Tuesday, April 17, 2018

UNDER THE MISSILES IN DAMASCUS (Submitted to Mondoweiss)


UNDER THE MISSILES IN DAMASCUS
(Submitted to Mondoweiss)
A loud and persisant booming woke up everyone here in the early hours of Saturday morning. To this visitor from Boston it sounded like the Fourth of July fireworks we hear every year over the Charles River. But this was Damascus and the thunder was exploding missiles from the long-awaited attack by Trump and US allies Britain and France.

The bombardments started precisely at 4am local time and continued for the better part of an hour. Only the timing was a surprise here, as Trump had been threatening a reprisal attack for the alleged use by the Syrian government of chemical weapons in Eastern Ghouta outside Damascus last week.  Most Syrians and others in the region derided the charge as fake news – and in fact it is hard for anyone to fathom why the Syrian army would use chemical weapons when they were on the verge of military victory in Ghouta.  To the question of “cui bono?” (who benefits) it was hard to avoid the sense that only the so-called rebels and the enemies of Syria could get any advantage from this alleged chemical attack.

It was an ironic time for an American to be in Syria.  Arriving earlier that same day from Beirut with a group of international activists, including  three Americans, two Canadians , two Brits, two Irish, two Germans, one and one Dutch, we passed with some tension and delay at the Syrian-Lebanese border but ultimately we received our visas from the government authorities in Damascus. I was the designated translator at the passport control window, responding with some difficulty to the questions of the officer there, especially with the challenge of explaining the occupations of the visitors. “Retired,” “journalist” and “teacher” I knew, but a German choreographer and a Swiss film director became “Theater workers,” the Dutch machinist became an “engineer” and the German head of an HR recruiting firm became a “clerk.” Anyway, we passed muster.

Crossing the many security checkpoints on the way into the capital, it was touching to be met with smiles and greetings from the soldiers on duty, even though our countries had been complicit in the near destruction of Syria and were expected to launch a new attack at any moment.. There and in fact everywhere we went  the universal greeting from all Syrians was the only English word many of the knew: “Welcome!”

By all accounts, most Syrians were unfazed by the latest missile attack.  There were videos of Damascenes cheering from rooftops as anti-missile rockets were launched over the city to intercept the US, French and British missiles.

Trump’s tweet that the attack had been “perfectly carried out” is likely an overstatement. The Russian and Syrian militaries claim that the majority of the incoming missiles were shot down or diverted electronically from their targets, although this is impossible to verify.  In any case, before and after photos of th e alleged military/chemical research center in Damascus show pretty thoroughgoing destruction.  But the US attacks had been so fully telegraphed – and there were claims that the Russians were informed in advance of the targets - that the buildings were empty and there were no reported fatalities.

Of course, if these Damascus targets were actually chemical weapons facilities as charged there would have been massive civilian casualties from the bombing.  There were none.

The next morning, after a mostly sleepless night, we were led around the neighborhood by our Syrian translator and guide. Abu Maher, a very jovial Muslim who claimed his family had been Christian until a few centuries before, had been a tourist guide for 25 years.  A strong supporter of the Syrian government, he lived in the neighborhood regarded himself as a patriot rather than a political person.  Like many Syrians, he was passionate about the long history and multi-cultural identity of his country.  Before the war he had been a guide for Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt.  (He said that Brad was intelligent and asked good question; Angelina, not so much!)

Our hotel, Beit al Wali, is a beautifully restored Ottoman period mansion in the Bab Touma quarter of the Old City. Syrians had invested heavily in the tourist sector before the war in the expectation of attracting badly needed hard currency, but of course these days there are hardly any foreign visitors apart from a small number of well-to-do Lebanese.  Beirut is just  couple of hours away and Lebanese do not need visas for Syria.

Bab Touma is a traditionally Christian part of town, but the are also mosques here, in some cases directly neighboring churches of the 12 Christian denominations said to exist in Syria.  Orthodox (Greek, Syrian and Catholic Melchite) are the majority, but there are also Roman Catholic, Maronite, Armenian and even evangelical churches. The restaurants are frequented by mixed crowds of Muslims and Christians all happily drinking Arak and smoking shisha (water pipes). Liquor stores and bars are commonplace here and unmolested. We visited more than one (the very old “Abu George” was my favorite).

Nearly everyone we met on the streets and in the shops derided Trump’s missile attack.  Locals in Bab Touma were much more focused on the government recapture of Eastern Ghouta, where the neighboring rebel-held town of Jobar had been the source of daily rocket and mortar launched against this part of the city.  We were shown many sites of these attacks on the walls and roads of the area, including the locations where people had been “martyred.” More than a hundred Damascus civilians had been killed by these attacks in recent months – of course little reported in the Western press – and the residents were clearly relieved that their town was now safe. 

Compared to this, Trump’s missiles were a minor annoyance, ridiculed by all as a “show” from that American “donkey.”  There were spontaneous demonstrations of support for the government during the past few days and a larger organized rally scheduled for Monday afternoon. The atmosphere in the city was much more relaxed than it had been when I visited two years ago, reflecting a string of government military advances since then.

Of course, the missile attack was derided by many war cheerleaders in the West as “insufficient.” Israel and rebel supporters inside and outside the country also expressed their disappointment.

Saturday night the hotel prepared a festive dinner for us – it was the birthday of Mario, one of the Germans among our group.  Present also was the British journalist Vanessa Beeley, who has exposed much of the phony Western propaganda coming out of Syria – and been vilified for it – together with some locals, including the very colorful Syrian comic who goes by the name of “Treka.”  Treka, who grew up in Nigeria among the Syrian business community there, sports long dreads and speaks in very colloquial but accented English, defies all sterotypes about “Arabs.” He has posted many videos deriding the MSM narrative abroad. His latest, deriding the alleged chemical attack in Ghouta is here

We may or may not be allowed to visit recently-liberated Eastern Ghouta, but were are definitely going to Aleppo tomorrow, where there will be a large official Syrian Independence Day ceremony.  It’s a long way from the Fourth of July.

More postings to follow as circumstances permit.


















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Socialist Analysis: No Bombing of Syria | Oklahoma Teachers Strike So

Below you’ll find a collection of  articles which were recently originally published on SocialistAlternative.org. Please check SocialistAlternative.org regularly for the socialist analysis, strategy, and tactics needed to build movements to defeat the billionaire class.

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NO TO THE BOMBING OF SYRIA! BUILD A MASS MOVEMENT AGAINST THE WAR
Trump’s missile strikes against regime targets in Syria could trigger an explosive chain of events potentially leading to a more serious military conflagration between major international and regional powers in the Middle East.


GAZA: PROTEST IS NOT TERRORISM
When the residents of Gaza, the largest prison in the world, launched a mass protest against the backdrop of the brutal siege by both Israel and Egypt and the terrible distress they are in, the Netanyahu government sent the army against them.


POLICE LAWSUIT AIMS TO SILENCE KSHAMA SAWANT – DEFEND SEATTLE’S VOICE FOR WORKING PEOPLE
Seattle’s socialist City Councilmember Kshama Sawant is facing two defamation lawsuits, the aim of which is to silence an outstanding representative of working people and the oppressed

OKLAHOMA TEACHERS STRIKE
Three Socialist Alternative members from Arkansas drove to Oklahoma City to take part in demonstrations. The following report is based on conversations they had with Oklahoma teachers.



OBITUARY: A PIONEER OF SOCIALIST ALTERNATIVE
Lorraine Dardis, a founding member of Socialist Alternative in the US and an active member of the Socialist Party in England and Wales, passed away in London on March 22.






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JUAN MIRANDA The caravan marches north

The caravan marches north

Many hundreds of migrants who marched northward through Mexico to demand asylum now face threats from Donald Trump. Juan Miranda explains what happened.
Central American migrants traveling north build solidarity in Mexico CityCentral American migrants traveling north build solidarity in Mexico City
AN ESTIMATED 1,500 migrants from HondurasGuatemala and El Salvador embarked on a month-long journey across Mexico to demand dignity, the right to asylum and an end to political corruption in their home countries.
The group Pueblo Sin Fronteras has been coordinating these journeys for the better part of a decade now, but similar caravans have been taking place for longer, some going as far as the 1980s.
This particular caravan, however, caught the attention of Donald Trump, who predictably took to Twitter to warn of the supposed hordes of migrants "threatening" the U.S. border and demand that the Mexican government stop the group from proceeding north.
Only an hour after wishing Americans a Happy Easter, Trump wrote, "Border Patrol Agents are not allowed to properly do their job at the Border because of ridiculous liberal (Democrat) laws like Catch & Release. Getting more dangerous. 'Caravans' coming. Republicans must go to Nuclear Option to pass tough laws NOW. NO MORE DACA DEAL!"A few days later, he announced the deployment of the National Guard to the border.
Trump may have first been alerted to the caravan's existence by a segment on his favorite news show Fox & Friends, which aired a segment on April 1 about a "[c]aravan of illegal immigrants headed to the U.S." This was just the start of what turned into a long week of xenophobic fearmongering spearheaded by Fox and other right-wing news outlets.
"They end up in schools on Long Island, some of which are MS-13!" blustered host Brian Kilmead, referring to unaccompanied minors fleeing gang violence in their home countries. In another interview with a former Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent, the caravan was framed as an "organized plan and deliberate attack on the sovereignty of the United States by a special interest group."
This type of sensationalized commentary is nothing new and has continued to serve a common purpose for Trump and other anti-immigration pundits--to appeal to an alienated and angry base of voters and to whip them into a frenzy around baseless claims.
For example, the narrative propagated by these media outlets ignored the fact that the vast majority of people in the caravan planned to resettle in Mexico, not the United States. And that those coming to the U.S.--fewer than 100, according to an organizer--were expected to turn themselves in and go through the legal process of requesting asylum.
The goal of these Fox personalities, like the fascists throughout history that they increasingly resemble, is to turn cowardice into a virtue: to make it seem not pathetic but wise for rich white men to fear poor migrant children, and for the most powerful country in the world to deploy its troops against refugees seeking to make a legal case for asylum.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
TRUMP PREDICTABLY tried to generate fear about the caravan and then to use that fear to discredit Democrats--such as the tweet cited above that lashed out at "ridiculous liberal (Democrat) laws like Catch & Release" and calling on "Republicans [to use the] Nuclear Option to pass tough laws NOW."
But it also needs to be said that anti-immigrant appeals and policies have historically been a bipartisan project. As Socialist Worker has reported:
It was the Obama administration that bullied Mexico into changing its own border policy in 2014, part of the Democrats' heartless response to an unprecedented number of unaccompanied children seeking asylum from the gang violence ravaging Honduras following a coup backed by then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
Consequently, Mexico has increasingly become a destination for migrants from Central America. Last year, about 14,600 applied for asylum, 66 percent more than in 2016 and 11 times as many as five years ago.
According to its Facebook page, the caravan is being surveilled by Trump's law enforcement and has received violent and graphic threats from dozens of U.S.-based racist groups.
But the reality is that many migrants face daily threats in their home countries--threats that they know they must flee. In response, Pueblo Sin Fronteras issued the following statement:
We will not be cowed by Trump's efforts to isolate or intimidate us. Just as we will not be cowed by the violence and harassment used against political organizers by U.S.-armed and U.S.-funded governments in Honduras and Mexico.
So while the future of the caravan and the millions of people seeking refuge seems uncertain, one thing is clear. People will continue marching, resisting and struggling to be free.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
THROUGH THIS mass collective effort, migrants are demanding open borders and the right to asylum; an end to deportations, which destroy families; and the continuation of programs such as Temporary Protected Status (TPS), which has saved the lives of thousands of people fleeing violence in Central American countries.
Rodrigo Abeja, an organizer based in Mexico, said the number of people on this caravan--more than three times the number who participated in last year's action--illustrates the desperate circumstances facing so many throughout the region.
The logistical problems associated with trying to shepherd such a large group on such a long journey slowed the caravan considerably, leading Trump to boast that the caravan had been stopped by the Mexican government, because of his threats.
But on April 14, after several days of protests and actions in Mexico City, about 600 resumed the journey north. Many more decided to stay and request asylum in Mexico.
The 2,000-mile trek to the U.S. began back on March 25 in Tapachula, Chiapas, Mexico, near the Guatemala-Mexico border.
Whether on foot, bus, or on top of trains, the refugee caravan--"Migrantes en la lucha" or "Migrants in Struggle"--brought people together to improve their chances of arriving safely at their destination. There are estimates that 10,000 migrants are killed or disappeared each year as they travel across Mexico.
According to organizers, about 80 percent of the migrants in the latest caravan come from Honduras, a country in which two-thirds of the population lives in poverty and generally has the highest or second-highest murder rate in the world, depending on the year.
This influx is most likely the result of the recent political instability in that country as a result of U.S. foreign policy, including the U.S.-backed coup in 2009 and the propping up of the repressive regime of Juan Orlando Hernandez.
As journalist Dana Frank describes in a New York Times opinion article: "[T]he coup was what threw open the doors to a huge increase in drug trafficking and violence, and it unleashed a continuing wave of state-sponsored repression."
Since the coup, hundreds of union and student activists have been murdered, including the environmental and indigenous rights leader Berta Cáceres.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
THE CARAVAN'S first stop was the town of Huixtla in Chiapas, where many of the migrants camped outdoors. "Even in the night, it's not hot, but the cold assaults you," Carlos, a former soldier from El Salvador, told Reuters.
They then proceeded to the town of Mapastepec, where a local school offered food and shelter. Over the years, the caravan's success has depended on such acts of solidarity and generosity encountered along the way. On April 6, about 800 of the migrants arrived in Puebla, where they planned to attend legal workshops in preparation to request asylum in Mexico and the U.S.
The journey is especially hard for children and mothers who have to arrange for water, food and shelter for the most vulnerable members of the caravan.
"I do everything for my daughter, I know I will arrive," said Blanca, in an interview with El Sol de Hidalgo. "I am not afraid because I travel with many people. If something happens they will not let something happen to me." She is traveling with her 2-year-old daughter, her brother and her mother to escape the gang violence that is consuming her native El Salvador.
The long and dangerous odyssey is being supported by Pueblo Sin Fronteras, a group that has been organizing these annual caravans since 2010 with the goal of ensuring safe passage for migrants.
The group coordinates humanitarian aid for the caravan while looking for every opportunity to shine a spotlight on the plight of immigrants, in particular, by highlighting the role that the U.S. has played in creating the various crises forcing people to flee their home countries. According to their site, their "dream is to build solidarity bridges among peoples and tear down border walls imposed by greed."
The caravan is made up of children, infants, mothers and fathers, elders, and even an LGBTQ contingent. Nikolle Contreras is one of roughly 25 transgender and gender-nonconforming people who have joined the caravan. This is her third attempt to leave Honduras, one of the most dangerous places for transgender people.
According to organizers, most people are willing to bear the many hardships and risks of such an arduous journey in order to escape political persecution, gang violence and other dire threats. "The journey is extreme," said organizer Rodrigo Abeja. "People say that if they stay where they are, they'll die. So they're here because they're trying to stay alive."

The Great Art Heist Caper-Carmen Diaz and Colin Firth’s “ Gambit” (2012)- A Film Review


The Great Art Heist Caper-Carmen Diaz and Colin Firth’s “ Gambit” (2012)- A Film Review   



DVD Review

By Sam Lowell

Gambit, starring Colin Firth, Cameron Diaz, Allan Rickman, 2012

Willie Sutton the great and legendary bank robber was reputed to have said (I assume when he was in police custody although who knows maybe he gave free-lance interviews on the fly) when asked why he robbed banks answered truly enough “that was where the money was.” Okay, but dear sweet Willie was an old-fashioned boy and while in his time that was the place to go to earn his daily living that mode of employment is now rather dangerous filled with sensors, wires and the 3rd Marine Division, or so it seems. Moreover as the film under review The Gambit amply demonstrates there are more ways to heaven through guile, and through a choice piece in the international art market. That guile is important since there are basically two ways to acquire art and amass your fortune. That aforementioned guile which will drive the action in this film and a straight out heist into some museum overriding the security systems and such which is the stuff of more than one cinematic storyline. I like the second way quite a bit since I have been around long enough to have seen the masters of the profession at work in the famous, or infamous your choice, big rip-off at the Gardner Museum in Boston which to this day has the frames of the ripped off art work as painful reminders that those objects have never been recovered and the police and others are still scratching their heads on that one.

The guile strategy does have its good points though especially if you have a ready buyer and you have an enflamed unscrupulous individual wealthy, wealthy these days meaning a billionaire or one who has access to billions. Especially when it is an inside job, a comeuppance inside job. The average person probably does not know it since the very rich in Scotty Fitzgerald’s famous aphorism are different, very different from you and me but high end art collectors can put art experts on their payrolls without thinking about it. A wise investment when you think about it guarding against fakes and frauds and tax deductible too. That is the case here with hired gun art expert Deane, played by Colin Firth who is out to bamboozle an ugly rich and nude everyman billionaire do we really need to know names, played by the villainous late British actor Alan Rickman.

This is how this caper played out and you really have to admire it even if your heart is with those Gardner master thieves. Claude Monet, the max daddy Impressionist, painted a couple of haystacks out in the French countryside in the 1890s, one at dawn the other at dusk. The “at dawn” one money bags already has but the other “at dusk” had a long and troubled history including being part of German Nazi Goring’s private collection and supposedly  subsequently when the Reich fell down in poor Podunk, Texas in the hands of the guy who grabbed it when the Nazi went down. Or rather to complete the key ensemble, his granddaughter PJ now, played by Cameron Diaz, a true cowgirl in the sand.

Deane’s play is to convince the dear Lord that the Texas Monet is legitimate and enlists PJ in the caper to add the final touch to the also lecherous Lord. The caper goes through a bunch of perhaps unnecessary pratfalls once PJ hits London in order to get her claws into the Lord, get them in good so he buys the story, takes the bait. Which he does. This is the beauty of the play though. Deane had his confederate master art forger paint two Monets-dawn and dusk and through a series of flimflam maneuvers is able to substitute a fake “dawn” for the real one in the Lord’s possession while claiming the dusk one is a fake (which it is of course). Deane sells the real “dawn” to a Japanese competitor of the Lord’s for a cool ten million-pounds (pre-Brexit). Nice play-and PJ gets a big cut too before heading back to Podunk, Texas. I wonder if the dear Lord is interested in a Rembrandt self-portrait–cheap at the price.