol farther south into Jihad, where a few weeks earlier Shiite militiamen descended on the neighborhood, set up fake checkpoints and just started killing people.

The Americans didn’t patrol it much before. Now they do. Perhaps it was my imagination, but there was a lot more smiling and waving at Americans in this neighborhood than I’d seen in others? Half of Jihad is fairly nice houses inhabited by Sunnis while the other half is trash filled and crumbling and Shiite.

The area is patrolled by the national police, once known as the commandos, and predominantly Shiite. The litany of events that led up to the massacre is quite depressing.

The police raided a mosque known to harbor weapons and insurgents. A few days later a bomb hit a police patrol killing several. A few days later a bomb went off in front of a Sunni mosque just after prayers, killing several. The next day a huge car bomb went off in front of a Shiite mosque, shattering it and killing 12.

The next day the militias showed up.

I saw the shattered remnants of the Shiite mosque, in a poor neighborhood, in a street filled with rubble, with barricades all around to prevent new car bombs.

Graffiti nearby read “the army of the imam is the fork in the eye of terrorism”.

Ten minutes drive later we were outside the Sunni mosque that was bombed, where the Shiite militia had set up a check points and started killing people in the street. Where the national police who were supposed protect the mosque had suddenly disappeared. The US soldiers pointed out to me the large dark patches of dried blood still on the sidewalk.

In the backstreets behind the mosque the graffiti said “long live the resistance and death to the Americans and the spies.” But in front of the mosque on the street with the dark stains, the same graffiti had been painted over.

Palestinians called Mubarak a “pig”

Trust the Palestinians to tell it like it is:

More than 2,000 Palestinians denounced moderate Arab leaders in a march through Ramallah in support of Hizbullah on Tuesday.

“Mubarak is a pig,” protesters chanted, a reference to the Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak, who criticized Hizbullah in the first days of battles between the group and the Israeli army.

The protesters also accused Jordan’s King Abdullah of being a “collaborator of the Zionists and the Americans.”

While it won’t reach the magic three-letter word in Egypt, what I’ve seen in the press since I got back is scathing. People are very pissed off indeed.

Latest developments

From Reuters:

Latest developments in the Middle East

Reuters 01.08.06 | 19h16

Aug 1 (Reuters) – Here are developments on the 21st day of the Middle East crisis.

* Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert says he sees the beginning of a process that would lead to a cease-fire in Lebanon. He also says Hizbollah guerrillas could never threaten the Jewish state again.

* Israeli troops cross into new area of south Lebanon and pound towns and villages in two other areas

* Troops meet fierce resistance from Hizbollah guerrillas. Al Arabiya TV says three Israeli soldiers killed.

* EU calls for immediate halt to hostilities to be followed by a sustainable cease-fire, watering down demands for immediate cease-fire at insistence of Britain and other U.S. allies.

Continue reading Latest developments

No innocents in Qana, say rabbis

I await the worldwide indignation at this form of religious barbarism with trepidation:

Yesha Rabbinical Council: During time of war, enemy has no innocents

The Yesha Rabbinical Council announced in response to an IDF attack in Kfar Qanna that “according to Jewish law, during a time of battle and war, there is no such term as ‘innocents’ of the enemy.”

All of the discussions on Christian morality are weakening the spirit of the army and the nation and are costing us in the blood of our soldiers and civilians,” the statement said.

Maybe they can have a Reformation…