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THE ORIGINS OF THE ISRAEL LOBBY

"It was impossible to hold the line. All we got was a battering from the Jews."
--John Foster Dulles, Secretary of State, 1956

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"Imperial Crusades: a Diary of Three Wars" by Cockburn and St. Clair

Cockburn CSPAN 2 Encore Saturday at 9AM EST

Today's Stories

April 7 / 8, 2007

Alexander Cockburn
Dead Dogs Don't Bleed: How Giuliani Lost America

April 6, 2007

Franklin Lamb
Why is Hezbollah on the Terrorism List?

Gloria La Riva
On the Case of the Cuban Five and Luis Posada Carriles

Corporate Crime Reporter
The Politics of Coal in West Virginia

Ron Jacobs
Good Friday, Beethoven and Patti Smith

Felice Pace
Simon Says: The Pro-Israel Bias of NPR

Walter Brasch
Treason in the White House?

David Swanson
Heroes, Sung and Unsung

Sylvia Syracuse
Roadside Rampage: Salvadoran Murders in Guatemala


April 5, 2007

Patrick Cockburn
A De Facto Hostage Exchange

Tom Barry
The Fred Thompson Factor

Richard W. Behan
Congressional Complicity

Nicola Nasser
Playing US Politics with Iraqi Blood for Oil

Bernadine Dohrn
The New and Old SDS: Convergence Not Division

Laray Polk
Lucky Dragon: Does the World Really Need a New H-Bomb?

Helen Redmond
Female Chauvinist Pigs?

 

April 4, 2007

Col. Dan Smith
"Have You No Sense of Decency?": the Tillman Affair and the Moral Decay of the Army

Joshua Frank
Democratic Blood Money: Sen. Feinstein's War Profiteering

Margaret Kimberly
Of Confessions and Torture

Sharon Smith
Circuit City's Guinea Pigs: the Latest Trend in Corporate America

Jeff Cohen and Norman Solomon
The Martin Luther King You Don't See on TV

Martin Luther King,Jr.
Beyond Vietnam

Bill Quigley
Incident at Fort Huachuca, the Army's Torture Training Center

Dave Zirin
Picking Chicago's Pockets with the Olympics

Evelyn Pringle
Drug Companies Want Women of Childrearing Years

Peter Rost, MD
Pfizer's Puny Fine

Website of the Day
Crash of the Honey Bees

 

April 3, 2007

Patrick Cockburn
US's Bungled Plan to Kidnap Iran's Top Spook Prompted hostage Taking

Marjorie Cohn
Coming Up Short on Habeas Corpus for Gitmo Detainees

Brian M. Downing
The Army's Road to Iraq

Corporate Crime Reporter
Coddling Pfizer: Praise the Criminal, Dis the Whistleblower

Carol Norris
A Psychologist on Sexual Assault: Yes, Virginia, There is a Sollution

Ralph Nader
Tailpipe Blues

Dave Lindorff
I Quit: A Movement of One (Or a Maybe a Million)

Scott Bontz
The Great Depletion

Thomas Dolby
Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye, Racism and the National Anthem

Website of the Day
Cockburn on BookTV


April 2, 2007

Gary Leupp
A Bogus Hostage Crisis

Uri Avnery
Condi in the Middle East: Olmert and the Pussycat

James Petras
Palestine: The Political Economy of a Disaster

Norman Solomon
McCain in Baghdad: Walking in McNamara's Footsteps

Robert Fisk
War of Humiliation

Stanley Heller
A Neocon Looks Two Conquests Ahead: The Ravings of James Woolsey

Sherwood Ross
How the Pentagon Cheats Iraq Vets Out of Medical Care and Disability Pay

Monica Benderman
On Keeping Men Alive: Report from Ft. Stewart

Stephen Fleischman
Winners and Losers in a Dog-Eat-Dog System

Anne McElroy Dachel
Never Mind the Mercury

Website of the Day
Midwestern Common Sense on the War


March 31 / April 1, 2007

Cockburn / St. Clair
That Was an Antiwar Vote?

Fred Gardner
How Corrupt is Malcolm Gladwell? Shilling for Enron and Breast Cancer

Greg Moses
The Pirates of Homeland Security

Gary Leupp
300 vs. Iran (and Herodotus)

Robert Fisk
Shakespeare and War

Roger Morris
The Politics of the Witch Hunt

Conn Hallinan
The Price of Fire: Oil, Water and Resistance in Bolivia

Kristin J. Anderson
A Protocol for Death

Jason Hribal
California's Most Unhappy Cows

John Ross
Strange Fruit Down South

Christopher Brauchli
Bush and the Politics of Falsehoods: If You're Going to Lie, Lie Big

David Underhill
War Breeds Stranger Bedfellows

Elizabeth Schulte
The Pentagon's "Don't Ask" Disaster

Ben Terrall
Time for Lula to Stop Doing Bush's Dirty Work in Haiti

Missy Beattie
Guess Who Isn't Coming to Dinner: The Story of King Abdullah and the O-Word

Sonja Karkar
How Palestine Became Israel's Land

Daniel Wolff
Have You Heard the News?

David Vest
A Romanian Jazz Rebel Drops a Bomb on Paris

Ron Jacobs
Wynton Marsalis Checks In on the Land That Never Has Been Yet

Poets' Basement
Davies, Holt, Wigley and Landau

Website of the Weekend
Kansas City Rocks

 


March 30, 2007

Alan Maass
Oil and the Empire

Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity
A Memo on Iran: Brinksmanship in Uncharted Waters

Richard W. Behan
George Bush's Land Mine: If Iraqis Get Revenue Sharing, Exxon Gets Their Oil

Gabriel Kolko
Israel's Last Chance

William S. Lind
Operation Anabasis

Stedjan / Weis
The Cluster Bomb Treaty: Again, It's the US vs. the World

Kevin Zeese
Is Bush Lame or Is Congress?

David Busch
Homeless in LA

Fidel Castro
Biofuels and Global Hunger

CounterPunch News Service
Mistrial in Olympia 15 Case

Website of the Day
Free Shaquanda Cotton


March 29, 2007

Saul Landau
Comparing Padillas

Patrick Cockburn
When Iraqi Cops Go on a Rampage

Dave Lindorff
War and the Futures Market: Oil Traders Fear an Attack on Iran

Arthur Neslen
Normalizing Injustice: Jaffa's Ugly Truth

Michael Dickinson
Incident at Westminster Abbey

Ingmar Lee
Plantskyyd: Planting Trees with Pig's Blood in British Columbia

Aseem Shrivastava
As India Goes Global, the Public Goes Private

Marlene Martin
Sacco and Vanzetti, Revisited

Mahmoud El-Yousseph
Wake Up, You Live in America!

Michael Foley
A Citizen's Peace Lobby

Website of the Day
Impeach Bush Club Parade


March 28, 2007

Nicole Colson
The Ongoing Persecution of Sami Al-Arian

Harry Clark
Michigan Peaceworks on Palestine

Larry Everest
Another $100 Billion to Continue the War

Jonathan M. Feldman
Citigroup, Property and Theft

Dave Zirin
Yet Another Book on Muhammad Ali (and Why I Wrote It)

Jane Stillwater
How Runaway Inflation Has Slipped Under the Radar

Ayesha Ijaz Khan
Pakistan's Cry for Justice

Jim Wilfong
Who Owns Maine's Water?

Hawra Karama
An Open Letter to Kanan Makiya, an Iraqi Uncle Tom

Website of the Day
Free Fire on Iraqi Civilians



March 27, 2007

Iain Boal /
Standard Schaefer
British Petroleum and the New Greenmail

Patrick Cockburn
The Hostage Game

Monica Benderman
On Ending War: Is America Ready for the Troops When They Come Home?

Corporate Crime Reporter
Political Players and Single Payer

Joshua Frank
Dems in Power: Broken Promises and Bald-Faced Lies

Harvey Wasserman
Will Al Gore Deliver Us to Solartopia?

Sen. Russell Feingold
FBI Abuses of the Patriot Act

Tillman Family
Crimes and Cover Ups are Not "Missteps"

Patrick Bond
Zimbabwe's Descent

David Judd
Arbitrary Discipline at Columbia

Website of the Day
Why Work?


March 26, 2007

Patrick Cockburn
Seven Days on Iraq's Cruel Roads

Uri Avnery
Schoolbooks and Borders

Greg Moses
Hothouses for Hapless Masses on the Rio Grande

Bill Hatch
A Plague of Big Shots

John V. Walsh
The Democrats' War Funding Debacle

Diane Christian
God Does Not Love the Aggressor

Dan La Botz
The Immigration Movement at a Crossroads

Frederico Fuentes
Latin America Tells Bush to "Get Out!"

Sunsara Taylor
Democrats' Victory Means More Iraqi Deaths

Mickey Z.
Pat Tillman: Beyond the Hype

Website of the Day
DynCorp's Iraq Training Policy

 


March 24 / 25, 2007

Alexander Cockburn
Where are the Laptop Bombardiers Now?

Jeffrey St. Clair
Nuclear Saviors?: Kyoto, Gore and the Atomic Lobby

David Rosen
An American Obituary: Anna Nicole Smith and the Exploitation of Nature

Ron Jacobs
The Political History of the Car Bomb

Robert Fantina
Vietnam and Iraq, the Rhetoric Remains the Same

Alan Maass
Why Ralph Nader Took a Stand

Atul Gawande
On Washing Hands: A Surgeon's Notes on How Infections Spread in Hospitals

Marianne McDonald
Staging Anti-Colonial Protest

China Hand
Zealots Scheme to Derail North Korea Accord

Kaz Dziamka
The Iroquois Way of Impeachment

Andrew Wimmer
The Nursemaid's Tale

Don Monkerud
World's Biggest Debtor Nation

Anthony Papa
Bong Hits 4 Jesus Case

Matthew Provonsha
Return of the Black Bloc

Missy Beattie
Calling Youth and Young Adults

Stephen Fleischman
Confrontation, At Last

Poets' Basement
Newberry, Laymon, Harley and Buknatski

Website of the Weekend
An Interview with Ron Jacobs

Song of the Weekend
"Who Would Jesus Bomb?"


March 23, 2007

Saul Landau
Return to Syria

Patrick Cockburn
Welcome to Iraq, Mr. Ban

Greg Moses
Protesting Immigrant Prisons in the Rio Grande Valley

Rep. Ron Paul
The War Funding Bill

Franklin Lamb
Will Hezbollah Hand Israel Its 6th Defeat?

Stephen Gowans
Mugabe Gets the Milosevic Treatment

Roger Burbach
Leftist Victory in Ecuador

Dave Lindorff
The Gutless Mini-Politics of the Congressional Democrats

William S. Lind
Candles in the Hurricane

Alan Mammoser
The New Rules of Food

Russell Hoffman
Al Gore's Nose is Glowing

Website of the Day
Global Outsourcing and the US Working Class

 

March 22, 2007

Patrick Cockburn
Oil-Rich Kirkuk at the Melting Point

Robin Blackburn
Toxic Waste in the Sub-Prime Market

Michael Donnelly
Mr. Green Goes to Washington: Another Oscar Performance from Al Gore

Uzma Aslam Khan
Down Pakistan's No-Constitution Avenue

Lee Sustar
Bush's Braceros: The Ugly Truth About the Guest Worker Program

Robert D. Skeels
LA's Vicious War on the Homeless

Rev. William Alberts
The Forbidden C-Word

Anne McElroy Dachel
The Search for the Elusive Autism Gene

Mickey Z.
This is Your Brain on Meat

Website of the Day
Raimondo Does Hitchens

 


March 21, 2007

Tao Ruspoli
A Conversation with Robbie Conal

James Petras
Meet the Global Ruling Class

Fred Gardner
A U.S. Army Pipe Dream

Corporate Crime Reporter
Cramer Comes Clean: Lies, Market Manipulation and Wall Street

Faisal Kutty
Too Guilty to Fly, Too Innocent to Charge?

Robert Fantina
U.S. Imperialism in Action

Isabella Kenfield and Roger Burbach
Brazilian Opposition to Bush-Lula Ethanol Accords

Lucinda Marshall
Missing in Action: Why is the Peace Movement Ignoring the Impact of War on Women?

Winslow Wheeler
Dem Budget Tricks: Reform Means What We Say It Means!

Website of the Day
Student Day of Action Against the War

 

 

March 20, 2007

Patrick Cockburn
Iraq is a Vast, Blood-Drenched Human Disaster

Winslow T. Wheeler
The Blank Check War

Sharon Smith
Hillary's Cojones: Our Bleached-Blond Thatcher?

Uri Avnery
The New Palestinian Unity Government

Stan Cox
Down-to-a-Trickle Economics

Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz
Hating the Rich

Alan Farago
Why Al Gore Soft-Peddled the Environment in 2000

Richard W. Behan
Impeachment and Patriotism

Juan Antonio Montecino Latin America Has Moved On

David Krieger
The Treaty of Tlatelolco

Peter Rost, MD
An Open Letter to Pfizer's CEO: $11 Million Salary, 36% Raise, 10,000 Fired Employees

Mickey Z.
A Cat-Eat-Cat World: Beyond the Pet Food Recall

Website of the Day
Bringing the War Home

Webclip of the Day
Sunsara Taylor Beats O'Reilly, Again

 

March 19, 2007

Paul Craig Roberts
Crime Blotter: 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue

Patrick Cockburn
Operation Deepening Nightmare

Stauber / Rampton
Why Won't MoveOn Move Forward?

Werther
Plame Wars: Valerie Plame, the Washington Post and the Ghost of Joe McCarthy

Noam Chomsky
In Memory of Tanya Reinhart

Jeff Leys
Tap Dancing on Graves: How Democrats Bought the War

Richard May
And Then There Were None: Europe's Afghan Backlash

Ron Jacobs
Lessons of the Antiwar Movement and the Washington Post's Lessons of the Iraq War

Mike Whitney
Rove in the Dock

Website of the Day
Ringtones That Roar

 

 

March 17 / 18, 2007

Alexander Cockburn
Here Comes Another "Crime Wave"

John Scagliotti
A Sissy's Manifesto

Jeffrey St. Clair
The Green Imposter: When Al Gore Was Veep

Paul Craig Roberts
The Confession Backfired

Greg Moses
Jailing Immigrant Mothers in El Paso

Harry Clark
Thrice-Told Tales: Those Israel-Syria Peace Talks

Brian Cloughley
In the Name of Improving People's Lives: Mounting Civilian Deaths in Afghanistan and Iraq

Mehran Ghassemi
An Interview with Sasan Fayazmanesh on the US, Israel and Iran

William Loren Katz
A Disturbing Expulsion: Racism and the Cherokee Nation

John Ross
Being a Zapatista Where You Live

Ralph Nader
Ban the Bomblets!

Walter Brasch
An Intolerant Minority: the Witch Hunt Against Gays in the Military

Samer Assad
The Palestinian Unity Government: Another for US Diplomacy

Dave Zirin
Bowie Kuhn: Death of a Baseball Reactionary

Ron Jacobs
The Darker Nation's: Remembering and Re-examining the Third World

Missy Beattie
No to War and Pace

Don Santina
First, They Came for the Democrats

Sami Adwan
What Hillary Should Know About Palestinian Schoolbooks

Dr. Susan Block
Gods of Spring: the Erotics of the Equinox

Poets' Basement
Reed, Landau, Engel, Buknatski

Website of the Weekend
God Save Helen Mirren

 

March 16, 2007

R. T. Naylor
The Political Economy of Diamonds

Paul Craig Roberts
The Last Days of Constitutional Rule

Joshua Frank
Obama's Israel Problem

Diane Farsetta
How Reporters Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Nuclear Front Groups

Tom Barry
Tancredo's Putsch: Anti-Immigrant Agenda Veers Hard Right

Stephen Lendman
Plays from a Political Fake Book: Congress's Phony Opposition to War

Al Krebs
Compounding Infamy: Chiquita, Its Workers and Colombia's Death Squads

Jackie Corr
Senator Schumer and the Corruption Culture

Ramzy Baroud
Palestinians Must Redefine Struggle

Reza Fiyouzat
The Chinese Way of Capitalism

Website of the Day
Introducing: the iRak

 

March 15, 2007

Alison Weir
Strip-Searching Children at Israeli Checkpoints

Patrick Cockburn
Baghdad Under Surge

Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity
Memo to Congressional Leaders on Iraq Funding: First Stop the Bleeding

Franklin Spinney
Of Character and Contractors: the Unauthorized Rumsfeld

Standard Schaefer
Biofuels and the Green Resistance

Conn Hallinan
The Right's Stuff in Africa: Neocons, Evangelicals and Sudan

Maureen Webb
Another Patriot Act Abuse

Sonja Karkar
Rachel Corrie and Palestine

Margaret Kimberly
The Profits of Self-Hatred: Malkin and D'Souza, Incorporated

Anthony Papa
The New Capones: It's Time to Rethink Drug Prohibition

Katherine Hancy Wheeler Bush's Latin American Tour: Good Will Lost

Video of the Day
The Easiest Targets

Website of the Day
Memo to Kucinich: Watch Your Back!

 

March 14, 2007

Tao Ruspoli
A Conversation with Peter Linebaugh on the Slave Trade, Magna Carta and the State of the Left

Philip Agee
The Decline of the US, the Rise of Latin America

Bruce Dixon
The Digital Redlining of African-Americans

John Walsh
How One Senator Could End the War

Sunsara Taylor
Red Light, Green Light: the Democrats and Iran

William Johnson
Still Reeling from Katrina: The Spirited Strike at Pascagoula Shipyards

Richard Thieme
Entitlement and Empire

Jeffrey Klein
Right-Wing Academic Values

Nicola Nasser
This Time, Israeli is Missing an Historic Opportunity

Dave Lindorff
Political Hide-and-Seek with the Democrats

Website of the Day
Oil Change

 

March 13, 2007

Catherine Wilkerson, M.D.
Scenes from a Cop Riot

Jonathan Cook
The Real Goal of Israel's Invastion of Lebanon

Robert Bryce
Beyond Redemption: the Legacy of George the Second

Corporate Crime Reporter
Coal-Powered Democrats

Pierre Rimbert
Libération and the Evolution of French Neoliberalism

Dave Lindorff
What's Good for Halliburton is Good ... for Dubai

Elizabeth Schulte
The Repackaging of John Edwards

Norman Solomon
The Pragmatism of Prolonged War

Kevin Zeese
The Democrats' Fraudulent Iraq Exit Plan

Jeff Conant
Greeting Rumsfeld in Taos

Website of the Day
Tacoma and the Big Heat

 

 

March 12, 2007

Marjorie Cohn
Patriot Act Unbound

Col. Dan Smith
Ghost Prisoners, Shadowy Jails and Secret Trials

Paul Craig Roberts
Neocons in Kafkaland

Ingmar Lee
The Sentencing of Betty Krawczyk: a 78-Year-Old Eco-Heroine

Fred Gardner
Cannabis for the Wounded: Another Walter Reed Scandal

Ron Jacobs
Showdown at Port Tacoma: Confronting the War Machine in the Northwest

Ralph Nader
Send the Bush Twins to Iraq!

John Ross
Political Prisoners in Calderon's Mexico

Stephen Fleischman
Bush's Latin American Slip

Eva Carazo Vargas
Why We Reject CAFTA

Website of the Day
Mountain Justice Spring Break

 

March 9 / 11, 2007

Sameer Dossani
Interview with Noam Chomsky: War, Neoliberalism and Empire in the 21st Century

Jeffrey St. Clair
Crude Alliance: The Bi-Partisan Politics of Oil

Dave Marsh
Bono's Bullshit: Not One Red Cent

Patrick Cockburn
Shia Pilgrims Die Despite US Offensive

Jennifer Van Bergen
A Gonzo Argument: Alberto Gonzales's Defense of NSA Domestic Spying

James P. Stevenson
Pardon Whom? Libby and the Cheney Unseen

Arthur J. Versluis
Crusade for Commercialism

Corporate Crime Reporter
Not a Dime's Worth of Difference: Congress and Corporate Crime

Missy Beattie
Too Much Info, Newt!: Sex, God and Praying

Michael Simmons
Annie Get Your Gums: Why I Like Ann Coulter

Kevin Zeese
Making Democrats Pay the Price: Voting Against the War is No Longer Enough

David Swanson
Shocking Video: The Dark Side of the Democrats

John A. Murphy
Are the Congressional Democrats Spineless?

Dave Lindorff
Bush Dodges a Constitutional Bullet in New Mexico: Abetted by Democrats

Nikolas Kozloff
Lights! Camera! Chavez!

Christopher Fons
Bush Goes to Latin America: Is It All About (N)PR?

Mike Roselle
A Thousand Miles of Bad River

Mike Mejia
Justice for Sibel Edmonds

Susie Day
Anna Nicole Smith Bombs Iran!

Michael Donnelly
LA Story: Rock Stars, Porn Stars and Peace

Tao Ruspoli
Just Say Know (Parts 4 and 5)

Poets' Basement
Reed, Laymon, Mezmer and Harley

Website of the Weekend
Japanese Dolphin Massacre

 

March 8, 2007

Elaine Cassel
The Tragic Case of Jose Padilla

Yifat Susskind
Iraq's Other War: Violence Against Women Under US Occupation

Corporate Crime Reporter
Politics and the Prosecutors

Col. Dan Smith
The Sins of Walter Reed

William S. Lind
The Washington Dodgers

Mark Engler
Bush's Latin American Spring Break

Roger Burbach
With Negroponte as Tour Director, Bush's Trip Destined to Fail

Dana Cloud
Return of the Campus Witch Hunts: David Horowitz and the Thought Police

Isabella Kenfield
Brazil's Ethanol Pland: Breeding Rural Poverty and Environmental Degradation

Lucinda Marshall
We Stand with the Women of the World

Tao Ruspoli
Just Say Know: a Personal Look at Drugs and Drug Addiction (Part 3)

Website of the Day
Filibuster for Peace


March 7, 2007

Christopher Ketcham
What Did Israel Know in Advance of the 9/11 Attacks?

Christopher Ketcham
The Kuala Lumpur Deceit: a CIA Cover Up

Alexander Cockburn / Jeffrey St. Clair
Ketcham's Story: Coming in From the Cold

Winslow T. Wheeler
Mismeasuring the Defense Budget

Sean Donahue
Free Scooter Libby!

Dave Lindorff
The Fall Guy Has Fallen

Evelyn Pringle
Psychosis and Mania: ADHD Drug Warnings Come Too Late for Many

Tao Ruspoli
Just Say Know: a Personal Look at Drugs and Drug Addiction

Website of the Day
Debating Iraq: Gaffney Against the World!

 

March 6, 2007

Gary Leupp
Meet Eliot Cohen: "As Extremist a Neocon and Warmonger as It Gets"

Uri Avnery
Esterina Tartman: The Big Mouth of Israeli Fascism

Patrick Cockburn
The War on Terror is a Bust: Bush is Now Al Qaeda's Top Recruiter

Saul Landau
World in Crisis, Candidates in Denial

Corporate Crime Reporter
John Edwards' Big Lie

Ron Jacobs
The Legacy of Lordstown: The Union Makes Us Strong!

Mike Roselle
Judi Bari: Ten Years Gone

P. Sainath
Neoliberalism and the Ideology of the Cancer Cell

Joshua Frank
Dump the Dems, Unite Against the War

Aniket Alam
Women's Day, Lenin and a Riot in Copenhagen

Dave Zirin
Resurrecting Don Barksdale: Basketball's Forgotten Pioneer

Website of the Day
Physicians for a National Health Program

 

March 5, 2007

Greg Moses
Holding Suzi Hazahza for Profit

Patrick Cockburn
Exodus of Iraq's Ancient Minorities

James Petras
Bush vs. Chavez

Frida Berrigan
US Nuclear Hypocrisy and Iran

Marjorie Cohn
Conscientious Objector Faces Court-Martial: the Case of Augustín Aguayo

Douglas Kammen and S.W. Hayati
The Rice Crisis in East Timor

Sen. Barack Obama
On Israel and AIPAC: "We Must Preserve Our Total Commitment to Our Unique Defense Relationship with Israel"

Michael Young
Sy Hersh and Iran: the Dark Side of Spun a Lot?

Dave Lindorff
It's the People of Washington vs. Pelosi, et al

Sonja Karkar
Raiding Nablus: Israel's Hot Winter Offensive

Website of the Day
How Obama Learned to Love Israel

 

March 3 / 4, 2007

Alexander Cockburn
The Persecution of Sami Al-Arian

Corporate Crime Reporter
"No Fingernails, No Good:" Al-Arian Prosecutor's Anti-Muslim Bias

Jeffrey St. Clair
Glory Boy and the Snail Darter: Al Gore, the Origins of a Hypocrite

Patrick Cockburn
War Reporting in Iraq: Only Locals Need Apply

Ralph Nader
Hillary, Inc.: Sen. Clinton and Corporate America

M. Shahid Alam
American Mamlukes

Gilad Atzmon
From Esther to AIPAC

Fred Gardner
It's Official!: Cannabis Reduces Pain

George Ciccariello-Maher
The Fourth World War Started in Venezuela

Rock & Rap Confidential
Do the James Brown!: "No One Could Speak More Authoritatively for Blacks"

Gillian Russom
The Court Martial of Agustín Aguayo

Michael McPhearson
My Small Act of Civil Disobedience

Kevin Zeese
The Democrats and the Peace Movement: Who Owns Whom?

Sunsara Taylor
Four Years of an Unjust War

Wendy Thompson
Re-Organizing the UAW

Kenneth Rexroth
Gibbon's "Decline and Fall"

Missy Beattie
Regarding Cheney

Don Monkerud
Jesus Turned Away at US Border

Tina Louise
Stuffed with Terror, Starved of Dreams

Poets' Basement
Richards, Landau and Davies

Website of the Weekend
John Prine: Flag Decal

 

March 2, 2007

Roger Morris
Cheney's Bagram Ghosts

Phil Gasper
Prisoners of Ideology

Mike Roselle
Buffalo Gore: The Blood-Stained Snow of Yellowstone

Robert Bryce
The Ethanol Scam

John V. Walsh
Who is He This Time?: Kerry's Strange Call to Filibuster the War

Sherwood Ross
Bush and Walter Reed Hospital: Praise the Care, Slash the Budget

China Hand
Who Let North Korea Get the Bomb?

David Rosen
To Cut or Not to Cut?: the Politics of Circumcision in America

Chris Genovali
Connecting the Dots

Peter Harley
The Wall, Apartheid and Mandela

Website of the Day
Courage to Resist

 

March 1, 2007

Laura Carlsen
Return to Sender: Migrants as Globalization's Junk Mail

Paul Craig Roberts
The Tragedy of a Dozen Evil Men

Ray McGovern
How Far is Iran from the Bomb? Who the Hell Knows?

Christopher Brauchli
Bush's Theater of the Absurd

Najum Mustaq
America's Musharraf Dilemma

Brent Bowden
The War on Terror and the Terror of War

Tina Richards
Demoralizing the Troops? The Mother of an Iraq War Vet Responds

Ethan Nadelman
Mexico and the Drug War

Mike Stark
"Tough on Crime" is the Problem, Not a Solution

Wadner Pierre / Jeb Sprague
Haiti's Poor Under a State of Siege by UN

Mike Whitney
Market Meltdown: the Dead Hand of Greenspan

Website of the Day
Dylan Hears a Who

 

February 28, 2007

Peter Linebaugh
An Amazing Disgrace

Tao Ruspoli
A Conversation with Francisco Letelier

China Hand
The Shanghai Crash: Take the Money and Run

Marjorie Cohn
Why the Boumediene Case on Gitmo Detainees and Habeas Corpus Was Wrongly Decided

Sarah Olson
Is Lt. Watada an Isolated Case of Military Dissent?

Susan Van Haitsma
Mark Wilkerson: Standing for a Soldier's Right to Conscience

Nicole Colson
License to Torture

Harvey Wasserman
The Sham of Nuclear Power

William S. Lind
The Non-Thinking Enemy

Nicola Nasser
US Turnabout?: Engagement and Confrontation in the Middle East

Website of the Day
Andrew Cockburn on Rumsfeld

 

February 27, 2007

Tariq Ali
The Khyber Impasse: the Case for Withdrawal from Afghanistan

Tom Barry
America's Crusaders: Santorum and Lieberman

Uri Avnery
The Next War

Antonia Juhasz / Raed Jarrar
Oil Grab: the Secret Scheme to Split Iraq

Jeff Nygaard
Howard Hunt and the National Memory System

Hugh O'Shaughnessy
Grenada: an Invasion Revisited

Mitchell Kaidy
Israel's Cluster Bombs: Made in USA, Ground-Tested in Lebanon

Carl Finamore
Airline Bankruptcies, Mergers and Profits

Anne McElroy Dachel
The Really Big Lie About Autism

Ramzy Baroud
Who is Really in Control?

Andrew Rouse
The Queen, Her Apothecary and the War on Iraq

Website of the Day
New York City Skyline

 

February 26, 2007

Franklin Lamb
US Israel Lobby Targets Lebanon's Jihad al-Bina

Bill Quigley
The Right to Return to New Orleans

Greg Moses
Suzi Hazahza in Haskell Hell

Col. Dan Smith
Calling All Carriers

Ralph Nader
The Bush Administration is a Threat to Our National Security

Paul Buchheit
The Income Gap

Jeff Leys
How Democrats Are Buying the Iraq War

Dave Zirin
Bojangling for Bigots: an Open Letter to Jason Whitlock

Mike Whitney
Doomsday Dick and the Plague of Frogs

Michael Dickinson
Free Kareem Amer!

Website of the Day
Beware the Chickenhawks!

 

February 24 / 25, 2007

Jeffrey St. Clair
Frightening Tales of Endangered Species

R. T. Naylor
Inside Islamic Charity

Gary Leupp
AIPAC Demands "Action" on Iran

Saul Landau
Modern Day Miracle: Rev. Haggard Cured! Thank You, Jesus!

Ron Jacobs
Missile Defense Redux

Jeffrey Blankfort
A Debate on the Israel Lobby

Chris Sands
Afghanistan in Winter: Where Death Comes Cheap

Gary Freeman
The N-Word and Black History Month

Larry Portis
Zionism and the United States: the Cultural Connection

P. Sainath
Two Million People in "Maximum Distress"

Lee Sustar
What Next for the Immigrants' Rights Movement?

Kevin Wehr
Liberal vs. Radical Enviros: the Thrill isn't Gone, It's Just Moved

Ken Couesbouc
The African Card

Soffiyah Elijah
FBI Hunting Dead Panthers: Can John Bowman Ever Rest in Peace?

Kathlyn Stone
Iraqi Labor vs. Big Oil

Dave Lindorff
Breaking the Dam in Olympia

Jason Kunin
Criticizing Israel is Not an Act of Bigotry

Kevin Zeese
Can Hillary be Trusted?

Remi Kanazi
All Roads Lead to Checkpoints

Missy Beattie
Five Words That Change Lives

Poets' Basement
Davies, Holt and Rodriguez

Website of the Weekend
Caught on Tape: an Anti-War Movement Finding Its Feet?

 

February 23, 2007

Franklin Spinney
Top Gun vs. the Axis of Evil: Is This What We Have Become?

Jonathan Cook
Watching the Checkpoints

Patrick Cockburn
The True Extent of Britain's Failure in Basra

Kathy Kelly
Do Something Good

Chris Dols
Islamophobia at Urban Outfiters: the Case for Keffiyehs

Evelyn Pringle
The Neurontin Suicides: Risks Kept Hidden for Years

Stephen Pearcy
If Bush is a War Criminal, What About the Troops?

Dan Brook
Making Poverty History

Yifat Susskind
Iraqi Police Commit Rapes

Website of the Day
A Citizens Arrest of Patty Murray

 

February 22, 2007

Robert Fantina
Repeating History

Tariq Ali
Prodi's Soap Operatic Fall: Neoliberalism and War in Italy

Michael Shank
An Interview with Noam Chomsky on Iran, Iraq, the Democrats and Climate Change

John Ross
Calderon's War on Drugs

Christopher Brauchli
Stockcars on Dope: How NASCAR and the Tour de France are Bring the World Together

Cindy Litman
Paying for the Damage Done to Iraq

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
Mr. Jefferson's Inheritors: Caution, Calculation and Cold Feet

Kevin Zeese
Finally, a Populist Antiwar Candidate for President

Aseem Shrivastava
The New Indian Way?: a Developer's Model of Development

Reza Fiyouzat
A Letter to the Israeli People: We are All Led by Mad Men

Illinois Students Against the War
Why We Protested at Obama's Speech

Website of the Day
An Interview with Mike Gravel

 

February 21, 2007

Maass / St. Clair
The Clintons: the Art of Politics Without Conscience

Sharon Smith
Inside the Imperial Budget

Greg Moses
Showdown Over Texas Immigrant Prisons

Margaret Kimberly
America the Stupid

Ralph Nader
Making Cancer Cool: Tobacco and Hollywood

Nicola Nasser
Evasive Diplomacy: Bush Adm. Shuns Middle East Peace Talks

Mike Whitney
The Second Great Depression

Tao Ruspoli
Revolutionary But Gangsta: a Conversation with Stic.Man of Dead Prez

Byeong Jeongpil
Beyond the "Protection Facility", Another Prison

Corporate Crime Reporter
Why Hillary, Obama and Edwards Oppose Single-Payer Health Care

Josh Mahan
The Lost Art of Shattuck: a Good, Old-Fashioned Drinking Story

Website of the Day
Time to Free the Puerto Rican Nationalists


February 20, 2007

Sgt. Martin Smith
Structured Cruelty: Learning to be a Lean, Mean Killing Machine

Werther
How to be a Washington Expert

Corporate Crime Reporter
Exposing SAIC

Carl G. Estabrook
Common Sense About the Recent Past

China Hand
Setting Sun: The Diverging US-Japan Relationship

Joshua Frank
Cleaning Up Exxon's Greenpoint Oil Spill

Megan Boler
The Daily Show and Political Activism

John Feffer
People Power vs. Military Power in East Asia

Daryll E. Ray
What's Inside the New Farm Bill

Alan Gregory
Midwest Wolves Fall Prey to Slob Hunters' PR Scam

Website of the Day
"Not a Target Rich Environment?"

 

February 19, 2007

Paul Craig Roberts
Economists in Denial: Blind to the Consequences of Offshoring

Gary Leupp
"A Genocidal, Suicidal Nation:" Mitt Romney Joins Iran's Hysterical Accusers

Ron Jacobs
The Mecca Agreements: the Future Remains Bleak

Michael F. Brown
The Peace Process Industry

Robert Jensen
Liberal Icons and War: Bi-Partisan Empire-Building

Roger Burbach
Ecuador Stands Up to US

Monica Benderman
America, Where Are You Now?

Sonja Karkar
Apocalyptic Archaeology: Israel's Provocations Threaten Jerusalem

John Walsh
Some Good News from Beantown

Talli Nauman
Colorado Delta Blues: Challenging the Law of the River

Website of the Day
"The Best Place to be in Town"

 

Feburary 17 / 18, 2007

Alexander Cockburn
Sold to Mr. Gordon, Another Bridge!

Tao Ruspoli
CounterViews: a Conversation with Patrick Cockburn, Part Two

Gary Leupp
Iran: A Chronology of Disinformation

Jeffrey St. Clair
Dark Mesas in an Ancient Light

Roger Morris
The Undertaker's Tally: the Tragedy of Donald Rumsfeld

Uri Avnery
Facing Mecca

James Brooks
Palestinians and the "Diplomatic Horizon"

Sen. Russell Feingold
Congress Must Defund the Iraq War

Linn Washington, Jr.
"Death Row is a Web That Catches Only the Poor"

Michele Brand
Iran: the Proxy War?

Fred Gardner
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar on Music and Basketball in the Harlem Renaissance

Mitchel Cohen
Storming the Pentagon: Lessons from 1967

Mike Ferner
Democrats Keep Ohio Refugee Free: "No Iraqis in Our Backyards!"

David Swanson
Memo to Don Young: What Lincoln Really Said

P. Sainath
In the Theater of the Jungle Belt

Mike Stark
GoreAid: Gore Plans Concert with Musicians He and Tipper Betrayed in the 80s

Missy Beattie
The Object of My Disaffection

Jonathan Franklin
Carnival: Where Dance is Hope

Website of the Weekend
The Godfather and the Tenor: "It's a Man's World"


February 16, 2007

Marc Levy
Turning Point: Veterans' Voices Trigger Response

Andrew Cockburn
In Iraq, Anyone Can Make a Bomb

Glen Ford
Powell, Rice and Obama: Putting Black Faces on Imperial Aggression

Greg Moses
The Terror of Suzi Hazahza: Why Her Family Must Be Freed

Ron Jacobs
Marching on the Pentagon: Then and Now

John W. Farley
Hook, Line and Sinker: The Press and Stephen Hadley

James Marc Leas
Vermont Legislature Says: "Bring Them Home Now!"

Tim Rinne
The Most Dangerous Place on the Face of the Earth?: StratCom and the Coming War on Iran

Albert Wan
Star-Cross'd Lovers?: The Strange Romance of Hillary and David Brooks

Website of the Day
Did Wal-Mart Murder Tweety Bird?

 


February 15, 2007

Patrick Cockburn
Who is Muqtada al-Sadr?

Saul Landau
How to Obsess Your Enemies

Stephen Lendman
The Rules of Imperial Management

Evelyn Pringle
More Zyprexa Postcards from the Edge

Michael Simmons
Is the Joke Over?: an Evening with Ralph Steadman

Kevin Zeese
A Congressional Kabuki Show

Dave Lindorff
The Co-Dependent Congress

Pete Shanks
They Want You to Eat Cloned Meat--And They Don't Want You to Know It

Peter Rost
The Michelle Manhart Affair: the Air Force Listens!

Lenni Brenner / Gilad Atzmon
An Exchange

Website of the Day
Barack Obama vs. Huey P. Newton

 

February 14, 2007

Tao Ruspoli
CounterViews: A Conversation with Patrick Cockburn

Dick J. Reavis
War Without a Name

Margaret Kimberly
Medical Apartheid in America

Christopher Brauchli
The Perils of Charity: You Can be Prosecuted for Funding Terror Even If the Designation of the Group as a Terrorist Organization was Wrong!

Paul Craig Roberts
Cracks in the Pentagon

John Ross
The Plot Against Mexican Corn

Michael F. Brown
The Democrats and Palestine: New Chairman, Old Rules

Dave Lindorff
The Press Bites, Again: a Word of Caution on Those Iranian Weapons

J.L. Chestunut, Jr.
Texas-style Injustice in Black and White

Don Fitz
Hybrids, Biofuels and Other False Idols

Michael Donnelly
Give Love, Give Life

Dr. Susan Block
The Chemistry of Love

Website of the Day
Code Pink Drops By Hillary's Office

 

February 13, 2007

Uri Avnery
Three Provocations: the Method in the Madness

Patrick Cockburn
Targeting Tehran

Ralph Nader
When Wall Street Whines (You Know They're Making a Killing)

Marjorie Cohn
Fool Us Twice? From Iraq to Iran

Col. Dan Smith
Iran Bashing Goes Prime Time

Col. Douglas MacGreagor
Empty Vessels: Gen. Patraeus and Other Hollow Men

Thomas Power
Coal Ambivalence: Mining Montana

Nicola Nasser
The Politics of Archaeology in Jerusalem

David Swanson
Iran War Talking Points

Columbia Coalition Against the War
Why We Are Striking

Website of the Day
Our Friends at Antiwar.com Need Your Help

 

February 12, 2007

Patrick Cockburn
Scapegoating Iran

Paul Craig Roberts
How the World Can Stop Bush: Dump the Dollar!

John Walsh
A Splintered Antiwar Movement: Nader and Libertarians Not Welcome

Dr. John Carroll, MD
What Next for Haiti's Cite Soliel?: a Journey Through the World's Most Miserable Slum

Greg Moses
An Outrageously Sickening Immigration Policy

Nicole Colson
The Frame-Up That Fell Apart: Jury See Through Another Botched Federal "Terrorism" Case

Dave Lindorff
Acting in Bad Feith: Inappropriate Behavior and Impeachment

Ray McGovern
The Kervorkian Administration: Are Bush and Cheney the Biggest Threats to the Existence of Israel?

Doug Giebel
Rampant Cyncism

David Swanson
Twisted: Sex and Torture in America

Website of the Day
The Texas Model: Executing Women in Iraq

 

 

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Weekend Edition
April 7 / 8, 2007

Highs and Lows in the Northern Rockies

In the Realm of the Grizzly Kings

By JEFFREY ST. CLAIR

Tomorrow will open again, the sky wide
as the mouth of a wild girl, friable
clouds you lose yourself to. You are lost
in miles of land without people, without
one fear of being found, in the dash
of rabbits, soar of antelope, swirl
merge and clatter of streams.

-from "Driving Montana"
Richard Hugo

In June 1877 a fistful of non-treaty Nez Perce lashed back against the forces conspiring to evict them from their traditional lands in the Hells Canyon and Salmon River country of central Idaho and eastern Oregon. The young warriors killed 18 white settlers, bringing down upon their people the full wrath of the US Army, which was, of course, looking for any excuse to incarcerate or exterminate them. Thus, began the most amazing journey and ruthless pursuit in American history.

Soon after the killings, the leaders of the Nez Perce bands, Looking Glass, White Bird, and Joseph, led their 300 warriors and 500 women, children, and elders across the Salmon and Clearwater Rivers and up the deep ponderosa, Doug-fir, and lodgepole forests of the Lochsa Canyon to the rugged Bitterroot Range, chased most of the way by the one-armed, demented fundamentalist Gen. Otis Howard. Their goal was the buffalo country north of the Canadian border and a possible union with the Sioux visionary Sitting Bull.

The dissident Nez Perce, loaded with dried salmon and buffalo robes, single-shot rifles and their lodgepoles, quickly traversed the steep and treacherous Lolo trail, where Looking Glass skirted the band past an inept blockade at Lolo Hot Springs and down into the stunning Bitterroot Valley, then across the spiny Anaconda Mountains to a campsite along the Big Hole River, perhaps the world's most exquisite trout stream.

As the Nez Perce regrouped and rested, they were cruelly ambushed by a pre-dawn raid led by Col. John Gibbon that left a carnage of slaughtered women, children, and elders. Miraculously, the Nez Perce recovered behind Ollokot and Wounded Head to inflict heavy casualties on the overconfident troops, while Lean Elk led the shattered band away to the south across Bannock Pass, east to Henry's Fork where they gathered camas root and raided General Howard's camp for horses and supplies, and then over the tall Targhee Pass and into the Yellowstone country.

The Nez Perce sped across the central plateau, hugging the rim of the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone, and then made the slow, torturous crossing of the Absaroka Range, their travel impeded by dense forest and heavy treefall. When it appeared they might finally be caught between converging federal troops, the renegades descended the treacherously steep "Dead Indian Hill" undetected by Col. Samuel Sturgis's spies. Then the Nez Perce dropped into the dark and narrow slot of the Clark's Fork Canyon deftly evading the ambush plotted by the comically pompous colonel.

The Clark's Fork Canyon opened to a fast, grueling route north along the Rocky Mountain Front across the Mussleshell River and through the Judith Gap, before it all came to a disastrous dénouement on the wind-brushed buffalo plains of northern Montana in the shadow of the Bear Paw Mountains, when General Nelson Miles unleashed this howitzers and cavalry on the weary Nez Perce encamped by Snake Creek only a few hours ride from the Canadian border.

Ollokot, Lean Elk, and Looking Glass were killed in the battle, along with 120 others. Chief Joseph, later canonized for his pacifism by white historians, surrendered to be imprisoned on the dusty Colville Reservation in eastern Washington. But the old chief White Bird, who refused even to consider giving up to the marauders in blue uniforms, quietly escaped with 200 other Nez Perce renegades to the wilds and relative freedom of the Canadian Rockies.

* * *

The escape route of the non-treaty Nez Perce roughly transects the bioregion now known was the Northern Rockies, a terrain that remains as hostile as it is enchanting. From Hells Canyon to the asbestos plants of Libby, the Chinese Wall to the Berkeley Pit, the Northern Rockies is a region of extremes, extremes in climate and geography, culture and politics. It is a haven for writers and artists as well as white-supremacists and conspiracy theorists; it's a region that gave rise to Earth First! as well as some of the most virulent strains of the Wise-Use Movement.

In a bitter irony, perhaps symbolic of the region, the gray wolf has been returned amid international fanfare to Yellowstone at the same time the grizzly seems destined to make its final exit from the park.

The Rockies are the ecological spinal column of North America, a fragile corridor down which our native wildness flows. Unlike the coastal forest of the Pacific Northwest, a ragged and tattered ecosystem in need of major reconstructive ecological surgery, the wildlands of the Northern Rockies retain a certain native wholeness and exert an imposing primal presence on the totality of the landscape. Today, wildlands, not clearcuts, still define the states of Idaho and Montana.

Here, the opportunity exists to preserve complete ecosystems. There are roadless areas in Idaho the size of some of the original colonies. And some of them share grizzlies, wolves, and salmon. Beyond the smelter stacks, strip mines and ski resorts, Lewis and Clark would recognize much of western Montana. But each year this wilderness is being inexorably shaved away by the forces of corporate greed, bureaucratic malfeasance, political expediency and social indifference. Each year forgotten ranges like the Yaak or the Missions, the Selkirks or the Crazies are being cut into fragments and islands, shattered images of their former selves, lengthening forever the forested synapses across which the sparks of life must jump.

Like the tragic saga of the renegade Nez Perce, the recent history of the Northern Rockies must be read with a mixture of hope and despair.

* * *

The national forests got their start in the Northern Rockies with the designation of the Shoshone Forest Reserve in 1897 and were managed in a largely custodial fashion until the 1950s, a period when district rangers really were rangers, riding right off the pages of Ivan Doig and Norman Maclean. These forests got their comeuppance in 1970 when the forestry and wildlife faculty of Montana State University conducted an investigation of the agency's management of forests in western Montana, revealing to the public what insiders had known for 20 years: the depletion of private timber stocks and the post-World War II housing boom instigated an era of timber primacy on the national forests.

The Bolle Report, named after Montana State University's Dean Arnold Bolle, documented an undeniable patterns of overcutting, regeneration failures, decimated wildlife habitat and destroyed trout fisheries. In many ways the Bolle Report was the first real evidence of the Forest Service's betrayal of the public trust and its progressive multiple-use mission promoted by Gifford Pinchot. "Multiple-use management, in fact, does not exist as the governing principle" for the agency, the Bolle Report concluded sharply.

The Bolle Report, and the Forest Service's continued mismanagement of the national forests in Montana and Idaho, led to the famous Church Hearings and guidelines, the Randolph Bill, and ultimately the National Forest Management Act and the decade-long debacle of national forest planning.

These congressionally-mandated forest plans changed nothing in the Northern Rockies. In some cases the forest plans actually proposed doubling the historic logging rates, and established an "advance roading" strategy designed to settle the wilderness debate once and for all. Thus was the James Watt-John Crowell vision for industrial wood production on the national forests brought to life. Ironically, the agency midwife for most of these plans was then Regional Forester James Overbay, who would return to the region in 1991 as deputy chief to lead the crackdown on John Mumma and several renegade forest supervisors who said that meeting the forest plan timber targets would force them to break the law.

On top of these problems, harvesting timber in most of the Northern Rockies is an exceedingly irrational economic proposition. Unless, of course, the government is writing the checks. The Forest Service's own accounting records bear this out. From 1990 to 2005, timber sales on national forest lands in Montana, Idaho, and Wyoming have lost more than a billion dollars-not to mention the monumental losses in environmental values, such as salmon, trout, and elk habitat.

The Forest Service has gone to extraordinary lengths to justify and conceal these losses from a disbelieving public. For example:

The Gallatin and Flathead National Forests in Montana have promoted new timber sales in grizzly bear habitat in order to raise money to close other logging roads in bear habitat.

On the Idaho Panhandle Forests, the Forest Service justified new timber sales and roads in one watershed in order to raise funds to restore the damage done to another watershed by previous clearcutting.

The Clearwater National Forest in Idaho (perhaps the most landslide prone forest in the country) boasted in their forest plan that the clearcutting of the current forest would yield a kind of super-forest of tomorrow, where trees will grow to 600 feet tall.

The Boise Forest claims its aggressive salvage sale program in roadless land is actually a forest health operation designed to preserve the wild character of western Idaho forests.

And believe it or not, that's the way natural resources bureaucracy really works in the Northern Rockies. These incidents are the rule not the exception. For 40 years in the Northern Rockies the Forest Service has simply been cutting by numbers, meeting targets, building its budget, pleasing local politicians.

After repeated attempts at reform, and little success in the courts, by the late 1980s it appeared that the etiology behind the overcutting of the national forests in the Northern Rockies might be beyond therapy.

* * *

The impetus for corrective change in the region came from the parallel development of two forces: grassroots environmental groups, such as the Alliance for the Wild Rockies, and the internal Forest Service reform movement.

The evidence of unraveling ecosystems in the Northern Rockies had been steadily compiled by agency scientists, but it was buried year after year by obedient line officers, left to fester in the files of the Forest Service until the early 1990s when the whole thing burst open like an infected wound.

First came the so-called Sundance Letter to Forest Service chief F. Dale Robertson in which the supervisors of Region 1 forests described the Forest Service as "an out-of-control agency" that had strayed from its multiple-use mission by devoting too much staff and budget to timber sales and roads. This letter gave birth to an internal Forest Service reform movement, but it came back to haunt the careers of those who signed it as they became the targets of hardliners inside the agency and right-wing politicians looking for convenient scapegoats for the depleted resources of the region.

At the same moment, timber sales in the Northern Rockies began to bottom out, dropping 30 to 50 percent below forest plan targets. Several factors contributed to the decline in sale volume, including the overcutting of private lands on the checkboard landscape which triggered a moratorium on federal sales in overstressed watersheds, grossly exaggerated yield tables, regeneration failures, and conflicts with grizzlies, trout, and elk. Of course, the real problem was that the forest plan targets themselves were unsustainable. On some forests, such as the Lolo, Flathead and Kootenai, the allowable sale quantities were nearly twice the sustainable logging rate when forest plan standards and guidelines were factored in-and that's if you buy the increasingly dubious notion that any rate of logging in these dry forests is ecologically sustainable.

Meanwhile, bad ecological news continued to surface with stories of phantom forests on the Kootenai, ravaged watersheds on the Clearwater, destroyed grizzly habitat on the Targhee, all deliberately leaked to environmentalists or the press by Forest Service whistleblowers. None of this washed well with the Idaho and Montana Congressional delegations, the chief's office, or then Assistant Secretary of Agriculture John Beuter, who contended that the targets were "required management objectives" that must be met, regardless of the consequences for grizzlies or trout.

Sen. Larry Craig made the delegation's concerns starkly clear in a bullying letter to Robertson: "You have a serious management problem that must be addressed. It is my hope that you will move to assure that targets are met and line officers held accountable for their targets."

Back in Missoula, John Mumma, the renegade regional forester for the Rockies, stood his ground. Mumma maintained that to meet the targets would force him and his supervisors to violate the law. This virtuous act killed his career. Mumma was publicly scolded by James Overbay and was soon informed by Associate Chief George Leonard that this position was untenable and that he could either retire or accept a directed reassignment to D.C. Mumma opted for retirement and told his compelling story to Congress.

But the crackdown didn't end there. At the insistent prodding of Craig and Senator Conrad Burns of Montana, the Office of Inspector General launched covert criminal investigations against many of the reformist supervisors. One by one the whistleblowers were forced into early retirements, transferred out of the region, or compelled into directed reassignments to desk jobs in D.C. The list of casualties is a long one: Tom Kovalicky, Bertha Gilliam, Fred Trevey, Win Green, Van Elsbernd.

And the beat goes on. The purge of Northern Rockies reformers continued through the Clinton administration with the forced retirements of Helena forest supervisor Ernie Nunn and the Custer's Curtis Bates. Now, under Bush, timber hardliners, are firmly in control of the regional office and man of the key timber producing forests in the region.

* * *

The Northern Rockies is also home to one of the intellectual bastions of the privatization movement: Bozeman, Montana. Bozeman houses both the Foundation for Research on Economics and the Environment (FREE) and the Political Economic Research Center (PERC). Both outfits contend that most environmental problems in the West, including wilderness, water, and forest management, derive from a lack of defined property rights for natural resources. This is the Second Coming of the Sagebrush Rebellion, and it advertises that the only way to save the environment is to sell it.

PERC, whose top economist once told me that if the grizzly's "present net value" dropped to zero it should be driven to extinction, regularly attacks with some ferocity the public land ideals of the progressive era, dropping subtle hints along the way about the patriotism of environmentalists. Reading their publications you could be seduced into believing that Al Gore, Leonardo DiCaprio, and the managers of Yellowstone National Park (not to mention real environmental militants like Mike Roselle and Steve Kelly) pose a bigger threat to the ecosystems of the Northern Rockies than the W. R. Grace Co. or Boise-Cascade.

There is a kind of clever cultural calculus at work in the free-market think tanks of the West that goes something like this: Environmentalists support regulations; Regulation requires Big Government; Big Government equals Socialism; Environmentalists are Socialists; Socialism is un-American; Environmentalists are un-American. This is exactly the kind of western neo-McCarthyism that plays well in the hinterlands.

FREE's John Baden, for example, gained some notoriety for his use of the watermelon as a metaphor for environmentalists: Green on the outside, red on the inside. He even produced a watermelon tie that was quite popular at gatherings of the free-marketeers, where, Windsor-knotted, they would all sip wine, toast Milton Friedman, and long for the days when the philosophy of John Locke was in its ascendancy.

Of course, many of the same corporations and foundations that support PERC and FREE also quietly fund People for the West and other more proletarian Wise-Use groups that are pursuing the property-rights cause in much more strident tones. It goes without saying that these same corporations, such as Chevron, Arco, and Amoco, stand to reap enormous economic benefits if the shock troops of the Wise-Use movement are successful in weakening federal laws and regulations.

It is a game that utilizes themes and symbols of insecurity, loaded signifiers, as my deconstructionist friends would say, that when pressed can ignite loathing and rage in a population that is terrified of change. The xenophobia card is played repeatedly by corporate-types and their agents from Cheyenne to Spokane. The rhetoric of entrenched nativism is articulated even by figures widely regarded as social liberals, such as Senator Max Baucus.

"With increasing frequency, out-of-state members think they know what is best for Montana and the American West," Baucus said after his wilderness bill failed to skate through Congress in 1992. He blamed the defeat on the machinations of Hollywood celebrities, English majors, and eastern politicians.

Another example of how the subtle manipulation of images can distort reality is the rapid demise of the Yellowstone Vision document, a timid and inoffensive attempt by the Park Service and Forest Service to establish a framework for managing the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. For the privatizers and the Wise-Use movement, the Vision document became an objective correlative for everything that was wrong with ecosystem management: It was a proposal hatched by radical scientists, environmentalists, and bureaucrats designed to lock up everything near Yellowstone, including private lands.

Naturally, nothing could be further from the truth. After all, the Vision document was generated under the first Bush administration. But highly paid Wise-uUse provocateurs (one was a former lobbyist for Saudi Arabia) transformed the real anxieties of loggers, ranchers and and others who work at the margins of the Western resource economy into an extreme animus at environmentalists and the Park Service. Ultimately, these vitriolic attacks destroyed not only the Vision document, but also the careers of nearly everyone associated with it, including Lorraine Mintzmeyer, regional director of the Park Service, whose directed reassignment to Philedelphia was apparently engineered by John Sununu himself, then G.H.W Bush's chief of staff.

As in most of the West, politicians and business leaders tout the Northern Rockies as a region of self-made men. This is a lie, of course. Indeed, it is the oligarchy of large corporations that continues to reap the liberal benefits of federal subsidies and public resources. These same companies regularly shaft and exploit their own laborers. Don't worry about our workers, Anaconda Copper and Champion International said, they're the rugged individuals of the American West.

A kind of corporation imperialism has been played out in the North Rockies over the past 100 years, a strategy for control, power and commodification of cultures and resources that started with a campaign of genocide against the native peoples of the region and is now ending with a mop-up assault on the region's native ecosystem.

In the North Rockies, free enterprise was given free reign, backed by government guns, dams and subsidies. To assume that the same free-market forces can correct this history of abuse and annihilation is to engage in a kind of economic surrealism. Want a reality check? Take a flight over the "private" timber lands of northwestern Montana and Idaho, the ecological equivalent of electroshock therapy for the uninitiated.

* * *

Last summer I took a stomach-churning plane ride over the battered Mission Range in northwestern Montana. As the tiny Twin-engine Otter rose and plummeted through the vicious air pockets above the rugged mountains, I looked down on a legacy of lesions on the landscape, 640-acre chunks of raw, stripped forest, and felt my pulse pounding at the perfidy of Plum Creek Timber. Laid open below me was evidence of the corporation's audacious acquisitiveness, a 30-year-long search and destroy mission on their own lands aimed soley at turning trees into fast cash. Grizzly and millworker, bull trout and timber faller, be damned.

Company officials brazenly admitted that they were basically liquidating their own forest holdings, cutting trees at twice the sustained-yield rate. Plum Creek's chief executive for the Northern Region boasted in 1990: "We have never said we were on a sustained-yield program. Let's get to the heart of it. Sure it is extensively logged, but what is wrong with that?"

And Plum Creek wasn't alone. The other beneficiaries of the federal largesse known as the Northern Pacific Rairoad Lands Grant (Champion International, Potlatch, and Boise-Cascade) joined in the clearcutting frenzy. Champion, eager to raise cash to build new mills and plants in the Southeast, blitzed its 800,000 acres at an even faster rate and then turned around and sold its land holdings to Plum Creek and its mills to Stimson Lumber, a Portland-based log exporter.

After annihilating its own land, driving dozens of small millowners out of business, exporting millions of board feet to Asian markets, and other egregious enterprises, Plum Creek got a big dividend: the opportunity to cut even more on the national forests. The corporation is now the driving force behind calls to open more roadless areas to logging.

With its acquisition of Champion International's lands, Plum Creek positioned itself to be the sole timber operator in western Montana. The problem was its image. Unless the suppurating lesions on its public reputation were spruced up, the state of Montana might actually enact a state forest practices act. Or even worse there might be a move in the Congress to take back the railroad grant lands from Plum Creek entirely. Such a move is called revestment and Congress not only has the power to make such as seizure, it also has the moral obligation to do so.

So corporate officials finally admitted that something indeed had gone wrong. Sure, they'd made some bad moves in the past, but these lapses were more the fault of the times, an imperfect corporate understanding of ecosystem management, than of any ill intent. With more than 95 percent of its own forests logged off in Montana, Plum Creek Timber is now prepared to be penitent.

Plum Creek's "environmental forestry" practices now occur under the imprimatur of new forestry guru-for-hire Jerry Franklin, who has taught the company how to feather the edges of its clearcuts and to leave behind more spindly trees per acre than Bill Arthur, the Sierra Club poobah who infamously clearcut his own land in eastern Washington and compounded the outrage by selling the timber to a log exporter. Highgrading with a conscience? Enlightened deforestation?

Plum Creek is not the only company to seek out a corporate facelift. Potlatch, long regarded as the Darth Vader of Idaho forest lands, boldly announced that it too is changing its ways and is planning to enter into an operational compact with the Forest Service to merge their Geographical Information Systems in an attempt to better manage the totality of the checkerboard landscape. Natch.

Plum Creek and Potlatch have also hired PR firms to spin stories of how their timber practices now harmonize with the needs of bull trout, wolves, and grizzly bears. All this gives new meaning to the term chop-logic.

* * *

How's this for a conundrum: Idaho and Montana remain wild because they haven't passed state-wide wilderness bills. Think about it. In the West, the political objective of wilderness legislation is not so much to protect as to release, not so much to preserve as to secure land for logging and development unencumbered by the wilderness issue. Environmentalists bear serious complicity in this manner.

For decades the organizing principle of wildland politics in the Northern Rockies has been what I call non-confrontational incrementalism. Wilderness proposals were carefully calibrated to the prevailing political balance of the region, and sought only to draw protective lines around those roadless areas that lacked significant timber, range, and mineral resources. Wilderness on the rocks, my friend Howie Wolke calls it.

Ultimately, this approach collided against biological reality and the growing grassroots environmental movement, which sought to use wilderness as a means to protect ecosystems. The top heavy national green groups, however, failed to alter their historic approach and in 1990 signed off on the Lolo-Kootenai Accords, a compromised wilderness proposal for the two western Montana forests that contained "hard release" language designed to shield logging in non-wilderness roadless areas from legal challenges. The language, which later surfaced in Max Baucus's proposed wilderness bill, was developed by timber industry lawyer Steve Quarrles and attorneys for the (drum roll, please) National Wildlife Federation.

The Lolo-Kootenai Accords created upheavals and fractures in the environmental movement in the Northern Rockies, left the leadership of traditional groups riven by internal dissent, and, most importantly, led to the rise of the Alliance for the Wild Rockies and the development of the Northern Rockies Ecosystem Protection Act, a 20-million-acre multi-state wilderness and wildlands restoration proposal. NREPA evolved as the striking counterpoint to decades of state-wide, rocks-and-ice wilderness proposals that traded off ecological integrity and big wilderness concepts for favored hiking trails and political expediency.

Not surprisingly, the national environmental groups actively lobbied against introduction of NREPA. The Sierra Club even threatened to excommunicate renegade Club groups and chapters in Montana, Illinois, and New York that were supporting the bill.

Still, the political agenda for wilderness in Montana and Idaho continues to be set by the state's congressional delegations, which ritually offer up bills that release more than 70 percent of the remaining wildlands to development, fail to secure water rights for designated wilderness areas, and contain questionable release language that may limit citizens' access to the courts.

Of course, some environmentalists, desperate any kind of crumbs, argue that these kinds of bills should be supported in order to secure at least some protection for threatened areas. But the statewide wilderness release bills lose any attractiveness they might have on the surface when viewed in the context of what is being lost. These measures are legislative anachronisms, throwbacks to the days of ecological segregationism, when old-growth forests were excluded from wilderness areas as a matter of political fiat.

While environmental groups in the Northern Rockies appear to be congealing around NREPA, a bitter residue of tension remains, particularly in the leadership of the national organizations. The problem for the reactionary forces in the Sierra Club, National Wildlife Federation, and National Audubon, the traditional envoys of incrementalism, is a profound one: How to affect the appearance of thinking big, while continuing to act small.

The solution, as crafted by Audubon's Brock Evans and the Club's Larry Mehlhaf, is to publically endorse NREPA, do nothing to support it, then quietly back the puny piecemeal bills, anyway. This is the intrinsic inertia of incrementalism at work.

* * *

A few final thoughts about the grizzly.

There is no question that the grizzly is in worse shape now than when it was listed as a threatened species 30 years ago. Its habitat has been steadily eroded by hundreds of thousands of acres of clearcuts, roads, subdivisions, and oil developments. Each year dozens are shot with impunity just for acting like bears. Others are regularly tracked down, trapped, weighed, prodded, radio-collared, linked up with global positioning satellites, relocated when they stray beyond political boundaries, and injected with tranquilizers that when mixed with the destruction coming down around them like a bad hallucination simply drive many bears insane.

Among other gross deficiencies, the Fish and Wildlife Service's recovery plan for the bear, devised in Clinton time, represents a stunning negation of the nature of the grizzly. Compromise and consensus, the recurrent mantras of the Democrats and their green automatons, are not only alien to the bear, they are lethal to is future as a species.

And now under Bush the bill has come due for the great bear. The Yellowstone grizzly, clinging to a perilous existence in the region of the park, was in the winter of 2007 magically deemed recovered and was duly stripped of the meager protections it had enjoyed under the Endangered Species Act. And now the bear haters have their sights set on delisting the dwindling population of bears that prowl the Northern Continental Divide as well.

Have conservationists failed in one of our most important domestic missions? Hell, yes we have. By consistently conforming to the accepted political reality and repeatedly endorsing state wilderness proposals that militate against the very kind of dramatic change needed to protect the bear.

The grizzly is not a symbol of wildness; it is wildness personified. In the Northern Rockies, a "wilderness" without at least the hope of being traversed by the great bear is not truly wild. The ultimate test of the vitality of the region and the American environmental movement will be whether or not we can save the grizzly and its habitat. NREPA may not be enough, but its head and its heart are in the right place.

In the end, however, I believe we're going to have to draw a line. A line from Challis, Idaho, to Whitefish, Montana. Call it a radius. Within this circle beats the wild heart of North America. It's still not too late to save it all.

* * *

Late June, Nez Perce Creek, Yellowstone. I was following closely the path the renegade Nez Perce took 115 years ago, a trail that allowed them to leave behind the incompetent and homicidal Howard. Even then Yellowstone, already a national park, stood as a sanctuary of freedom and wilderness.

Bruise-colored stormclouds piled up over the Madison Range. I dropped down to a small bench by the stream to await the onslaught of the storm and watched the Yellowstone cutthroat angle themselves against the swirling current before rising to snatch newly hatched salmonflies. Jolted by thunder, I looked up the ridge and caught sight of my first Yellowstone grizzly: a young bear standing on a downed fir tree, digging playfully at the decaying wood. As lightning bolts shattered the sky, she rose on her hind legs, and turned her dished face towards me, her reddish coat flecked with gold, an image of bristling defiance.

A damn fool, all I could think of then was capturing a photo of the grizzly in this wild and distant place, but I stumbled and fell into the creek trying to unsheathe my camera. The cold current tugged at my legs, pulling me into the deep pool where the cutthroat had been feeding. When I finally regained my footing, dragged my pack out of the frigid stream and looked back up the slope, she was gone: vanished into the amber light.

Jeffrey St. Clair is the author of Been Brown So Long It Looked Like Green to Me: the Politics of Nature and Grand Theft Pentagon. His newest book is End Times: the Death of the Fourth Estate, co-written with Alexander Cockburn. He can be reached at: sitka@comcast.net


 

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