Thursday, January 29, 2009

Wired for War


http://wiredforwar.pwsinger.com/
http://www.armchairgeneral.com/author-pov-wired-for-war.htm

One of Obama's campaign advisers for defense issues (P. W. Singer of the Brookings Inst.) recently published a book called Wired for War: The Robotics Revolution and Conflict in the 21st Century. In an interview on "Fresh Air", Singer described the technological, political, strategic, and moral implications of this new evolution of warfare. Namely, do the "conveniences" that robotics/automation bring to modern combat affect how easily our leaders decide to wage war? Also, how wise is it to rely so heavily on this technology - what are the repercussions when it malfunctions and innocents die? Maybe due to social-ideological shifts or manpower shortages, it appears that the Pentagon has rushed to integrate automation into the military without really taking all the risk considerations into account. But that's nothing new for them, and boys will always be impatient to show off their new toys.

In rugged theaters like Afghanistan, remote-controlled Predator drones are critical for reconnaissance and air strikes. In Iraq, robots diffuse bombs, scout, and do many other tasks. Robot/drone missions in Iraq increased from zero in 2003 to 12,000 in 2008. The US military owns over 17,000 drones (5k air, 12k ground). By 2010, the Pentagon expects to spend $4.3B on such unmanned systems.

Every major technological advancement since the wheel has modified the ways that humans kill each other, so of course electronics and automation will create drastic changes. Robots can overcome some human limitations (fatigue, irrationality, variable performance, physical vulnerabilities). This can be a real help in some situations, if those robots function properly. Besides the more sci-fi models like Predator or TALON (think WALL-E with a machine gun), the majority of military automation is meant for information processing (where robots excel most over humans). Real-time, high-resolution battlefield data feeds allow decision-makers (or bureaucrats) thousands of miles from the war zone to micromanage a fight or overrule commanders on the ground. This of course creates a lot of tension and resentment among the soldiers who are risking their lives on the front lines, and the "soldiers" who watch them from afar (and may even render life-death decisions upon them without consultation).

We don't even realize how much of our national defense is already automated. Via our satellite network, computers survey and identify potential targets for attack worldwide. But the system does err, and we have ordered air strikes on what appeared to be high-value enemies (even Osama) that were actually innocent bystanders. In some cases, computers decide to shoot nearly autonomously. On-board B-52 targeting computers do 99% of the work, and the pilot just presses a button. He can't see the target on the ground and can't control the flight of the ordinance, but instead just trusts the computer. Our warships equipped with AEGIS defenses are designed to identify threats and defend the ship in case vital crew members are killed or incapacitated. But what about non-threats? One of our AEGIS ships erroneously shot down Iran Air Flight 655 in the Persian Gulf in 1988. The investigation concluded that the ship's crew misinterpreted or manipulated the AEGIS data feed tracking a commercial airliner, making it appear to be an attack plane. I know that a device is only as good as the people using it, but it's hard to believe that our trained sailors would be so trigger-happy in a sensitive conflict zone without some cause. Maybe trust or overconfidence in AEGIS provided that last bit of impetus to act on their paranoia.

Well, I guess it was cheaper to dismiss the incident as human error rather than call into question a multi-billion-dollar system deployed on over 80 US warships. But how much are robots augmenting, influencing, or outright replacing real-time human decision-making, and how will that trend grow in the coming years (especially with control of nuclear weapons)? Much sci-fi fiction involves machines, trusted with vital duties too important to be left in human hands, that end up going haywire. While we haven't had to battle a renegade Skynet or HAL2000 in real life, minor incidents have happened (read on). Our militaries will have to delicately balance the delegation of critical decisions among human and computer actors. If an Air Force bomber mistakenly transported nuclear warheads across the Midwest in 2007, obviously it couldn't hurt to add more automated failsafes and human-executed security procedures. But when is a computer allowed to override a human's decision in the interests of "national security"? Guide dogs are trained to disobey and protect their masters in cases of obvious harm, for example when a blind person wants to enter an intersection when it is not clear. Sadly, there is a thin line between protection and harm. But dogs, like computers, just act in accordance with their programming. If Asian hackers can crack most versions of Windows and crash the Microsoft website in their spare time, how can we trust programmers to design safe software that manages vital defense infrastructure? In an effort to make Windows Vista a more secure OS for our computers, Microsoft has made it nearly impossible for even experienced users to enact system changes to their own property. And there we see the trade-off with defense computing: it needs to be secure enough to resist enemy tampering, but it shouldn't be locked up so tight that humans can't "hit the kill switch" in time during a malfunction. Mistakes on either end could potentially spell doom.

New technologies completely redefine what it means to be a soldier, as well as the associated psychological burdens. Now a 19-year-old high school dropout in Nevada can contribute more to the Iraq war effort than a commissioned officer and veteran pilot stationed on a carrier in the Gulf... and they do. The author mentioned one unnamed soldier fitting that profile who became such an expert Predator pilot that he is now an instructor. He joined the military wanting to repair helicopters, but was found to be unqualified, so instead they sat him in front of a computer and he became a drone "ace". The author jokes that the military might now prefer to recruit computer nerds with sturdy bladders, rather than a jock with 20/20 vision and a 6-minute mile time. Needless to say, this change is not well received with the cocky Top Gun crowd in "traditional" pilot circles. For a military that is supposed to function as an integrated, cooperative unit, these new divisions and culture clashes cannot be overlooked.

The emergence of the Predator has also changed the military lifestyle. Drone pilots can literally work their craft as an 8-to-5 job, then come home to their families. "RC" soldiers don't even have to live with each other on a base, maintain off-duty discipline, and most importantly, don't have to get shot at or lose friends in battle. But this convenient duality is not as perfect as it sounds. The rate of PTSD among such drone pilots is actually higher than the average military, possibly due to the mental challenges of taking life one minute, then taking their kids to soccer practice the next. You can't just turn it on and off like a switch. There is inherent conflict between the civilian and military aspects of a citizen-soldier, and at least in a combat theater you can forget "the world", your comrades can support you, and also empathize with your problems. A Predator pilot can't really complain about his bad day to the wife and neighbors, without really freaking them out. And domestic problems or general busyness might be very bad distractions for inexperienced young men charged with huge responsibilities.

http://blog.wired.com/defense/2008/08/flying-drones-f.html

Of course the military says that nothing can ever replace a brave, skilled American pilot. Tom Cruise's Maverick should be their recruiting poster boy, not Steve Urkel. But in this age of streamlining and reducing loss of (American) life, if our automated systems are performing about as well as human pilots, then why would the military continue to risk manned missions? But if they do decide to rely more heavily on RC drones or fully-automated fliers, they had better plan for the human consequences as well. As we all know, technology meant to make our lives easier often produces the opposite effect, or even introduces new problems.

Ever-increasing computing power has really blurred or destroyed the line between war games and warfare. Instead of video game makers tailoring their entertainment systems to simulate real warfare, the military is actually designing its new training and combat systems to emulate video game platforms! Maybe they figure that Sony and Microsoft have already done extensive ergonomics and performance research for their products, so if it ain't broke, don't fix it. Think I'm exaggerating? It's already happened: the company iRobot (makers of the cute Roomba vacuum) also make the PackBot for military scouting and IED disposal. It can be transported in a soldier's pack (hence the name), assembled/deployed in a few minutes, and literally controlled by an Xbox 360 controller. I guess if it's already available and validated, no need to reinvent the wheel.

The controller used with the latest Pacbot is modelled after video game controllers, making the system easier to use.

As we all know, automation and advanced electronics do fail. And for the more complex systems that are charged with life-death capabilities, failures are very costly. Our forces in Iraq are using machine gunner robots nicknamed "R2-D2" to shoot down incoming insurgent RPGs/mortars. During an early test, it accidentally fired on a US helicopter, but fortunately missed. In South Africa, they weren't so lucky. An anti-aircraft robot (with a 35 mm cannon that can literally vaporize human flesh) experienced a "software glitch", started shooting wildly, and killed 9 soldiers. And then what about the legal aftermath? What if the victims are civilians/foreign nationals? Prosecute the designers or the administrator? Or is it just tough luck?

http://blog.wired.com/defense/2007/10/robot-cannon-ki.html

Another problem with increased use of military automation by the US is our allies/enemies will invariably follow suit. And our enemies will surely be hard at work to develop countermeasures to our robots. Since many of them are remote-controlled, our adversaries could potentially turn our weapons against us. Like torture, we can't let the genie out of the bottle and expect other nations or stateless militants to refrain. And unlike Star Wars or nuclear weaponry (WMDs that the US feels entitled to maintain a permanent advantage), robotics are much more cheaper, portable, and accessible. Already US companies are selling them to foreign governments. So an arms race of this nature would be much harder to control and stay ahead of the pack. Even the Lebanese militant group Hizbullah used simple robotics in its 2006 war with Israel (the first time in history when 2 sides used robotics against each other in a war). Just imagine how automation can change the way that "suicide attacks" are carried out.

In addition, how will enemies and neutrals perceive our increased use of robotic weapons? Western powers already take a lot of heat for "cowardly" air strikes and artillery barrages that often kill bystanders. While insurgents seek to level the field and confront our forces in small arms urban fighting, they can't do anything against our bombing. They die but we don't. They don't even get to see the whites of our eyes. It makes strategic sense, but appears quite dishonorable to some who still believe in a warrior code. We "hide" behind our technology and project our force from afar. But then again, the majority of US military deaths since 9/11 are from IEDs, which are equally cowardly by those standards. Bottom line, the more we rely on robotics (for dirty jobs or innocuous ones), the more we play to the stereotype of cold, militaristic Americans. But some of this could be mitigated with better PR and disclosure. Unfortunately most armed forces are not very skilled in those areas.

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The over-arching danger of high-tech war is that it builds on a trend making it less and less of a moral-social burden to wage war. Historically, war maims and kills scores of people, shatters families, destroys cities, disrupts economies, bankrupts treasures, and causes massive trauma that takes years to repair. But if robots can remove some of that stink, does war become a more desirable option? And Obama has followed Bush's example by maintaining that "all options are on the table".

Walking the streets of any American city today, a foreigner could hardly tell that our nation was at war (in 2 places). Compare that to Congo or Sri Lanka, where it's abundantly obvious. I suppose that is the nature of foreign wars, and why Bush said that it's better to fight our enemies overseas than in our backyards. But despite our haste to oust Saddam, our inflammatory bombings in Pakistan, and the many terrible episodes in American militarism, I hope that war can be a very solemn, serious decision for our current and future leaders. If the Pentagon told Obama that a Predator thinks it has OBL in its bombsights, but there's a chance that it's a false positive, and children are in the area - what is he going to do? High-tech war thrusts these rapid, difficult decisions on flawed, emotional people, and therein lies the danger.

Many ordinary people are not feeling the effects of our wars, which is both a blessing and a danger. Out of sight, out of mind. Yes we're losing international goodwill and hemorrhaging tax dollars in the War on Terror, but the sting from that will be hard to directly notice back home, and probably further down the road. The lowest of our society are the ones dying and enduring 15-month tours, while the middle-upper classes keep consuming obliviously (or fretting about the economy). Mostly our exposure to war is just some fancy graphics and press conferences on CNN. When war is so "painless" to wage, what is holding us back from engaging in it? Violence seems to be such an easy "solution" to the various frustrating tensions around the globe, but the costs are profound and enduring. Just because we can do something, and do it swiftly and efficiently, doesn't mean we should.

Since WWI, industrialization has permitted soldiers to kill each other from afar without even seeing each other, and now we're taking it to another level. Modern wars for resource control, imperialism, or proxy power struggles tend to be fought on third party battlegrounds with little damage to the instigating parties' homelands. And after the expiration of selective service, our modern "professional army" is mostly comprised of the poorer, minority, and uneducated demographics. The rich and powerful monopolize the decision to go to war, but now they can totally divorce themselves and their loved ones from enduring the direct suffering of war. Outliers like Pat Tillman and Beau Biden aside, no privileged American should ever want or need to fight for their country, except maybe out of machismo or aspirations for a future political career, both of which are not necessarily in our military's best interest. Some hawkish Americans like to ridicule Europeans for being wimps and appeasers when it comes to modern conflicts and terrorism. But today's Europeans are children of the WWII ashes, and many of their states still mandate military service. They understand war suffering better than us, and if they do have to fight, it hurts everyone from the top down.

We also have the Rumsfeld-advocated (but he is not the only one) approach of "sleek war", with a minimal number of boots on the ground and a huge reliance on technology to dominate asymmetrical wars. Yes technology can improve our military capabilities, increase efficiency, and reduce the loss of life. But for now, robots can't kick down doors, protect VIPs, and escort convoys through IED-mined highways, so we hire Blackwater mercenaries to fill that need, as a previous email described. We have so few "regular" soldiers now (plus recruiting shortages), that we use contractors to prepare meals, do laundry, maintain equipment, and fill dozens of other tasks that enlisted people used to do a generation ago (in addition to fighting). But when we outsource our military effort to for-profit corporations, how can we expect loyalty and commitment when things go bad? Will they sacrifice for the good of the nation as an oath-bound soldier would? The same can be said of automated systems. They are designed and marketed by companies following their own agendas that are not beholden to any national goals or set of principles. All they care about is selling the maximum number of units and service plans, not winning or preventing wars.

Defense is obviously easier for richer nations, who can afford the most advanced weapons. But what is to prevent the haves from menacing the have-nots who stand in the way of their strategic objectives? Like easy credit and the housing bubble, convenience can lead to irresponsibility. Readily available resources are often abused, especially if the abusers won't suffer direct consequences for their actions. Sometimes the only thing stopping bullies in the schoolyard is their fear of picking the wrong fight and losing. When it doesn't hurt us to hurt someone else, what is left to keep the peace? The whole rationale behind the nuclear deterrent was to make it too costly to attack a nuclear nation (or their friends), but how can a superpower be deterred? Hopefully our laws and political system serve that purpose, but still Congress voted overwhelmingly to invade Iraq in 2003. Well, one method of deterrent is disarmament, and refraining from developing new weapons. The chicken-hawks of the privileged class need to know that war isn't just about the victory parades and "Mission Accomplished" banners. And even if they do succeed, like the amazingly one-sided Operation Desert Storm, their glory was purchased by others' blood. "War as last resort" has now become an insincere political cliche, but it should still apply just for the rare circumstances where not fighting means catastrophe. And I think we will be hard pressed to come up with even a handful of historical examples where a conflict could only be resolved through war.

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Israel refuses to extradite its own in the event of war crimes indictments


Sorry to keep harping in this, but an interesting development:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/7850085.stm

So after WWII, militant Jews hunted down suspected Nazi war criminals overseas, with little to no regard for the laws of other nations and the chain of evidence. Sometimes they brought them to Israel to stand trial, other times they assassinated them on the spot. The same can be said later for Arab-Palestinian terrorists. In some cases, they killed the wrong person. Like during the "Operation Wrath of God" retribution murders after the Munich massacre, Mossad agents killed a waiter in Norway, mistaking him for Black September honcho Ali Salameh (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lillehammer_affair). Israel never claimed responsibility for the murder, but 6 of its agents were captured and convicted in Norway, and later the government paid almost $500k to the victim's next of kin.

But now, PM Olmert has vowed to refuse extradition of any Israelis participating in the Gaza invasion who may be found guilty of war crimes by international courts. The government has also blocked the Israeli press from publishing the names of any squad commanders of Gaza forces, in the event that others want to build cases against them. Olmert said that no son of Israel will face trial for defending their country. So I guess if IDF soldiers gun down an unarmed civilian, or bomb a hospital, they did it out of love for country, so it's permissible and they're not accountable to anyone else?

But what about the Nazis and Arabs who were following their own extreme nationalistic, ethnocentric impulses when they carried out their atrocities against Jews? When the Allied tribunal or international courts declare the enemies of Israel as war criminals, by all means they are guilty as sin, and Israel has the green light to circumvent official channels. They bring them to justice on their terms, even if they have to break laws and kill the wrong people in the process. And Israel denounces any nation daring to harbor those fugitives as accessories to the crime. But with the shoe on the other foot, Israeli war criminals are immune to any outside punishment, and it's perfectly fine for Tel Aviv to protect them. Though of course with US diplomatic cover (plus America's disdain for the ICC or any other sort of cooperative European entity is already well-known), probably no Israeli will ever be charged with war crimes in our lifetimes. But I suppose it's anti-Semitic if anyone else dares to accuse an Israeli of a crime while carrying out the sacred duty of defending Israel. "Israel has the right to defend itself," by any means necessary.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Israel has attacked the UN more than Al-Qaeda


Last year, Al-Qaeda's #2 Zawahiri denounced the UN as the "enemy of Islam" for helping create and legitimize the state of Israel in the past, as well as condoning Western militarism in Muslim lands. We know that Al Qaeda in Iraq attacked the UN headquarters in Baghdad in 2003, killing 22 (including the special envoy to Iraq). After that, the UN withdrew completely from Iraq for years. More recently, Qaeda also claimed responsibility for a suicide bombing at a UN compound in Algiers that killed 41 (of them, 18 UN staffers) in 2007. These acts against defenseless victims were of course barbaric and cowardly.

http://www.fao.org/world/Regional/RNE/UNNews/news123_en.htm

But strangely, it is actually the Israeli military that has attacked the UN more times since 9/11, albeit less "deliberately" and with fewer casualties.

[The Israeli Defense Forces] don't care if they kill a UN man or anybody on the Lebanese side. For them, their own life is sacred, their own troops are sacred. They have a mission, and if the UN gets in the way of their efforts over there, if the UN gets hit, so be it.

- Timur Goskel, professor at Notre Dame Univ. and former UNIFIL advisor (UN peacekeepers in Lebanon), 2006

Maybe you remember during the Israel-Lebanon War in 2006, then-Secretary-General Kofi Annan chastised Israel for what appeared to be a deliberate targeting of a legally sanctioned UN observation post in South Lebanon that killed 4 neutral observers. The UN has been there since the first Israel-Lebanon war decades ago. The maps haven't changed and that outpost never moved. There were no Hizbullah fighters in the vicinity, yet the IDF decided to fire. But of course PM Olmert demanded than Annan retract his outrageous accusation.

http://www.democracynow.org/2006/7/26/kofi_annan_says_israels_fatal_attack

And earlier this month in the Gaza war, Israeli armor allegedly fired on a UN aid convoy, killing a truck driver (a Palestinian contractor hired by the UN). This incident took place during an agreed-upon 3-hour cease fire. The UN had informed Israel of the aid convoy's scheduled trip, and were given the green light to proceed. Their vehicles are clearly marked with UN blue, and the IDF was given its GPS coordinates. However, Israel claims that it was actually a Hamas sniper that killed the truck driver, possibly in an attempt to set up the IDF for a bad PR incident (as if the IDF needed any outside help in that regard). Even giving Israel the benefit of the doubt here, what resulted was the UNRWA mission suspending all aid shipments into Gaza since then (they are set to resume tomorrow). So needy people continued to go without. If a neutral third party is "aiding" your enemy, would you fire at them as deterrence? Did the IDF want to send a message to the UN, and did the Lebanon incident have a similar purpose? So are their wars against all Palestinians/Lebanese, or just the terror groups?

A few days later, it got worse. Israel attacked UN-run elementary schools at 3 separate locations over 36 hours. One site was vacated, but the others housed hundreds of terrified Gaza residents seeking refuge from the fighting. Over 40 died. Again, these buildings are clearly-marked and the UN gave Israel their GPS locations long ago. The IDF attempted to justify its actions by stating that they observed Hamas mortar fire originating from inside one of the UN schools. UN officials on the ground said that they were 99.9% sure there were no Hamas there and no mortars were fired (and they have no reason to lie for Hamas). Laughably, the IDF further tried to defend the attack by releasing video of Palestinian militants firing a rocket from one of the schools and then fleeing. However, the video was from 2007! In that case, we better bomb Saudia Arabia, because we have past video of Osama bin Laden walking the streets of Riyadh. Even if Hamas was there, how can they defend their attacks? It is a neutral site, off limits like an embassy. For that matter, what if Hamas militants were alleged to be hiding in a US consulate building? Would the IDF still bomb? Technically that is a violation of international law and an act of war.

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/ShArtStEng.jhtml?itemNo=1053455&contrassID=1&subContrassID=1&title='UN+rejects+IDF+claim+Gaza+militants+operated+from+bombed-out+school'&dyn_server=172.20.5.5

The Israeli army however said the school was being used to store weapons, and the casualties were as a result of secondary explosions caused by the the munitions stored in the building. After a brief investigation this story changed. The army did admit the Israel Air Force targeted the school, but said it was returning fire. It had no comment on the fact that several hundred refugees had taken shelter at the school.
- IsraelNews.net

Israel scorns Hamas and Hizbullah for being so dastardly to hide behind civilian shields, and they're right. If only we could divorce combatants from populated areas, but in the post-Cold War world, most if not all conflicts will be asymmetrical and urban. When you decide to wage war (and let's look past the BS about being "forced" into war - it's always a conscious, voluntary choice), you have to know that many innocents will suffer (especially children), so hopefully that can serve as a deterrent. They should have learned all this at the military academy, but maybe as Prof. Goskel claims, the problem is that Israel just doesn't give a damn. Israel says they're being being set up to take the blame for civilian deaths as part of the propaganda war. But no one forced the IDF to pull the trigger. They know civilians are there, and yet they choose to fire anyway, just to maybe kill a few insignificant foot soldiers, or at best some "high value target" that will just get replaced by an even meaner SOB, as depicted in the film "Munich". They could apprehend and convict them through established legal channels, or wait to attack until their targets are in the clear, or if that doesn't happen then just let it go - because the cost of killing innocents (thereby creating much backlash and future terrorists in the process) is always higher than letting one bad man go free. Therefore, they don't get to blame anyone else for their murders. Not surprisingly, in 2003 27 elite Israeli pilots/officers had enough of their leaders' immoral tactics, and published a formal protest refusing to take part in assassination missions over urban zones where civilians will invariably get hurt (see article at end).

And just today, Israeli artillery fire near the UN Gaza headquarters (housing over 700 refugees) started a blaze that destroyed their food/fuel storage warehouse. This time, they openly acknowledged that it was a "mistake", though again insisted that Hamas fire came from the area. It is suspected that phosphorous incendiary rounds were used, which easily cause fires to spread in cities (and therefore their use in urban zones is prohibited). Tons of vital aid supplies went up in smoke. A Red Cross/Crescent hospital was also hit, and the Palestinian death toll rose above 1,000 dead/5,000 wounded. Israeli losses still stand at 13, with 4 dead from friendly fire.

The belief is that Israel is stepping up military operations ahead of agreeing to a ceasefire in the days immediately before Tuesday's inauguration of Barack Obama as U.S. president.
- The Daily Mail

So once again, it seems like politics trump decency. Isn't an escalation of violence prior to a ceasefire defeating the very purpose of that ceasefire? I guess they just want to get those last shots in, and probably Hamas will too (well, does the fact that Hamas still launches rockets at the end of the war signify the folly and failure of the war?). And I guess Israel wants to make a good impression on the new president by pausing its war for his inauguration. How thoughtful.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1117144/Israels-strike-UN-headquarters-Gaza-indefensible-says-Gordon-Brown.html

So if the gunmen and thugs under Milosevic, Haitian/Somali warlords, and even Hamas, Hizbullah, and the Taleban can mostly respect UN neutrality in their conflicts, then what is Israel's problem? After all, they are the most democratic and technologically advanced nation in the Middle East. Pretty much the only other places in the world where UN staff are under such direct assault are Congo and Sudan. Ignominious company for sure. And in those nations, UN soldiers are authorized to actually engage local forces to protect civilians, so they have chosen to be part of the fray. No UN worker ever fired a shot at an Israeli.

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27 Israeli pilots refuse raid duty
Question morality of hitting civilians
By Dan Ephron, Boston Globe Correspondent, 9/25/2003
JERUSALEM -- Twenty-seven Israeli air force pilots, who are considered the most elite servicemen of the Israeli Defense Forces, pledged in an open letter published yesterday that they no longer would take part in raids on Palestinian population centers in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, describing them as "illegal and immoral."
The letter, published on the websites of several Israeli newspapers, appeared to give new impetus to the movement of several hundred soldiers who refuse to serve in the West Bank and Gaza Strip on moral grounds. It also marked the first time a group of air force pilots, who could face ouster or military trials, have banded together to take such a stand.
Among those who signed were a brigadier general who took part in Israel's 1981 raid on an Iraqi nuclear facility, two colonels, and four lieutenant colonels. About half of them fly warplanes and attack helicopters in reserve duty, while the rest are inactive, according to a senior air force officer.
Military officials described the letter as politically motivated and insisted that the Israeli military goes to great lengths to avoid harming civilians, even when Palestinian militants hide in their midst. One analyst said the letter carried symbolic weight, but would be significant from an operational standpoint only if dozens of other pilots refused to serve.
"We veteran and active duty pilots . . . are against carrying out illegal and immoral attacks of the kind that Israel is conducting in the territories," the letter reads. "We . . . refuse to take part in air force attacks on civilian population centers.
"We [pilots], who feel that the Israeli Defense Forces and the air force are an integral part of us, refuse to continue attacking innocent civilians," said the letter, which also condemns Israel's occupation of the West Bank and Gaza.
Several pilots who signed the letter could not be reached for interviews.
Air force pilots have had a large role in the fighting between Israelis and Palestinians that erupted three years ago, most controversially in track-and-kill missions against key militants. Israel has assassinated scores of militants in missile strikes and bombing missions in crowded areas of the West Bank and Gaza, but scores of innocent civilians have also been killed and wounded in the raids.
In one particularly devastating attack in July 2002, Israel dropped a 1-ton bomb on a building in Gaza where Salah Shehadeh, a top member of the Islamic militant group Hamas, was hiding. He was thought to have orchestrated attacks that killed dozens of Israelis. The bomb killed Shehadeh, his wife and daughter, and 12 other civilians.
Reuven Pedatzur, a former fighter pilot who is now a defense analyst for the Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz, said the Shehadeh assassination was a turning point for Israeli pilots. "I think that was the moment many pilots began asking questions about what they're doing and why civilians are being killed," he said.
Pedatzur said the letter was significant because air force pilots are the military's "cream of the crop" and because pilots have never protested collectively in such a manner. But a top air force commander said that the protesters represented a small minority of fighter pilots and that most of them had not been taking part in missions during the past three years of fighting.
Ido Nehushtan, an air force brigadier general, said pilots participating in missions against Palestinian militants had the complicated task of trying to thwart terrorists who operate in civilian centers. He said that pilots have the authority to abort missions if they believe civilians might be harmed, but that the air force could not live with a situation in which individual pilots decide not to take part in a whole category of operations.
"I can tell you with full confidence that we do everything possible to avoid harming civilians," Nehushtan said late yesterday, hours after the letter was published.
He said the pilots published their letter in the media without first presenting it to their commanders.
Pedatzur said the Air Force must decide between ousting the pilots from their units or trying them for insubordination. Military judges have jailed dozens of reservists in ground forces who have refused to serve in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
"This is a serious dilemma, because these aren't just privates in regular units; they're air force pilots," Pedatzur said. "If you put them on trial, the atmosphere in the air force could become very sour, and this wouldn't be good for the military in general."
In the Gaza Strip, meanwhile, a 16-year-old Palestinian boy was killed in an early morning gun battle between Palestinians and Israeli troops searching for weapons-smuggling tunnels along the border between Egypt and the Gaza Strip.
The firefight erupted when 20 Israeli tanks and armored bulldozers entered the Rafah refugee camp. Mohammed Hamdan, 16, was killed in the clash, hospital officials told the Associated Press, and more than a dozen Palestinians were wounded. Palestinian witnesses said troops razed two houses.
© Copyright 2003 Globe Newspaper Company.

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

BART police "execution"


I was out of town when this happened, but friggin' A...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IKy-WSZMklc

That is some messed up NYPD shit there. Who the heck is in charge of training BART cops anyway? Are they even subject to oversight and IA like the other cops? I guess they're one step up from Blackwater. But the video clearly shows the 2 other officers had the young man pinned down, he wasn't struggling (at the time of the shooting), and didn't seem like a danger to anyone. But the third just takes out his weapon, aims, and fires point blank in the back - for no valid reason that I can discern. It doesn't appear accidental. What was he thinking with all the witnesses around? My coworkers said that the BART police confiscated as many cell phones/cameras as they could find on people in the vicinity, supposedly for "evidence" (or cover-up?). But moot point, since some leaked to the press anyway.

And we wonder why urban minorities don't really trust police.

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http://www.ktvu.com/video/18426902/index.html

Take a look at this video. I looks as if one officer was off to the side talking on the radio, while officer Mehserle (the shooter) and another officer pinned the young man down. It is evident that the officer pinning the young man near his head moved up and away before the shot was fired as if expecting a stun gun shot and moving clear so as not to be secondarily tased. You can see the stupid look on Mehserle's face immediately after the shot, as he looks up and down at what had just happened.

I agree there's no valid reason to shoot the guy, even stun gunning the guy seems excessive. I disagree with your assertion that this does not appear to be accidental.

Now I'm not gonna defend this in anyway shape or form aside from saying this looks accidental. It's poor judgment anyway you cut it. It's bad protocol to have officers have stun guns near their firearms... most departments have them place it opposite their pistol on their non dominant side facing the opposite direction. As far as taking cameras from witnesses... hell who knows what standard operating procedure is on that one, but it does look suspicious.

This incident certainly doesn't help police win over urban minorities, but this incident looks like officer incompetence, lack of training, and poor protocol rather then the "white cop kills urban/minority youth" reaction this is getting on the streets of Oakland.

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But as far as I know, isn't a stun gun much lighter than a handgun? It's like reaching for a wood pencil at your desk and accidentally picking up a Mont Blanc - you should know the difference. I guess in the "heat of the action", maybe he just got confused. But I'm not sure if that "excuse" makes it any better, since there is an ongoing controversy about police over-use of stun gun submission that actually turns out to be more lethal that the manufacturers or cops claim.

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2007/06/11/national/a114135D39.DTL

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Yeah, I mean I agree with Juan that it was probably accidental and the cop wasn't looking to whack the kid. But you know in the navy how the officers repeat orders all along the chain of command to make sure that it was correct before executing? Isn't that to make sure the end result is proper and intentional? Captian: all ahead full, 2nd in command: all ahead full roger, helmsman: roger all ahead full, and then finally he puts the boat in gear. I believe surgical teams do similar stuff in hospitals, obviously because mistakes are too costly (and yet they still happen, but anything to reduce them is desirable). So would it have been so hard for Mehserle to tell his partners, "I am planning to tase the suspect, I am drawing my taser now, I am preparing to fire." And the onlooking cop could actually verify that he was holding his taser and not his Glock, instead of just looking away and hoping for the best.

I have no idea what the effed up "rules of engagement" are for cops (or BART rent-a-cops), but maybe there needs to be some major overhaul to verify the use of force before actually using it. I know if a perp draws a weapon on you or other emergency situation, your life comes first and you just have to react based on your training (seen "Burn After Reading"?), but if the officers are in no hurry and under no immediate threat, one person shouldn't unilaterally have the right to use his weapons when and how he/she wants. That is a violation of the public trust, because obviously we are unarmed and at their mercy.

Sunday, January 4, 2009

The PR war in Gaza


http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/meast/12/31/israel.youtube/index.html

Apparently the Israeli government is so desperate for PR cover for their Gaza war that they have turned to Twitter and YouTube as marketing vehicles. Certainly an academic tool like Twitter facilitates high-level discussion of such a challenging issue, for example one of the Israeli consulate's responses to a user question: "we R pro nego...we talk only w/ ppl who accept R rt 2 live".

They have even compiled footage from their bombing runs ("Shock and Awe: The IDF's greatest hits!" ... but what about the misses that kill kids?). As if favorable coverage by most major US TV news org's wasn't enough, I guess they wanted to connect to the plugged-in generation. Why bother really - since most young people are too busy or don't care about conflicts half the world away anyway. And apparently the bloodshed in eastern Congo is 10X more gruesome than Gaza. But John Travolta's son died - priorities!

From the BBC on the propaganda war:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/7809371.stm

Israel released video of an air attack on 28 December, which appeared to show rockets being loaded onto a truck. The truck and those close to it were then destroyed by a missile. This was clear evidence, the Israelis said, of how accurate their strikes were and how well justified. A special unit it has set up to coordinate its informational plan put the video onto YouTube as part of its effort to use modern means of communications to get Israel's case across. The YouTube video has a large caption on it saying "Grad missiles being loaded onto the Hamas vehicle." As of Saturday morning UK time, more than 260,000 people had watched it.

It turned out, however, that a 55-year-old Gaza resident named Ahmed Sanur, or Samur, claimed that the truck was his and that he and members of his family and his workers were moving oxygen cylinders from his workshop. This workshop had been damaged when a building next door was bombed by the Israelis and he was afraid of looters, he said. The Israeli human rights group B'Tselem put Mr Sanur's account on its website, together with a photograph of burned out oxygen cylinders. Mr Sanur said that eight people, one of them his son, had been killed. He subsequently told the Israeli newspaper Haaretz: "These were not Hamas, they were our children... They were not Grad missiles.".

The Israeli response was that the "materiel" was being taken from a site that had stored weapons. The video remains on You Tube. But the incident shows how an apparently definitive piece of video can turn into something much more doubtful.

It is reminiscent of an event in the Nato war against Serbia over Kosovo in 1999. In that case, a video taken from the air seemed to show a military convoy which was then attacked. On the ground however it was discovered that the "trucks" were in fact tractors towing cartloads of civilian refugees, many of whom were killed.
Major Avital Leibovich [of the IDF], said: "Quite a few [media] outlets are very favourable to Israel."

Israel has bolstered its approach by banning foreign correspondents from Gaza, despite a ruling from the Israeli Supreme Court. But the absence of reporters from major organisations has meant, for example, that Mr Samur's story has not been as widely told as it probably would have been, or his account subject to an on-the-spot examination.

Meanwhile Israel has received good coverage of the threats and damage to its own towns and communities.The problem is that foreign correspondents cannot get in to establish the exact situation for themselves.

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And below is a 2008 time line of the Gaza conflict, so you can see which side was more prone to violating the ceasefire. Hamas attacks on Israel are in red (not very many, though for the record the website is Iranian). As you can see, it wasn't much of a ceasefire at all, but the rockets did stop for much of the second half of 2008. And when rockets were fired, they were in response to an Israeli incursion and not spontaneous/unprovoked. The BBC said that while Hamas was generally standing down this fall, Israel maintained and even strengthened its blockade, so millions continued to starve within Gaza, with few foreign journalists permitted to enter and document the suffering. Yet a stipulation of the June truce was that Israel would ease its embargo to give the Gazans some relief! So who really violated the agreement? The Bush White House and much of the US media claim that Hamas "started" this war by re-launching rockets. But actually it was an Israeli military operation in Nov. to destroy a smuggling tunnel that set Hamas off. Whether that attack was justified is another story, but it's not like Hamas was eagerly waiting for the truce to expire and then launched all its rockets. Neither side is innocent.

http://www.presstv.com/detail.aspx?id=79964§ionid=3510304

June 19: An Egyptian mediated ceasefire begins between Hamas and Israel. The Palestinian movement agrees to stop firing rockets as Israel accepts to gradually ease its embargo on the Gaza Strip.

July 27: Israel kills Shihab al-Natsheh, a senior Hamas fighter, in his house in the West Bank city of al-Khalil.

August 2: Three Hamas police officers and six pro-Fatah gunmen are killed in factional fighting in the Gaza Strip, the worst of such since June 2007.

October 8: Israel prevents Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) from entering the embattled Gaza Strip.

November 5: Israel raids houses in the Hamas-controlled region and arrests seven Palestinians.

Israel attacks areas inside Gaza, killing at least six Palestinians. Ghassan el-Taramse, a nineteen-year-old Palestinian activist, is killed in an Israeli air raid in the northern parts of the coastal sliver.

Palestinians fire several dozen rockets and mortar shells at western Negev in Israel in retaliation. No casualties or property damage is caused, but three women are treated for shock.

November 8: Israel violates the ongoing truce as its tanks and bulldozers cross the southern border of the Gaza Strip.

November 14: Hamas fires a barrage of homemade rockets at the city of Ashkelon. Four rockets are also fired into western Negev after Israeli air strikes wounded two people in Gaza.

November 15: Israeli air strike kills two Palestinians in the town of Beit Hanoun in Gaza.

November 18: Israeli tanks backed by a bulldozer and a military jeep roll half a kilometer into Gaza. The Israeli army claims the incursion is "a routine operation to uncover explosive devices near the border fence in the southern Gaza Strip."

November 20: An Israeli tank fires shells, killing a Palestinian fighter east of Gaza City.

November 23: The Israeli army wounds two Palestinian residents while shelling homes in various cities in the strip.

November 28: Israeli forces backed by tanks enter the southern parts of the coastal region and kill two Palestinians.

November 29: Projectiles fired from the Gaza Strip wound eight Israeli soldiers in an army base in the town of Nahal Uz.

December 02: The Israeli army launches air strikes into southern Gaza and kills at least two civilians and wounding four others.

December 17: Five Qassam rockets fired from the Gaza Strip injure two Israelis in the southern town of Sderot.

December 18: A Palestinian man is killed in Jabaliya as Israeli aircraft target metal workshops in the towns of Jabaliya and Khan Yunis in the Gaza Strip. The Israeli military claims the targets are used to manufacture rockets.

December 19: The six-month truce officially ends.

December 20: Israeli launches air strikes on the northern Gazan town of Beit Lahiya, killing one Palestinian and wounding two others.

December 21: Palestinian fighters fire rockets into Sderot and Negev and one Israeli is wounded.

December 22: A twenty-four hour truce is declared between Israel and armed Palestinian factions at the request of Egyptian mediators.

December 23: The twenty-four hour truce expires.

Clashes between Israeli forces and Palestinian resistance fighters leave three members of the Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades dead along the border fence in northern Gaza.

Six Qassam rockets are fired into western Negev. The rocket attacks do not hit any targets in Israel.

December 24: Gaza fighters fire two dozen mortar shells at three different targets inside Israel.

An Israeli air raid kills a Palestinian and wounds two others in southern Gaza.

December 27: Israeli F16 bombers and apache helicopters carry out at least 30 simultaneous raids on various targets across the Gaza strip. The operation kills at least 230 and wounds hundreds of Palestinians.

Hamas responds with rocket fire from Gaza and kills one Israeli in the southern town of Netivot.

December 28: Israel begins a fresh wave of air strikes. Israel deploys tanks and troops along the Gaza border. Tunnels in and out of Gaza are bombed.

A Hamas missile strikes near the largest city in the south of the occupied lands, the deepest reach into Israel to the date.

Global protests against the Israeli attacks begin.

Palestinian death toll rises to 296; 900 are injured.

December 29: The third day of attacks on the strip brings the death toll to 340. At least 1,400 Palestinians are wounded.

Muslim world announces day of mourning.

Two more Israelis are killed and one is injured.

December 30: Israeli air operations continue as Tel Aviv declares the area around Gaza a 'closed military zone'.

Israeli floats the idea that a ground invasion of Gaza is imminent.

Palestinian casualties rise to 360 dead and 1,500 injured.

December 31: Israel continues tunnel attacks and civilian casualties increase.

Hamas says Gaza will be victorious.

The UN and Arab League find no solution to end the crisis.

Palestinian death toll rises to 400 with 1,600 injured.

January 1: Israeli bombardments continue; first senior Hamas official dies in air attacks.

Israel denies a 48-hour request for humanitarian aid to enter Gaza by rejecting an EU truce.

Hamas calls for Palestinian protests; it rockets hit several positions.

417 Palestinians and 6 Israelis dead.

January 2: Curfew imposed on West Bank and foreigners are told to leave Gaza.

Top Israeli ministers discuss ground invasion into the Gaza Strip. The United Nations condemns Israel and describes situation in Gaza as "appalling".

Kadima, Israel's ruling party, losses ground in polls ahead of elections.

Death toll continues to rise.

Saturday, January 3, 2009

Obama's silence on Gaza


http://www.rediff.com/news/2008/dec/31obama-silence-on-gaza-angers-arabs.htm

"Obama silence on Gaza angers Arabs"

Maybe all that aloha over Xmas made him forget who he is. Obama can try to hide behind the excuse of "one president at a time" all he wants, but we all know the world is looking to him for real leadership when Bush is obviously one foot out the door (and a staunch Israel partisan anyway). What Obama says may carry more weight than the Pope or UN Sec. Gen. right now. One president at a time? You don't have to be president to speak out against an injustice. You don't have to be president to do the right thing. He spoke out against the Iraq War when he was a lowly state senator, didn't he? And it helped get him to Washington! He spoke out against Rev. Wright's extreme comments, but only when he needed to. He and Biden had a 3-page pdf document on their campaign website professing their strong support for Israel. I don't think anyone will challenge that stance (especially with Hillary as his SoS nominee) if he dares to call a spade a spade on Gaza. Or is he still wary of being mislabeled as an Arab-Muslim? Well I don't care what faith you practice or where your parents came from, but you can't run from the obvious. Women and kids who pose no threat to Israel and never committed a crime in their lives are being maimed and killed by Israeli weapons, just because they have the horrible misfortune of living where they live. It's true that he's not the POTUS. He's not in a position to conjure up and implement a magical solution that has eluded the last 8 presidents. He doesn't even have to denounce Israeli aggression, but at least show some concern for the dead - on both sides. We've heard Obama's inspiring speeches for months now, though unfortunately his silence this week is speaking even larger volumes to Muslims who had the audacity to be hopeful.

Obama's November victory gave the US an ounce of goodwill in the angry Muslim World, and it would be a shame if it's squandered due to his Gaza indifference. Or maybe he doesn't care that civilians die in the name of an ally's "self defense", like all the other presidents before him. In the words of Bill Clinton's SoS Madelaine Albright regarding the thousands of Iraqi children who died as a result of US-imposed trade sanctions, "I think this is a very hard choice, but the price--we think the price is worth it" (60 Minutes, 1996). Maybe I'm being premature here and Obama's people will broker a breakthrough settlement in 2009, but I doubt it. Only a full-fledged occupation has a chance of stopping the rockets (but at what political cost, and do they even have the manpower?), so in that case maybe Israel should have never pulled out of Gaza in 2005. The Palestinians won't just forgive the murder of 400+ of their people. Even the pro-Fatah people in the West Bank are enraged and clashing with Israeli police.

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=98931442&ft=1&f=1001

So the IDF is now bombing residences and mosques just because they are supposedly storing "weapons". But where does it end? What if a building contains 5 rockets and 50 school kids? Is it still a valid target? What about 50 rockets and Gilad Shalit (the kidnapped Israeli soldier)? He took an oath and is prepared to give up his life for his country. Would they sacrifice him to stop those rockets from potentially harming other Israelis? Where do you draw the line? Why not bomb Palestinian maternity wards too, since some of those infants might grow up to fight for Hamas? I'm not sure that they thought this all through when they decided to proceed down this treacherous path.

How much collective punishment is acceptable for self defense? The one major Jewish uprising against the Nazis during WWII took place in the Warsaw ghetto in 1943. They got a hold of some small arms and put up a valiant month-long resistance against the Nazis, who were planning on shipping all the ghetto residents to Treblinka. So in response to this "security threat", German troops fought their way in and even gave the starving, outgunned, and outnumbered Jews a chance to surrender. They bravely declined, so the Germans razed the ghetto, killing over 10,000 (either from direct combat or the conflagration that ensued). The survivors were sent to the camps.

Armed resistance against foreign aggression/occupation is permissible in the rules of modern warfare. Whether you call it resistance or terrorism is purely political semantics. So if we honor the Warsaw Jews who dared to resist their Nazi oppressors, then it's only fair that Israelis accept some resistance due to their oppressive policies. And if the violent Nazi crackdown on the Jewish rebellion was morally and legally unacceptable, then the wanton bombing in Gaza (even in the name of security) is also reprehensible. Yes, we can argue 'till the cows come home about how Hamas is a terror group and not legitimate resistance, namely because they call for the destruction of Israel. But didn't the Jewish resistance also want the destruction of the Third Reich? Though debating all that nationalistic rhetoric about an enemy's destruction probably won't get us anywhere. Yes it's true that the Nazis wanted to exterminate the Jews (or at least deport them from Europe), but if the Israelis have cut off most food, fuel, and medical shipments to Gaza for a year (the poorest place on Earth outside of Africa and Afghanistan), isn't that genocidal too?

By no means am I equating the two regimes, but instead merely showing some similarities in the rationale behind their security practices. Bottom line: a lot of Israel's victim rhetoric falls flat, because they have chosen to enact some controversial policies that surrender the moral high ground (if they ever had it in the first place). And it's scary that the President of the US can't even wrap his head around that or publicly admit it.