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14 Sep 2004 @ 14:34, by Sandi Hunter
WSWS : News & Analysis : Middle East : Iraq
A daily toll of US atrocities in Iraq
By the Editorial Board
14 September 2004
The cold-blooded slaughter of civilians in Haifa Street in central Baghdad on Sunday underscores the completely criminal character of the US occupation of Iraq. Day after day, scores of Iraqi civilians are being massacred in concerted offensive aimed at terrorising the population and stamping American control over the country in the leadup to next year’s elections.
At least 13 people were killed and 55 injured when a US attack helicopter fired on unarmed demonstrators who were dancing around the remains of a burnt-out Bradley Armoured Vehicle on Haifa Street. Among the dead were a 12-year-old girl and a 28-year-old Palestinian journalist Mazen al-Tameizi, who was reporting on fighting in the area for the Al Arabiya television channel.
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Vote tampering feared in US presidential race
By Peter Daniels
14 September 2004
Only seven weeks remain until Election Day in the United States, and the charged atmosphere surrounding the reelection campaign of the Bush administration has focused increasing attention on voting and vote-counting procedures that have led millions to lose confidence that their ballots will be fairly cast and tabulated.
The vote-counting suspicions are centered on the continued use of antiquated equipment in some localities, the introduction in others of electronic voting systems that provide no paper trail for checking vote totals, and the fact that, according to one advocacy organization, the central tabulators used in 30 states to count up to 2 million votes at once are susceptible to hacking and vote-tampering (See: “Consumer organisation highlights security hole in US vote-counting system”).
Following the vote-counting debacle in Florida in 2000 that led to the installation of George Bush by a 5-4 majority of the US Supreme Count, Congress passed the misleadingly named “Help America Vote Act.”
WSWS : News & Analysis : Middle East : Iraq
A daily toll of US atrocities in Iraq
By the Editorial Board
14 September 2004
The cold-blooded slaughter of civilians in Haifa Street in central Baghdad on Sunday underscores the completely criminal character of the US occupation of Iraq. Day after day, scores of Iraqi civilians are being massacred in concerted offensive aimed at terrorising the population and stamping American control over the country in the leadup to next year’s elections.
At least 13 people were killed and 55 injured when a US attack helicopter fired on unarmed demonstrators who were dancing around the remains of a burnt-out Bradley Armoured Vehicle on Haifa Street. Among the dead were a 12-year-old girl and a 28-year-old Palestinian journalist Mazen al-Tameizi, who was reporting on fighting in the area for the Al Arabiya television channel.
A column of US armoured vehicles had moved into the street around 3am and set off stun grenades, provoking fierce clashes in a neighbourhood known for its hostility to the US occupation. The Bradley Fighting Vehicle was crippled by a car bomb about 7am, forcing the crew to flee after an exchange of fire that left at least six US soldiers wounded. As the US forces retreated, a jubilant crowd gathered on the street.
Mazen and cameraman Seif Fouad captured the scene on camera. As they were filming, a US helicopter appeared, flying low and, without warning, fired on the crowd. The footage showed the armoured vehicle exploding and Tameizi stumbling away from the blast, shouting “I am dying, I am dying”. Rajih Khalil, a friend of Tameizi, told the British-based Telegraph: “People trying to help us were wounded or ran away. After a minute, the helicopters came back and fired again. They came three or four times.”
A US spokesman dismissed reports of civilian deaths, declaring that the helicopters had “fired upon anti-Iraqi forces and the Bradley, preventing the loss of sensitive equipment and weapons”. The military later claimed that “insurgents in the vicinity of the vehicle” had fired on the helicopters. Either way, this wanton disregard for the lives of innocent civilians simply means that the Pentagon regards all Iraqis as “insurgents”, “terrorists” and “anti-Iraqi forces”.
The tragic events in Haifa Street are not an isolated incident. Following the end of last month’s protracted siege of Najaf, the US military has intensified its operations against major strongholds of anti-American resistance—Fallujah, Ramadi, Sadr City in Baghdad, Tal Afar and others. The only difference between what happened in central Baghdad on Sunday and indiscriminate attacks elsewhere in Iraq is that the slaughter was captured on video footage.
More than 60 people were killed in Iraq on the same day. In all, 37 died in Baghdad and another 10, including women and children, in Ramadi when US tanks and helicopters opened fire on a residential district. Around 2,000 US and Iraqi troops, backed by armoured vehicles and F-16 fighters launched a major predawn assault on Tal Afar to end a bitter two-week siege of the northern town. After the attack American forces sealed off the area and refused to allow desperate residents back into the town. But an Associated Press report described scenes of devastation, with bodies lying in the streets and buildings reduced to rubble.
The US attacks continued yesterday. For the sixth day running, US warplanes bombarded the city of Fallujah, long a symbol of Iraqi resistance. At the end of the day, a US military spokesman repeated the same mantra—“precision strikes” had been launched against “terrorist safe houses”. These bare-faced lies were denounced by officials at the Fallujah General Hospital who explained that one of their ambulances had been hit, killing the driver, a paramedic and five patients.
Hospital director Rafayi Hayad al-Esawi told the British-based Independent newspaper: “The conditions here are miserable—an ambulance was bombed, three houses destroyed and men and women killed. The American army has no morals.”
What is taking place in Iraq on a daily basis constitutes a terrible war crime. One has to go back to the Vietnam War or to the atrocities carried out by Nazi armies in Europe to find a parallel for such a systematic slaughter of civilians. The Bush administration is resorting the same methods as colonial oppressors down through the ages: punitive raids and massacres aimed at instilling fear and terror in a population that is overwhelmingly hostile to the US occupation and its Iraqi puppet regime.
The current military offensive is a deliberate response to the rising tide of armed opposition throughout the country that has turned one town after another into no-go zones for the US military and its allies. In chilling statements last Friday, senior White House officials bluntly spelled out Washington’s determination to crush any resistance prior to national elections due next January.
US National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice told the media that the US military would “keep the insurgents at bay. We’ve been doing a lot of damage to the safe houses of terrorists and will do more.” Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld warned: “We know what will take place in Fallujah, and that is that it will be restored to something under the control of the Iraqi government eventually. What we don’t know is whether it will be done peacefully or by force. But one way or another, it will happen.”
In emphasising Washington’s determination to regain recover the no-go areas, US Secretary of State Colin Powell declared on Sunday to NBC’s “Meet the Press”: “When the insurgency is put down, what the people of the world will see are Iraqis in charge of their own destiny... This is not the time to get weak at the knees or faint about it, but to drive on and finish the work that we started.”
The language is truly Orwellian: indiscriminate attacks on civilians are termed the destruction of terrorist safe houses, the levelling of Fallujah is justified as returning the town to the control of the Iraqi government, and all of this is described as putting “Iraqis in charge of their own destiny”. It recalls the US military’s infamous remark during Vietnam War: to save the village, we had to destroy it.
Not a word of protest has been uttered by the presidential contender John Kerry or any of the Democrats against this slaughter. It is not even an issue in the election campaign. Nor has any section of the American media issued a protest. The war crimes are being carried out in the name of the American people with the complete complicity of the entire political establishment which, whatever tactical disagreements may exist, is committed to the neo-colonial subjugation of the Iraqi people and the country’s vast reserves of oil.
These barbaric actions must be condemned by working people around the world. The demand must be raised for the immediate and unconditional withdrawal of all US and allied forces from Iraq, the payment of reparations to compensate the Iraqi people for their immense suffering and the prosecution for war crimes of all those who planned and executed the invasion of Iraq.
See Also:
US military launches bloody attacks on rebel strongholds in Iraq
[11 September 2004]
The US sinks deeper into the Iraqi quagmire
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WSWS : News & Analysis : North America
Vote tampering feared in US presidential race
By Peter Daniels
14 September 2004
Only seven weeks remain until Election Day in the United States, and the charged atmosphere surrounding the reelection campaign of the Bush administration has focused increasing attention on voting and vote-counting procedures that have led millions to lose confidence that their ballots will be fairly cast and tabulated.
The vote-counting suspicions are centered on the continued use of antiquated equipment in some localities, the introduction in others of electronic voting systems that provide no paper trail for checking vote totals, and the fact that, according to one advocacy organization, the central tabulators used in 30 states to count up to 2 million votes at once are susceptible to hacking and vote-tampering (See: “Consumer organisation highlights security hole in US vote-counting system”).
Following the vote-counting debacle in Florida in 2000 that led to the installation of George Bush by a 5-4 majority of the US Supreme Count, Congress passed the misleadingly named “Help America Vote Act.”
Among the provisions of this legislation was the appropriation of federal funds to states for upgrading voting equipment. Most of the money was not distributed until June 2004, however, and the states have until 2006 to install the new voting machines. As a result, according to a report in the Washington Post, about 32 million voters in 19 states will still use the punch-card ballots that led to the “hanging chads” in Florida four years ago.
Some 72 percent of Ohio’s voters, for instance, will be using punch-card ballots this year, and eight other closely contested states also continue to use this procedure.
The percentage of voters using electronic machines is expected to more than double in comparison to the last presidential election, but the new computerized equipment in most cases does not provide any paper record alongside the electronic vote. Critics have pointed out that the countless automated teller machines around the country provide receipts, but there is no similar protection for voters that would provide proof that their ballots have been correctly recorded.
Fears of vote-tampering and vote suppression are far from exaggerated or imaginary. The most elementary democratic procedures, including a provision that would allow voters to register and cast their ballots at the same time, on Election Day, are not even considered by the Democratic or Republican politicians. Voting procedures remain a chaotic patchwork based on laws that differ for each of the 50 states and the District of Columbia. Procedures for independent and working class candidates to obtain ballot status vary similarly, and in most cases are prohibitive.
The Help America Vote Act will no more effectively extend and defend the right to vote than the much-touted campaign finance “reform” legislation sponsored by senators McCain and Feingold several years ago has loosened the grip of the super-rich on US election campaigns. Despite the promises of the big business politicians, every supposed reform only succeeds in creating new loopholes and new means for maintaining the “dollar democracy” in which wealth determines the outcome of the vote.
The 2002 bill, for instance, introduced voter identification requirements. According to a “compromise” between Republicans and Democrats, first-time voters who register by mail must include an acceptable ID or show such identification at the polls. States are permitted to add additional requirements. Florida and Missouri, for instance, are among 17 states that require all voters to produce identification when they vote. Many poorer voters have no driver’s license or other acceptable ID.
Another stipulation in the 2002 bill is the requirement that states provide provisional ballots to voters whose names aren’t on the rolls when they arrive to cast their ballots. Voters would then be able to cast a ballot, and officials could determine their eligibility afterward. One problem, however, is that many states refuse to count a ballot if it is cast in the wrong precinct or congressional district, thus effectively disenfranchising a voter because of an official error. In a recent Chicago election, less than 10 percent of 5,914 provisional ballots were counted.
States are also requiring that voters casting provisional ballots fill out complex affidavits. The time-consuming paperwork amounts to a new kind of literacy test that will have the effect of discouraging voters.
In general, the Republicans are spearheading efforts such as these to suppress the votes of poor people and minority workers, in the expectation that most of these would be cast for the Democrats. The Democrats, however, are carrying out their own attacks on democratic rights, in the form of efforts to deny ballot status to candidates of the Socialist Equality Party and others running in opposition to the two major parties. Though Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry has issued a mild statement warning of vote suppression, the Democrats are neither willing nor able to appeal to the millions of workers who are being effectively disenfranchised.
The denial of the right to vote to convicted felons is one of the major techniques of political disenfranchisement. Alabama Republican Party Chairman Marty Connors did not mince words when he declared last year, “As frank as I can be, we’re opposed to [restoring voting rights] because felons don’t tend to vote Republican.”
With the explosive growth of the US prison population in the past 20 years, this is no small question. Forty-eight states deny the right to vote to prison inmates, 33 of these states continue to deny the vote to parolees, and 29 deny it to those on probation. Fourteen states permanently forbid felons from voting, even after they have served their sentences and are no longer on probation or parole. The total of disenfranchised citizens is about 4.7 million. As a result of these provisions, 13 percent of African-American men are denied the right to vote.
While these efforts at disenfranchisement are more prevalent in the South, they are by no means confined to the states of the old Confederacy. In Ohio, for instance, the Prison Reform Advocacy Center has sued the state, asking a federal judge to remedy a situation in which local election boards have given false information to released felons trying to have their voting rights restored. When procedures were tested recently, 21 of Ohio’s 88 election boards gave wrong information to individuals posing as felons who inquired about the procedure for registering. Some boards falsely said that the felons would have to first complete parole. Others claimed incorrectly that documents proving they had been released from prison were required.
Florida is a major focus of attention in the upcoming election, given its pivotal role in Bush’s narrow “victory” in the Electoral College in 2000. Earlier this summer, civil rights advocates raised an alarm in connection with Florida’s latest efforts to purge felons from the lists of registered voters. Florida’s governor is Jeb Bush, the brother of the president.
The Florida Secretary of State, Glenda Hood, was accused of implementing a plan whose methodology resulted in leaving Hispanic voters, who are more likely to vote Republican, on the rolls, while purging many thousands of black voters.
It was also found that more than 2,100 voters were incorrectly listed on the felon purge list, where Democrats outnumbered Republicans by 3 to 1. Ms. Hood—appointed by Governor Bush to succeed the notorious Katharine Harris, whose rulings contributed to the theft of the 2000 election—claimed ignorance and ditched the felon list. The governor called the list an oversight. The Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights under Law and other groups, however, remained suspicious. “Florida is absolutely committed to blocking voters,” said Barbara Arnwine, the director of the Lawyers Committee.
The felon list is only one of the methods being utilized. According to New York Times columnist Bob Herbert, “the smell of voter suppression coming out of Florida is getting stronger.” Herbert pointed out that the Florida Department of Law Enforcement has sent dozens of armed state troopers into the homes of elderly black voters in the city of Orlando in recent months, allegedly pursuing an investigation of voter fraud. The pretext for this obvious attempt at intimidation is an allegation involving absentee ballots that arose during the city’s mayoral election six months ago.
“The officers were armed and in plain clothes,” Herbert reported. “For elderly African-American voters, who remember the terrible torment inflicted on blacks who tried to vote in the South in the 1950s and 60s, the sight of armed police officers coming into their homes to interrogate them about voting is chilling indeed.” As Herbert points out, no charges need ever emerge from this exercise. Many voters have already expressed alarm, as a result of the raids, about using absentee ballots.
The signs of voter suppression in connection with the upcoming elections demonstrate that the 2000 vote scandal was by no means a peculiar or exceptional event. Attacks on the right to vote are endemic to the US political system, and underscore the hypocrisy of the pontifications by the government and both major parties on the merits of free elections elsewhere. Even former President Jimmy Carter, recently returned from Venezuela, where he acknowledged the basic fairness of the vote that defeated the recall of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, suggested that voting procedures in the US were far inferior, and that election observers would probably refuse to even carry out similar duties in this country unless procedures were improved.
The current attacks on the right to vote can be understood only in the light of the historical record. The 15th Amendment to the US Constitution, granting the right to vote to former slaves, required a Civil War. The 19th Amendment, finally extending the right to women, was the product of nearly a century of struggle. The mass struggles of the labor and civil rights movements were needed before the days of poll taxes, literacy tests and other means of denying the vote to Southern blacks were ended.
For the past quarter-century, however, there has been a growing onslaught aimed at undoing the effects of earlier reforms. There is no constituency within the ruling establishment to defend the right to vote, just as there is no constituency to defend other democratic rights. The enormous growth of social polarization in recent decades has made it impossible for the ruling elite to live with many of its previous concessions on democratic rights. Even elections in which only 50 percent of the population votes and tens of millions of workers and poor people are too disgusted and alienated to cast ballots for the two major parties are no longer considered “safe,” and more active methods of voter suppression and tampering are required.
It will take massive political struggles to defeat these new attacks on democratic rights today, struggles that pose the need for the international unity of the working class against the profit system that breeds inequality and is incompatible with elementary democratic rights.
See Also:
US voting machines: Will 2004 elections be electronically rigged?
[24 December 2003]
Background to the 2000 US election: Florida’s legacy of voter disenfranchisement
[9 April 2001]
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