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M. K. BHADRAKUMAR Iran to hit Israel hard with smart power

August 3, 2024

Mourners gathered at the Imam Muhammad Abd-al Wahhab Mosque for Friday prayers before the burial of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh, Doha, Qatar, August 2, 2024

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(The re-entry of Mohammad Javad Zarif, as a chief Iranian negotiator for the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, otherwise known as the “Iran Nuclear Deal”. Zarif got his phd at the University of Denver’s (then) Graduate School of International Studies [where I taught – he was before my time there])

INDIAN PUNCHLINE

POSTED ONAUGUST 3, 2024 BY M. K. BHADRAKUMAR

Iran to hit Israel hard with smart power

Amidst the cascading tensions in the Middle East following the assassination of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh by Israel and vows of  ‘revenge’ in Tehran, the new government under President Massoud Pezeshkian, sworn in on Tuesday, made its first move on Thursday. Former Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif was appointed as the ‘Strategic Deputy’ of the Iranian president entrusting him with the responsibility of the Center for Strategic Studies (CSS).

The CSS is the research arm of the president’s office. Zarif’s appointment signifies his return to the foreign policy arena and Pezeshkian’s high estimation of his unique credentials to chariot Tehran’s Track 1.5 diplomacy.

Zarif’s long exposure to the American policymaking circles during his extended tenure as ambassador to the UN and his active social networking in New York are his strategic assets. Zarif is a familiar face and is highly regarded in the western capitals.

Read more…

Finland: From Kekkonen’s Neutrality to a NATO Frontline State Facing Russia – 2

July 27, 2024

Finland, Summer, 2011. Between Kaivoksela and Louhela in Vantaa (R. Prince photo)

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Referring to Finnish entry into NATO as “a monumental shift in European security structure, Pascal Lottaz, organizer of the podcast “Neutrality Studies, queried, in a recent interview with Finnish economist, Tuomas Matinen, “How did we go from Finnish neutrality to unfettered U.S. base building in less than two years? “

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Not surprisingly, since joined NATO, Finland’s relationship with Russia has continued to spiral downward. A political boil has been lanced and with it a turrent of anti-Russian propaganda of the cheapest and most xenophobic variety has been unleashed in the country ; the Finnish media daily bombards its readers and subscribers with daily doses of Russophobia.

Don’t expect this anti-Russian hysteria to end soon as it a part of a bigger picture of Washington’s plans to bleed Russia dry, to unseat its president, Vladimir Putin, and at least according to some of the more radical anti-Russian analyses, to engineer the partition of Russia into smaller, “more manageable” (for U.S. financial and corporate interests). That such a plan is going nowhere, does not seem to have made a dent – either in Washington or Helsinki.

In fact, Finland’s embrace of NATO is poorly timed. It comes at a moment where Russian reconstruction is in full bloom and growing stronger by the month. To the contrary, it is both NATO’s and Washington’s influence that is waning. If Finland “read the tea leaves” accurately in 1944 (to be discussed below), in 2024, it seems to have read them incorrectlyas it is partnering with a party in decline, increasingly unable to guarantee (for many reasons) the security umbrella it promises to Finland.

The new strategic alliance, pushing Finland head first into close strategic cooperation with Washington and NATO is a part of a larger NATO military build up that includes what are now the presence of  a constellation of U.S. military bases in the Nordic Countries. With opening itself up to 15 new U.S. military bases on its soil, Finland has “transitioned” from a model of neutrality, to, along with Poland and the former Soviet Baltic States), becoming Washington’s dobberman pincher.

In more ways than one, with the ratification – unanimously supported by the Finnish Parliament – of the

In total, Norway, Sweden, and Finland have opened 36 military bases for US forces and weapons. The agreements are bilateral, i.e., between the US and the individual country, and not a NATO agreement. The billions that Washington will have to spend to service, maintain these bases will only add that much more to the U.S. already bloated military budget which “officially” stands at $820 billion but is probably much more in actual fact. Read more…

Finland: From Kekkonen’s Neutrality to a NATO Frontline State Facing Russia

July 26, 2024

The fifteen military bases that Finland has offered the USA  throughout the country as Finland sells its soul. (See circled areas). In total, Norway, Sweden, and Finland have opened 36 military bases for US forces and weapons. The agreements are bilateral, i.e., between the US and the individual country, and not a NATO agreement.

 

 

 

Agreed Facilities and Areas

  • Ivalo, Border Guard Base (military use facilities and areas)
  • Kuopio-Rissala, Karelia Air Command Air Base
  • Niinisalo Garrison and Pohjankangas-Hämeenkangas Training Areas
  • Parkano Military Storage Area
  • Raasepori Garrison and Syndalen Training Area
  • Rovaniemi, Lapland air Command Air Bse and Jaeger Brigade Garrison
  • Skinnarvik Military Storage Area
  • Tamela Military Storage Area
  • Tampere-Pirkkala, Satakunta Air Command Air Base
  • Tervola Military Storage Area
  • Jyväskylä-Tikkakoski, Air Force Academy Air Base
  • Upinniemi Navy Base and Garrison in Kirkkonummi including Russarö Island
  • Veitsiluoto Military Storage Area
  • Vekaranjärvi Garrison and Pahkajärvi Training Area
(Source: Agreement on Defense Cooperation Between the Government of the Republic of Finland and the Government of the Unites States of America, Annex A p.37)

 

Finland approves defense agreement with US

US, Finland sign defense cooperation agreement

New Defense Agreement Gives US Access to Several Military Areas in Finnish Lapland

Swedish Bases To Be Opened To U.S. Forces

American forces enter the North with free access to 36 military bases.

Arrested for pro-Palestinian protesting, this Denver man declined a plea deal before mostly winning at his day in court Merrill “Arnie” Carter brought his message for a ceasefire in front of a jury. The Denverite: July 15, 2024

July 15, 2024
Arrested for pro-Palestinian protesting, this Denver man declined a plea deal before mostly winning at his day in court
Merrill “Arnie” Carter brought his message for a ceasefire in front of a jury.
A man in a black cap and a colorful keffiyeh around his neck purses his lips, emotionally, as he looks past the microphone in his hand.
Merrill “Arnie” Carter sits with supporters onstage at the Unitarian Society of Denver in Capitol Hill, during a press conference about an upcoming trial for his arrest at a pro-Palestine protest last December. July 10, 2024.
Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

“I was, at one time going to consider taking a plea [deal],” he said from the First Unitarian Society of Denver’s stage. “Then one thing after another in Gaza. The bread massacre … the 6-year-old girl that got killed by an Israeli tank. One disaster after another. And I just became actually very angry.”

On Dec. 3, 2023, Carter joined a protest organized by Jewish Voice for Peace, which shut down Speer Boulevard to call out the Jewish National Fund’s Global Conference for Israel happening at the convention center nearby.

The protest was one of many following Hamas’ attack on Oct. 7, where the group killed over 1,200 people and took hundreds of hostages, according to Israeli officials. Since then, tens of thousands of Palestinians have been killed or wounded in Gaza by Israeli forces.

It turned out to be less black and white. Carter went to court, beat three of the four charges and ended up with similar penalties as his compatriots, all while keeping the message for a ceasefire front and center. His willingness to stand before a jury may ripple beyond this moment.

Merrill “Arnie” Carter and Rob Prince can be seen standing in the middle of protestors with arms bound together in the intersection of Speer Boulevard and Champa Street, protesting the Jewish National Fund’s annual Global Conference for Israel happening across the street. Dec. 3, 2023.Eli Imadali for Denverite and CPR

Carter describes himself as a ‘working class guy from Denver.’

He grew up in Park Hill, he said, when people like his blue-collar parents could afford it.

“I saw how my family struggled. I saw how people of color in Park Hill struggle even more,” he told us as he walked into the Lindsey-Flanigan Courthouse on Thursday. “I see how marginalized people are cast aside and thrown away and it happens all over.”

It was with that angst that he got involved in activism. He’s been a staple at protests and vigils for years, and said he could not look away as the civilian Palestinian death toll grew. This wasn’t his first arrest doing something he thought was right.

In December, Carter was arrested as other protesters formed what’s known as a “sleeping dragon,” locking their arms together in PVC and chicken wire to occupy the intersection and slow police’s attempts to move them out of the street.

Carter was standing nearby, chained to his buddy, Rob Prince, with what Prince described as a metal bike chain that he could break with his hands. They remained in the street after police officers ordered the crowd to leave. Carter, everyone acknowledged during his trial, followed officers’ orders to leave the road after the crowd had dispersed, the sleeping dragon was dismantled and they asked him directly.

He was charged with obstructing a public street, failing to obey a police order, interfering with police and possessing “obstruction equipment.” That last charge is a subsection of law prohibiting dangerous weapons, but specifically refers to gear like the sleeping dragon that might be used to block a roadway.

A man and a woman walk towards the doors to a building adorned with a sign that reads "courthouse," holding hands with their backs to the camera.
Arnie and Rolina Carter walk into Denver’s Lindsey-Flanigan Courthouse before Arnie’s his first day in court, for an arrest related to a pro-Palestinian protest in December. July 11, 2024.Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

This is a fairly rare look at what happens after protesters are arrested.

While the city has faced an ongoing parade of lawsuits brought by protesters who’ve claimed police brutality since 2020, we don’t always get to see how protesters are treated when they’re on trial.

As few as 1 percent of Colorado’s criminal cases go to trial. Many people take plea deals, like those accepted by people arrested with Carter. Some of the highest-profile arrests of protesters in 2020 ended with dropped charges.

Civil rights attorney Tyrone Glover, who represented Carter in court, said state charges for protesting do tend to get dropped. Denver’s city attorneys tend not to let those go.

“They go to trial more often than other jurisdictions, but still they don’t go to trial all that often,” he told us.

In court, city attorneys tried to keep the conversation focused on what Carter actually did, not the statement he intended to make.

They argued he was connected to the sleeping dragon via the bike lock. They pointed out that he didn’t leave during officers’ initial warnings. They tried to get Carter to admit his purpose that day was to block traffic.

Two people embrace in a big hug in a bright hallway, surrounded by people looking on and smiling.
Merrill “Arnie” Carter’s supporters greet him with love as he prepares for his first day in court, for an arrest related to a pro-Palestinian protest in December, at Denver’s Lindsey-Flanigan Courthouse. July 11, 2024.Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

When Carter took the stand, they resisted letting him get too deep into why he was there.

“Talk to us about some of the lead-up and your decision to be there on that day,” Glover said to him.

“I was watching, reading, listening to accounts of civilians being intentionally targeted, children being intentionally targeted and killed on mass scales,” Carter responded. “I was reading about hospitals and medicine being withheld and used as a weapon of war. I was reading and hearing about food being withheld and used as a weapon of war. And those are all war crimes. Those are all illegal internationally —”

“Objection,” a prosecutor said, cutting him off.

Establishing intent is part of this process, Glover said, adding he suspects members of the jury took what they did hear from Carter into account when they deliberated. They acquitted him of all but the charge of blocking a road. He was sentenced to 40 hours of “useful public service” — what his buddy, Prince, said was what they thought we were doing out there in the first place.

“We spent two days discussing, in a very public way and with a jury that deliberated for five hours, the cause that is near and dear to his heart,” Glover said after the verdicts were announced. “It’s a victory for continuing to keep this in the public’s mind and public awareness, and it’s a victory for justice, that the jury applied the law and held the city accountable.”

Glover said it’s important for protesters to take charges like these all the way to a jury.

Everyone else who took a plea deal, including Prince, succumbed to what Glover described as Denver’s attempts to “kill” free speech.

“The playbook oftentimes with the city — in this city in particular — is to bring a whole bunch of charges and try to force a plea deal,” he told us. “If you bring a whole bunch of scary charges and then give them a good plea offer, most of the time they’ll take it, right? But it’s not the right thing to do.”

Carter said going to trial helped him continue to spread protesters’ messages for a ceasefire. But Glover said it may also help push back against Denver’s interest in prosecuting protesters more generally.

“You don’t want to send a message that they can essentially chill this type of action or speech by weaponizing the criminal justice system,” he said. “Prosecutor’s offices, knowing that these cases don’t come easy, protects all of our constitutional rights to air our grievances, whether you agree or disagree with Mr. Carter. And so I think him going all the way on this has done a service to all of us.”

The Denver City Attorney’s Office did not respond to questions about their tactics, but we’ll update this story if we hear from them.

Auraria Police carry an arrested protester, who refused to walk, to a bus as he and others advocate for the end of Israel’s offensive in Gaza are cleared from the Tivoli Quad. April 26, 2024.Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

Carter was arrested months ago, but campaigns to stop the death in Gaza have continued.

In the lead-up to his trial, Carter was surrounded by activists who led actions against the Zionist conference last year and organized encampments at local universities.

Linda Amin Badwan, who is from the Palestinian West Bank and an organizer with the Colorado Palestine Lobbying and Advocacy Group, said protesters don’t set out to get arrested, though some are willing when their tactics ultimately attract police.

“It’s about, first and foremost, educating people about what’s happening there,” she told us, adding that most people had little concept of what the Palestinian territories even were before Hamas’ attack on Oct. 7 and Israel’s ensuing offensive.

The conversation over this violence has continued to miss the mark, she and her colleagues told us. Some Americans still conflate their objection to Israel’s military occupation as anti-Semitism. They don’t understand many protesters just want the killing of civilians to stop.

Linda Amin Badwan speaks at a pro-Palestinian protest encampment on the University of Denver’s Carnegie Green. May 21, 2024.Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

Still, she believes activism here and across the country has begun to shift those misunderstandings.

“It is literally chipping away at this, a little bit every day, every moment, every time, to start to make that difference,” she said. “This is something that takes time and a lot of patience, even in the face of, you know, I wake up every day to see horrible reports of what happened. Even today.”

When the dust from his trial settled, Arnie Carter said he viewed this episode as a “small victory.” He had a chance to keep hammering that message beyond the occupation of Speer Boulevard last winter, and he felt good about his decision to fight a deal that could have kept him silent.

“I got to talk on the stand about why I did it, and many, many people were there in support and were part of this victory,” he said. “I feel very, very good at this moment.”

Arnie Carter found “not guilty” of 3 of 4 charges stemming from December 3, 2023 Jewish Voice for Peace Civil Disobedience in support of a ceasefire, for an end to the U.S. supported Israeli genocide in Gaza

July 13, 2024

 

Arnie Carter being arrested – Civil Disobedience sponsored by Jewish Voice for Peace. December 3, 2023. Jewish Voice for Peace’s Civil Disobedience, for a ceasefire, for an end of U.S. support for Israel’s genocide in Gaza.

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Interview with Press Conference: It’s the Biden Administration and Israel That Should Be On Trial, Not Arnie Carter (note – go to the July 11, 2024 interview)

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Denver Colorado. July 11, 2024

In a trial held in Denver’s Municipal Court, Civil Disobedience protestor, Merrill “Arnie” Carter, was found not guilty on three of four counts brought against him as a result of his participation in a civil disobedience organized by Front Range Jewish Voice for Peace on December 3, 2023 in downtown Denver. There protesters blocked a main thoroughfare – the corner of Speer Blvd and Champa Street.

Those involved were protesting in support of an immediate permanent ceasefire, an end to the U.S. funded, armed and politically supported Israeli genocide against Gaza Palestinians as well as expressing protest to the holding of a national meeting of the Jewish National Fund in Denver, Colorado. 15 people were arrested as a result, 14 of whom agreed to plea deals with the city of Denver. Arnie Carter, insisting that “it is the Biden and Netanyahu Administrations that should be on trial, not me” insisted for a jury trial.

That trial took place on July 11-12, 2024. The city coughed up four witnesses to testify for the prosecution, the defense only called one, Arnie Carter, himself. Carter was represented pro bonoby Tyrone Glover Law.

I was in the courtroom late in the afternoon of July 11th when Arnie Carter gave testimony. As he commented:

Civil Disobedience is as American as apple pie.

The children of Gaza are burning

I was watching, listening to, reading about civilians (in Gaza) being  slaughtered, children bombed to bits, hospitals and schools targeted, food being withheld as a weapon of war ..

Concered friends met locally with members of Congress, protested legally trying to end the genocide, the murder of Palestinian people. None of our legal efforts failed so we took to the streets to protest.

I am not a leader or an organizer; I’m just an old man who felt a need to care for, be part of these young Jewish folk supporting justice for Palestine.Who hurts one of us, hurts all of us.

We take care of each other. It’s our duty to stand up for each other, to support those in need like the Palestinians in Gaza.

Apparently for the most part, the jury of six agreed with Arnie’s explanation as they found him innocent of three of the four charges. The Colorado Palestine Coalition and Jewish Voice for Peace considered the verdict a victory for free speech itself and a political defeat for the city of Denver which pursued the prosecution.

Having accomplished its mission the Arnie Carter Defense Committee dissolved. But Arnie and a few friends intend to build on this victory to support the more than 40 protesters who were arrested for refusing to leave an encampment on the Auraria Campus (which houses the University of Colorado Denver, Metroopolitan State University and Community College of Denver).

Their trials are scheduled over the next few months.

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International Press Review. July 9. 2024

July 12, 2024

Hungary’s Orban Visits Moscow: Is Hungary Replacing Finland as Central Europe’s Bridge between East and West

July 6, 2024

Budapest – November, 1988 (R. Prince photo)

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Today I met with the President of Russia for the 11th time. This meeting is special because it is being held at the time of war, when Europe badly needs peace. Peace is what Europe needs most of all. We see the struggle for peace as the main task for the next six months of our European Council presidency.

Viktor Orban, Prime Minister of Hungary, in Moscow. July 5, 2024

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1. The E.U. and the Biden Administration “dismayed” at Hungarian PM’s Ukraine peace initiative

The NY Times headline reads “Viktor Orban Meets Vladimir Putin, Dismaying E.U.” And indeed, breaking ranks with E.U. colleagues and the Biden Administration, the Hungarian Prime Minister did go to Moscow, did meet with Russian President Putin, a vist which shook the leaders of the European Union to the very essence of their being.

It also triggered a strong negative reaction in Washington.

As reported in The Hill:

“We’re concerned that Prime Minister Orban would choose to take this trip to Moscow, which will neither advance the cause of peace, nor will it promote Ukrainian sovereignty, territorial integrity and independence,” a senior Biden administration official said on a call with reporters, previewing the NATO summit that will take place in Washington next week.

As Alexander Mercouris, a Greek commentator living in London, noted, Orban visited both Kiev where he spoke with (ex) Ukrainian President Zelensky and Moscow where he met with Russian President Putin. In Kiev Orban proposed to Zelensky to announce a unilateral ceasefire, an idea immedialy rejected by the Kiev government.

In meeting with Putin, Orban violated an unspoken taboo of direct talks with Putin, this that despite the fact that any prospect of ending the conflict in Urkaine, would require exactly that.

In contrast with earlier visits by French and German political leaders, Orban did not come diktating negotiating terms; to the contrary, as any decent negotiator would do, he came to listen to both Ukrainian and Russian concerns to probe if there is any basis to shift gears from war to peacemaking. In so doing, Viktor Orban, broke ranks with his E.U./NATO allies who had establish a common united front against negotiating with Russia.

2. Nothing more important to stop Europe’s bleeding than peace. Read more…

It is Israel and the Biden Administration That Should Be On Trial: Not Arnie Carter

June 26, 2024

Boulder Jewish Community Center cancels a performance of “Standing for Humanity in Gaza and Israel” because one of the participants, Evan Weissman, was a founder of Jewish Voice For Peace in Colorado.

June 25, 2024

Evan Weissman “cancelled” from performing at the Boulder Jewish Community Center.

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Below is a letter from Evan Weissman, local actor (a founding member of and long time actor in the Buntport Theater, an experimental theater group in Denver). He is also a well known, respected and talented social movements activist who has spearheaded the ongoing activities of what is called “Warm Cookies of the Revolution” which brings together youth of all colors, genders and creeds – and an occasional alte kocker like me – for civic discussions. With a name like that you’d have to see it in motion to believe its substantial contribution to civic dialogue here in Denver. 
Weissman was to be a part of a panel to come right after the performance of a play called “Standing for Humanity in Gaza and Israel” that has already been produced in several venues. It was scheduled to be produced at the Boulder (Colorado) Jewish Community Center but was cancelled after the Center’s administration learned that Weissman, a Jewish critic of Israel’s mistreatment of the Palestinians, was involved.
The administration refused to permit the play to be shown if Weissman participated and the cast refused to put the production on without him. 
Finally, adding to his other “high crimes”, he is a long time personal friend which probably didn’t help his cause.
Below is Weissman’s letter protesting the cancellation of the play and requesting a meeting with the BJCC administration. 

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To the decision-maker(s) at the Boulder Jewish Community Center,

After being told of your decision to cancel the performance of Standing for Humanity in Gaza and Israel event, because the artists involved would not remove or replace me, I’ve been trying to understand how and why you came to this decision.

As you know, no one spoke to me. No one asked me who I was. No one asked me about what I think or feel or anything about my connection to Israel/Palestine, to Boulder, to the Jewish community, to theater, to art, to humanity. Nothing. You created a story of me.

A story where I’m a monster so hideous, with powers to infect the minds of the Boulder Jewish Community Center’s attendees, that you were compelled to keep me away so that my poisonous ideas couldn’t take hold. Is that right? I can only guess because we never spoke.

Taken at face value, asking for someone to be removed means you think their participation is so objectionable that allowing them to take part would spoil the purpose of the event. The obvious question is: What is it about me that you find so objectionable? And further, who at the JCC actually made this decision?

As far as I was told, you demanded I be removed because you would not host someone who “did not believe Israel has a right to exist”. Is that what I believe? You don’t know. The only thing you know is that 20 years ago I was a co-founder of our Denver/Boulder chapter of Jewish Voice for Peace, and you have an opinion about JVP (based on… what exactly?) and made a decision by association. I wonder if you see the problem with that process? Read more…

M. K. Bhadrakumar: Death of petrodollar is a Biden legacy

June 14, 2024

US President Joe Biden fist bumps Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman upon arrival for a high-stakes visit, July 15, 2022. Apparently the fist bump meant less than meets the eye at the time.

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(Although this appears to be a rather remote development and one that some might not understand … the developments discussed in this article are going to effect all of us personally. An 80 year old agreement made on a yacht in the Suez Canal where then President Roosevelt, just before dying, sealed a deal with Saudi King Abdul-Azis Ibn Saud in which the Saudis agreed to sell their oil in dollars and invest their profits in U.S. treasury bonds in exchange for U.S. protection has come to an end.
And the world will never be the same, I assure you. This will be yet another fatal-quality blow to his re-election chances – along with his consistent support for Israel’s genocidal war in Gaza, and his increasingly evident slip into senility.
M.K. Bhadrakumar is a retired Indian diplomat with rich experience in international affairs. I met him on line a number of years ago and have been following him ever since. You should too. Links to his articles are just below. RJP)

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Death of petrodollar is a Biden legacy

The Deep State should have been alert five years ago when Candidate Joe Biden announced that he, if elected as president, was determined to make the Saudi rulers “pay the price, and make them in fact the pariah that they are.”

Biden was blunt to the point of being brutal about the Saudi royal family, saying there was “very little social redeeming value in the present government in Saudi Arabia” under King Salman’s rule.  

But, instead, the Deep State felt delighted that Biden was just the man to succeed Donald Trump and reverse the Trump-era practice of forgiving Saudi human rights violations in order to preserve jobs in the American arms industry.

Biden probably knew by then that the American intelligence had concluded about the role of Mohammed bin Salman, the Saudi crown prince and the de facto leader of the country, in the killing of the dissident-journalist Jamal Khashoggi, who was a ‘strategic asset’ of the CIA for navigating the next Saudi succession and the ensuing regime change to a happy ending. Khashoggi’s decapitation crippled Washington’s game plan to instal a pliable ruler in Riyadh. 

Today, all that is history. But unlike the Bourbons, the Saudi royals never forget or forgive. They also have infinite patience and their own concept of time and space. And last Sunday, June 9, they struck. 

In great royal style, last Sunday, Riyadh simply let the 50-year-old petrodollar agreement between the US and Saudi Arabia to expire. 

To recap, the term “petrodollar” refers to the US dollar’s pivotal role as the currency used for crude oil transactions on the world market per the US-Saudi deal dating back to 1974 shortly after the US went off the gold standard.  Read more…

Beit Ummar: Those who have so little to share, share with those who have nothing; Beit Ummar Sends Aid Shipment to Gaza

June 13, 2024

Beit Ummar, West Bank Palestine. Volunteers from the Center for Freedom and Justice there prepare packages of food and supplies for the suffering people of Gaza.

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Press Release: The Biden Administration must insure that needed food, medical and infrastructural aid reach Palestinians in need in Gaza.

1.The horror of Gaza continues unabated on a biblical scale; 2.3 million people are in dire need of food, water, shelter, medical care. Meanwhile in the West Bank, almost ignored in the mainstream media, Israeli repression has intensified, too.

In Gaza, among the atrocities, the UN estimates 50,000 pregnant women are currently living in Gaza, with more than 180 births taking place every day amid the “decimation” of healthcare. Many of those women are acutely malnourished. Few receive any medical attention before labor, often weeks ahead of schedule resulting in premature babies with little chance of surviving. C-sections are done with no anesthesia. There is little food for new babies or Moms.

2. While our brothers and sisters in Gaza continue to be subjected to war crimes, the Zionists have also escalated their repression across the West Bank, including against our friends in Beit Ummar where since October 7th of last year total number of arrests of Palestinians exceed 9,170. Torture is commonplace.

Beit Ummar, population 20,000, is located in the West Bank, a region controlled by the Israeli Defense Force. Living under close to a military virtual siege  for decades, fully one third of all Palestinian youth incarcerated in Israeli prisons come from Beit Ummar.

The IDF or Israeli settlers terrorize the townspeople by breaking into their homes in the middle of the night, stealing and breaking household items. This happens regularly across the rest of the West Bank and includes often brutal arrests along with threats against detainees and their families.

Seizures of land and Palestinian private property have intensified with armed clashes breaking out through the territory. Vigilante attacks by Israeli settlers, armed and egged on by the government and encouraged by the IDF, have accelerated. According to Al Jazeera, more than 500 Palestinians have been killed in the West Bank .

We, the Center of Freedom and Justice – Colorado,   call on the Colorado Congressional Delegation to ensure that the aid being collected by Beit Ummar (and others) for the suffering people of Gaza be speedily and successfully delivered to the starving people of Gaza.

3. Those who have so little to share, share with those who have nothing.

As Center for Freedom and Justice spokesman Mousa Maria noted:

“The project spanned a full week of continuous effort to pack 2000 parcels into the trucks. We are now awaiting coordination from the Palestinian authorities to allow the trucks to the crossing then to deliver these parcels to 2000 effected families in Gaza.

“This project involved three months of continuous planning, during which we successfully raised $70,000 for foodstuffs and logistical work. Our success will be marked by the safe entry of the trucks into Gaza.

Concerning the current situation, as one Beit Ummar resident commented (June 13, 2024):

In Beit Ummar we face Israeli raid almost every night, they have been imprisoning people way more that before the war and the prisoners are being treated really really bad.

Also Israeli government is refusing to give us our money’ salaries for those working in the Governmental sector, and starting from this week, they reduced the water we receive 40% although even before that, the water was barely enough.

We are threatened to face what Gaza faced. I’m terrified for my family, kids and beloved ones but nothing to do other than praying.

For more information: cfjcolorado@gmail.com

Notes – Remarks, Rob Prince – in Denver Municipal Court. June 12, 2024

June 12, 2024

Front Range Jewish Voice for Peace Civil Disobedience. Denver, Colorado. December 3, 2023

(What follows below is the written statement I handed to the court. The spoken remarks were much shorter as was appropriate to the situation).

Notes – Remarks, Rob Prince – in Court. June 12, 2024

Your Honor, Members of the Court, Observers …

Thank you for this opportunity to say a few words to you in response to this verdict.

1. On December 3, 2023, I participated in a civil disobedience action organized by the young and growing chapter of Front Range Jewish Voice for Peace. In what was a well organized effort, 30 or 40 of us stopped traffic on Speer Blvd, I believe for approximately an hour.

We were protesting the holding of a major national conference in Denver of the Jewish National Fund, an organization that for more than a century has been involved in expropriating Palestinian lands and property, in many cases completely bulldozing homes and settlements as a part of its program of ethnic cleansing of Palestinians from their homeland.

We were also there to call on the Biden Administration to call for a permanent cease-fire between the Israeli Defense Forces and different Palestinian resistance groups of which Hamas was just one, and for Israel to end its genocidal attack on Gaza, withdraw its troops, permit the reconstruction of Gaza and to call for a permanent resolution of the crisis.

These goals remain as valid today as they were on December 3.

2. Concerning the charges made against me…

I admit to having refused to obey a police order to disperse and, along with fellow protesters to have blocked traffic.

Concerning the third charge, that I was in possession of a deadly weapon – I must say that is a bit over the top.

The city attorney knows this and so do I.

3. Civil disobedience. Nothing is more American than apple pie than civil disobedience.

In participating in the December 3 civil disobedience, I entered into a fine democratic tradition in our country going back to the Boston Tea Party, the Abolitionist Movement prior to the Civil War, and virtually every social movement of the past century to make our country better, fairer, more democratic – the movement to insure women to vote, the great civil rights movements of the 1960s, peace movements from Vietnam to Iraq and against the nuclear arms race.

4. Your Honor, I grew up in a loving Conservative Jewish extended family in New York City.
It is from this family, this community that my views on society, on what it means to be human developed and certainly as a result of this upbringing that I decided sometime in my early 20s of what I wanted to do: to be a teacher.

My parents were not thrilled with this decision but I never regretted it. To the contrary. All my working life I was a simple teacher. It is all I’ve ever been, all I ever wanted to be.

Your honor …

Judaism speaks of ten truly holy people – 9 of them are rabbis. The 10th was secular, Janus Korczak by name, a doctor and author who ran a Jewish orphanage in Warsaw from 1911 to 1942.

Although he had the opportunity to abandon his charges and escape capture by the Nazis, he refused and stayed with the kids he taught, walking them with dignity to their deaths in Auschwitz. He would not abandon his students and he would be very displeased with me for abandonning these young Jewish peace militants.

I simply could not let these young Jewish progressive activists stand alone on Speer and Champa. I went with them in solidarity, so that they would know there are older Denver Jews – alta kockers for a cease-fire – who “get it” – who lovethem, believe in their work, their profound humanity,– and militancy for peace. This applies not just to the JVP people but to all those now working for peace with justice in the Colorado Palestine Coalition.

So I stand with them … for Palestine, for a renewed Judaism that rejects all claims to being “chosen” “better” “superior” and all such racist nonsense. We are all, all of humanity, chosen. We Jews have no monopoly on this. The sooner we understand this, the better.

Your honor, I had no choice but to engage in civil disobedience – Janus Korczak and my ancestors from far away places with -to many of our ears strange sounding names – Prienai, Lithuania, Grodno, Belarus, Bialystok, Poland – told me so. And when Korczak and the ancestors speak from the grave what else can I do but listen?

with Maggie Lewis in front of the Lindsay-Flanagan Courthouse. June 12, 2024

International Press Review – June 11, 2024

June 12, 2024

Rob Prince’s Day in Court – A notice I sent out to family and friends

June 11, 2024

December 3, 2024. Me being led into a Denver sheriff’s paddy wagon

Hello friends and neighbors…

Tomorrow  morning, Wednesday, June 12 at 8:30 I will be in court as a result of having been arrested for a civil disobedience I participated in on December 3, to end the U.S. sponsored, Israeli executed genocide in Gaza.
That event was organized by the group Front Range Jewish Voice for Peace. The main demand of that day was the call for a permanent bilateral ceasefire. I have accepted the city attorney’s offer to plead guilty in exchange for a six month probation period that includes community service. I will be asking that the community service be 32 hours assisting my daughter, Molly Prince, a special ed teacher in the Mapleton School District who teaches kids who need improved English skills.
My lawyer, Margeret “Peggy” Carey has informed me that I have the possibility of making a statement after accepting the verdict and I intend to do so. It will be rather brief – 5 to 10 minutes at most – but I want to lay out certain comments at this time. While I do not know exactly what time my case will be heard, I was told to report to Courtroom B at the Lindsay-FlanaganCourthouse. 520 W. Colfax Ave, Denver, CO 80204.
If you can make it, I invite you to join me in court.
Cheers,
Rob P.

South Africa – was the writing on the wall? By Mark Waller

June 7, 2024

South African youth. (photo credit: U.S. AID)

South Africa – was the writing on the wall?
By Mark Waller

Big question marks hang over South African politics following last week’s national elections.

Despite a spirited campaign involving tens of thousands of volunteers from the ruling African National Congress (ANC) and its alliance partners – the South African Communist Party (SACP), the Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu) and the South African National Civics Organisation (Sanco) – turnout was 58% of registered voters, well below the 66% of the last election in 2019. For the first time, the ANC won only just over 40% of the vote, down from 58% in 2019, meaning it will probably be forced to form a coalition government.

What will this mean for South Africa’s long-running transformation process, known as the national democratic revolution? What will the ANC and its alliance do to regain majority support in the country? Will populist politics, feeding on the grievances of millions of mainly black South Africans forced to endure growing inequality, poverty, unemployment and violent crime, further undermine the country’s fragile stability?

This last question relates to the biggest surprise of the recent elections: the strong performance, with over 14% of the vote, of a sudden newcomer to the political scene – the MK Party, led by former ANC leader and president Jacob Zuma. Zuma’s party performed strongly in South Africa’s most populous provinces, winning outright in KwaZulu-Natal (KZN), coming second in Mpumalanga and leading in a number of Zulu-majority townships in Gauteng that were formerly ANC strongholds. Read more…