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Rewriting the Book By
Anna Malpas Dissatisfied with current
approaches to the history of Soviet repressions, a congress of
schoolteachers offers new ways of confronting the past.
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Doublespeak By Patrick
Henry Two translations of
conceptualist poets Lev Rubinstein and Dmitri Alexandrovich Prigov
make vital reading for students of late Soviet art.
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Total Makeover By
Sergei Nikitin Reduced to rubble in
World War II, a medieval church gets a second chance thanks to
funding from Germany. |
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Indie Advance By
Sergey Chernov A lineup of
experimental, edgy bands from Russia and abroad kicks off the first
Avant festival of independent music. |
Iron Scales By George
Loomis French violinist Isabelle Flory
was cut no slack as a student at the Moscow Conservatory in the
1970s. |
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Wear and Tear By
Raymond Stults As preliminary plans
for the much-needed reconstruction of the Bolshoi Theater emerge,
onlookers wonder where the money will come from.
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Flights of Imagination By Maria Levitov A new
documentary by Olesya Fokina profiles a boy with severe cerebral
palsy who won a national literary prize at the age of 16.
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Turkish Sampler By Ira
Iosebashvili Looking ahead to the
upcoming tourist season, Turkey brings whirling dervishes, shadow
theater and pop idol Tarkan to Moscow. |
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Crazy Quilt By John
Freedman Piecing together snippets
from early avant-garde works, Taganka Theater director Yury Lyubimov
recreates himself at the age of 86. |
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Wanted By Kevin
O'Flynn Anyone who has been to sunny
Yalta and is interested in its pre-Revolutionary history can finance
the publication of a unique book: "Yalta -- My Love." Tel. 962-1254.
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Image By Igor Tabakov
Authors of the Slavic world's first
alphabet and written language, ninth-century saints Cyril and
Methodius are honored this week. |
Salon By Victor Sonkin
Popular playwright Yevgeny
Grishkovets's first novel taps into that nostalgia that everyone
shares -- even those born long after the good old days passed.
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Global Eye By Chris
Floyd This spring, Bush viceroy Paul
Bremer quietly signed a series of edicts that will give the United
States effective control over any Iraqi government, for years to
come. |
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Global Eye
Goon Squad
By Chris Floyd
Matters of great moment are suddenly in the air all
around us: stark evidence of war crimes by the leaders of the West;
the growing certainty of a humiliating geopolitical defeat inflicted
on the world's greatest power; terrorism and torture as the mirrored
emblems of the age, a deadly double helix giving rise to a hideous
global reality.
It's tempting in such times to inflate the
image of those in the forefront of events, painting them, for good
or ill, in the colors of legend: bold, outsize figures, Great Ones
playing dice with nations, characters whose roiling depths --
tragic, evil or heroic -- transcend the puny limits of the common
herd. Although on rare occasions this viewpoint might hold true, the
squalid history of our ill-cobbled species provides endless examples
to the contrary.
And they don't come any more squalid than
the crew now steering the American boat straight into the shoals of
disaster. For despite all the grandiose political rhetoric and
world-historical perturbations emanating from the Bush Regime's
imperial project, we should never lose sight of one simple fact:
Deep down, these guys are nothing but cheap hoods, two-bit chiselers
hustling for loot, thug-brained goons with no more grandeur about
them than the meanest pack of Mafia knee-breakers. For them,
statecraft is just a crowbar for bashing heads and jimmying open
lockboxes. Two recent stories, both obscured by the blood and
thunder of the Iraqi crack-up, illustrate this ugly truth.
Throughout the spring, as hundreds died in the spiraling
conflict, as Regime bosses applied their hardcore "anti-terrorist"
tortures to innocent bystanders raked up in their occupation nets,
as Regime mouthpieces prated endlessly of "liberation" and
"sovereignty," Bush viceroy Paul Bremer was quietly signing a series
of edicts that will give the United States effective control over
the military, ministries -- and money -- of any Iraqi government,
for years to come, The Wall Street Journal reports.
Bremer
has placed U.S.-appointed "commissions" made up of Americans and
local puppets throughout Iraqi government agencies; the ministers
supposedly in charge weren't even told of the edicts. These boards
"will serve multiyear terms and have significant authority to run
criminal investigations, award contracts, direct troops and subpoena
citizens," the Journal reports. Any new Iraqi government "will have
little control over its armed forces, lack the ability to make or
change laws and be unable to make major decisions within specific
ministries without tacit U.S. approval, say U.S. officials."
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Editor | Earlier Bremer edicts laid the Iraqi economy wide open
to ruthless exploitation by Bush-approved foreign "investors";
dominance of such key sectors as banking, communications -- and
energy -- is already well advanced. The latest dictates aim to
ensure that this organized looting goes on, no matter what kind of
makeshift "interim government" the United Nations manage to piece
together. Bush's plans to build a Saddamite fortress embassy in
Baghdad and 14 permanent military bases around the country are
designed to provide the knee-breaking "security" for these lucrative
arrangements.
Each passing day of scandal and carnage makes
this sweet dream seem ever more unlikely, of course. But not to
worry; Bush always has another country to loot -- his own. The
second ignored story tells of domestic corruption small in scale,
but large in revelatory power.
In April, Bush quietly gave a
mining conglomerate larded with his top contributors a little gift:
$155 million worth of federal land, the Denver Post reports.
Invoking an obscure 1872 law designed to help frontier prospectors
gain title to their small mining claims, Bush turned over a swathe
of prime Colorado mountaintop property to the firm of Dodge Phelps,
whose board is packed with oil men, military contractors and
official Bush "Pioneers": corporate fat cats who've strongarmed at
least $100,000 from their friends -- and employees -- for Bush
campaign coffers.
Because the never-updated 1872 law requires
that federal mining land be sold for $5 per acre, Bush's bagmen only
had to pony up $875 for the whole spread -- in an area where land is
worth a staggering $1 million per acre. The idea is to build an
elite ski playground on the looted public property -- even though
the law requires that such land sales be used for actual mining.
But what is law in this bold new Abu Ghraib era, when Bush's
own legal team pronounces the Geneva Convention "obsolete?" In fact,
as Newsweek reports, they explicitly told Bush to repudiate the law,
to establish the precedent that there is "no binding legal effect on
either the President or the military" in wartime. Otherwise, they
warned, he could be "subject to prosecution [under U.S. law] for war
crimes" -- especially "if the political climate changes."
In
the Colorado caper, as in so many others, Bush is following in the
mucky footprints of his father. In the waning days of his failed
presidency, George I used the 1872 law to cut a sweetheart deal with
Barrick, the Canadian mining giant. For $10,000 in chump change to
the federal treasury, Old Bush gave Barrick government land
containing $10 billion in gold, Greg Palast reports. Afterwards,
Bush I became a "special advisor" to Barrick, pocketing kickbacks
from the gold deal for seven years and traveling the world on behalf
of his corporate master, trying to rig up insider deals with his
"old friends" -- bloodthirsty dictators like Indonesia's Suharto and
Zaire's Mobutu. In return, Barrick later poured streams of its
Bush-gotten gold into Little George's 2000 campaign.
That's
how they operate, these cheap hoods. Like Saddam, like Osama, they
mouth great pieties, they strut and preen on the world's stage. But
underneath they're still nothing but witless, murdering,
money-grubbing goons.
Annotations
Memos Reveal War
Crimes Warnings Newsweek, May 17, 2004
Abuse Scandal Focuses on Bush Foundation Associated Press, May 16, 2004
Behind the Scenes, U.S. Tightens Grip on Iraq's
Future Wall Street Journal, May 13,
2004
The Gray Zone Seymour Hersh, The
New Yorker, May 15, 2004
Bush Pioneers Fill War Chest, Then
Capitalize Washington Post, May 15,
2004
I Don't Care What the International Lawyers Say, We Are
Going to Kick Some Ass George W. Bush, quoted
in "Against All Enemies," Richard Clarke, Free Press, March 22,
2004
'I
Killed Innocent People For Our Government Sacramento Bee, May 16, 2004
Chaos in Washington TomDispatch,
The Nation Institute, May 18, 2004
Bush Hands Million-Dollar Public Land to Mining Company
for $875 Greenwatch, May 5, 2004
Sale of Mining Patents Roils Crested Butte
Residents Denver Post, Apr. 6, 2004 (archive
fee required)
Poppy Strikes Gold UTNE Reader,
April 8, 2003
Locked in Abu
Ghraib: The Prison Scandal Keeps Getting Worse Slate.com, May 17, 2004
The Doctrine of Atrocity Village
Voice, May 11, 2004
Lies Were Fed to CIA on Iraq, Says Powell International Herald Tribune, May 18, 2004
Up to 90 Percent of Iraqi Detainees Arrested by Mistake,
Red Cross Says Chicago Sun-Times, May 11,
2004
Torture: A Systematic Process Learned From the Cold
War The Independent, May 14, 2004
The
Roots of Torture Newsweek, May 24, 2004
issue
God,
Country and Torture CounterPunch, May 14,
2004
The Buck Stops-Where? Slate.com,
May 14, 2004
US Vows to Stay in Control of Iraqi Troops The Guardian, May 17, 2004
Prison Abuse: Patterns From the Past CounterPunch, May 12, 2004
Implausible Denial I The Nation,
May 14, 2004
Implausible Denial II The Nation,
May 17, 2004
Powell Says Bush Was 'Informed' Of Red Cross
Concerns Baltimore Sun, May 12, 2004
'I Never Saw Such a Thing Under Saddam Chicago Sun-Times, May 16, 2004
Legal Advice on Torture Rejected ABC News, May 16, 2004
The Phoenix Program Revisited CounterPunch, May 15, 2004
Rise in Birth Deformities Blamed on Allies' Deadly
Weaponry The Independent, May 13, 2004
Amnesty Reports 37 'Disputed Killings' by UK
Soldiers The Independent, May 11, 2004
The Rise of bin Laden New York
Review of Books, May 27, 2004 issue
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