Archive for February, 2007

New Les roberts Op-Ed

Les Roberts has a new op-ed in the Independent:

Les Roberts: Iraq’s death toll is far worse than our leaders admit
The US and Britain have triggered an episode more deadly than the Rwandan genocide

Published: 14 February 2007

On both sides of the Atlantic, a process of spinning science is preventing a serious discussion about the state of affairs in Iraq.

The government in Iraq claimed last month that since the 2003 invasion between 40,000 and 50,000 violent deaths have occurred. Few have pointed out the absurdity of this statement.

There are three ways we know it is a gross underestimate. First, if it were true, including suicides, South Africa, Colombia, Estonia, Kazakhstan, Latvia, Lithuania and Russia have experienced higher violent death rates than Iraq over the past four years. If true, many North and South American cities and Sub-Saharan Africa have had a similar murder rate to that claimed in Iraq. For those of us who have been in Iraq, the suggestion that New Orleans is more violent seems simply ridiculous.

Secondly, there have to be at least 120,000 and probably 140,000 deaths per year from natural causes in a country with the population of Iraq. The numerous stories we hear about overflowing morgues, the need for new cemeteries and new body collection brigades are not consistent with a 10 per cent rise in death rate above the baseline.

And finally, there was a study, peer-reviewed and published in The Lancet, Europe’s most prestigious medical journal, which put the death toll at 650,000 as of last July. The study, which I co-authored, was done by the standard cluster approach used by the UN to estimate mortality in dozens of countries each year. While the findings are imprecise, the lower range of possibilities suggested that the Iraq government was at least downplaying the number of dead by a factor of 10.

There are several reasons why the governments involved in this conflict have been able to confuse the issue of Iraqi deaths. Our Lancet report involved sampling and statistical analysis, which is rather dry reading. Media reports always miss most deaths in times of war, so the estimate by the media-based monitoring system, Iraqbodycount.org (IBC) roughly corresponds with the Iraq government’s figures. Repeated evaluations of deaths identified from sources independent of the press and the Ministry of Health show the IBC listing to be less than 10 per cent complete, but because it matches the reports of the governments involved, it is easily referenced.

Several other estimates have placed the death toll far higher than the Iraqi government estimates, but those have received less press attention. When in 2005, a UN survey reported that 90 per cent of violent attacks in Scotland were not recorded by the police, no one, not even the police, disputed this finding. Representative surveys are the next best thing to a census for counting deaths, and nowhere but Iraq have partial tallies from morgues and hospitals been given such credence when representative survey results are available.

The Pentagon will not release information about deaths induced or amounts of weaponry used in Iraq. On 9 January of this year, the embedded Fox News reporter Brit Hume went along for an air attack, and we learned that at least 25 targets were bombed that day with almost no reports of the damage appearing in the press.

Saddam Hussein’s surveillance network, which only captured one third of all deaths before the invasion, has certainly deteriorated even further. During last July, there were numerous televised clashes in Anbar, yet the system recorded exactly zero violent deaths from the province. The last Minister of Health to honestly assess the surveillance network, Dr Ala’din Alwan, admitted that it was not reporting from most of the country by August 2004. He was sacked months later after, among other things, reports appeared based on the limited government data suggesting that most violent deaths were associated with coalition forces.

The consequences of downplaying the number of deaths in Iraq are profound for both the UK and the US. How can the Americans have a surge of troops to secure the population and promise success when the coalition cannot measure the level of security to within a factor of 10? How can the US and Britain pretend they understand the level of resentment in Iraq if they are not sure if, on average, one in 80 families have lost a household member, or one in seven, as our study suggests?

If these two countries have triggered an episode more deadly than the Rwandan genocide, and have actively worked to mask this fact, how will they credibly be able to criticise Sudan or Zimbabwe or the next government that kills thousands of its own people?

For longer than the US has been a nation, Britain has pushed us at our worst of moments to do the right thing. That time has come again with regard to Iraq. It is wrong to be the junior partner in an endeavour rigged to deny the next death induced, and to have spokespeople effectively respond to that death with disinterest and denial.

Our nations’ leaders are collectively expressing belligerence at a time when the populace knows they should be expressing contrition. If that cannot be corrected, Britain should end its role in this deteriorating misadventure. It is unlikely that any historians will record the occupation of Iraq in a favourable light. Britain followed the Americans into this débâcle. Wouldn’t it be better to let history record that Britain led them out?

The writer is an Associate Professor at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health

Add comment February 15th, 2007

In These Times on drugging, interrogations, and the APA

Writer Mischa Gaus, in In These Times, has a new piece on America’s inhuman interrogations [Interrogations Behind Barbed Wire: Who’s to blame for America’s new torture techniques?]

It raises the question as to whether the detainees are being drugged, in addition to everything else being done to “break them down”. We should distribute it to remind people that we’re not just talking about “ethics codes” and principles, but of horrors most of us can only imagine. And the BSCT psychologists are part of apparatus of terror. If APA had an ounce of ethics in them they would rush to demand a Congressional investigation of just what is being done to these people in our name. If it is benign, let’s find out. But if, as I believe, it is not benign, wouldn’t moral people, and a moral organization want to do everything possible to find out? At least in my concept of morality, that’s a no-brainer. Of course, in five years, the APA has done NOTHING to find out what’s really going on there. In my view “Something’s rotten in Denmark!”

Add comment February 14th, 2007

American Psychoanalytic Association condemns torture

Received from the American Psychoanalytic Association:

February 14, 2007

Dear Fellow APsaA Members,

I am proud to inform you that the Association’s Board of Directors approved the following position statement on torture at the Executive Council meeting in New York on January 18, 2007. The statement was approved unanimously. A press release issued that day was picked up by a variety of news sources scattered around the country.* News about the issuing of the position statement was also immediately posted on our website.

American Psychoanalytic Association Position Statement on Torture

January 18, 2007

The American Psychoanalytic Association joins with other mental health and medical professional organizations in strongly condemning the use of torture. As an organization of psychoanalysts who have devoted their lives to helping people undo the effects of trauma in their lives, we strongly protest any governmentally administered and governmentally approved torture of people who are detained. Torture degrades those tortured and those torturing. The effects of that physical and moral degradation, we know, are transmitted to the families and offspring of both victims and perpetrators.

We also strongly condemn the participation or oversight by any mental health or medical personnel in any and all aspects of torture. Such actions are contrary to the basic ethical principles fundamental to the helping professions.

******
[end of statement]

We believe this to be a clean straightforward statement, valuable in its simplicity and lack of ambiguity and exceptions. I’d like to personally thank all who made the approval of this statement possible in a relatively short period of time, especially Dr. Bennett Simon, who contributed a great deal to its drafting.

I hope you will all find occasions to use or refer to the statement in your work with other organizations, community groups, and the media.

Best regards,
Prudy Gourguechon,
President Elect

* A sampling of some of the “placements” of the press release:
dallasnews.com
PR Newswire
Yahoo!
MedicalDevices.Org
Yahoo!UK and Ireland
Dallas Morning News
NBC6.com

While this statement is nice to have, American Psychological Association people will point out that it ignores so-called “cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment,” which was condemned by the 2006 APA Resolution. Of course, both ignore any statement of whether, and where, torture is occurring and whether mental health professionals are aiding it. As usual, the devil is in the details.

4 comments February 14th, 2007

Jos Marshall on Iranian weapons in Iraq

Josh Marshall provides a detailed unpacking of what the President and others are saying, versus what they are hinting, about Iranian weapons in Iraq.

President Bush says “with certainty” that Qods forces are giving these weapons to fighters for use against American troops. The only question, he says, is whether the leaders of the Iranian government at the highest level directly told them to do so. CNN’s Barbara Starr says that this is the same thing that Gen. Pace is saying.

But they’re actually not saying the same thing. And President Bush’s remarks are intentionally framed to duck the key issue of who the Iranians are really arming and why.

1 comment February 14th, 2007

Music: Corinne Bailey Rae - Like A Star

For Valentines Day:

2 comments February 14th, 2007

Avian flu threatens internet

DemFromCT at Daily Kos discusses the threat avian flu may pose to the internet. Kids at home and YouTube may bring it down.

Add comment February 14th, 2007

Congress moves to undo Military Commissions Act

Some Senate Democrats have moved to undo the worst abuses of last year’s Military Commissions Act

group of Senate Democrats introduced legislation yesterday that would restore habeas corpus rights to all detainees in U.S. custody and would narrowly define what it means to be an “enemy combatant” against the United States, a measure designed to challenge laws ushered in by the Republican-controlled Congress last year.

The bill, titled the “Restoring the Constitution Act of 2007,” strikes at the core of the Military Commissions Act of 2006 by giving detainees access to U.S. courts. It was introduced by Sen. Christopher J. Dodd (Conn.), a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination.

The bill would also prevent the executive branch from making blanket determinations about who is an enemy combatant and would restrict the president’s authority to interpret when certain human rights standards apply to detainees. The legislation would limit the label “enemy combatant” to a person “who directly participates in hostilities in a zone of active combat against the United States” or who took part in the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

Should such language become law, it could change the status of numerous detainees who were picked up in U.S. counterterrorism efforts.

The bill would also restore to the detainees numerous rights they lost under the Military Commissions Act, including the right, under a habeas corpus petition, to challenge their detention in federal court.

It’ll be hard as they may face both a filibuster and a Presidential veto. After all, many Republicans will do anything to protect their torture regime.

Add comment February 14th, 2007

Iranian weapons in Iraq: Official lies and rumors

Gareth Porter deconstructs the anonymous American military claims that Iran is supplying armor-piercing weapons for use against American forces by Shia militias in Iraq: US Briefing on Iran Discredits the Official Line:

Taking into account the false notes struck by the anonymous officials, the damaging admissions they made and the absence of information they needed to make a case, the briefing appears to have been a serious setback to the administration’s propaganda campaign. It will certainly haunt administration officials trying to convince Congress to support its increased aggressiveness toward Iran.

Add comment February 14th, 2007

Monterey Bay Psychological Association task stand on interrogations

Promoted from the Comments section:

August 2006

To whom it may concern:

The members of the Monterey Bay Psychological Association feel compelled to speak out, unequivocally and without further delay, against the unethical, immoral, and illegal practices taking place in military prisons around the world. As psychologists, we would like to stand with all those who have protested the use of psychologists as consultants to torture, degradation, cruelty and/or inhumane treatment of military prisoners.

In its structured examination of the ethics of this practice, the APA Psychological Ethics and National Security (PENS) Task Force took a small step in the right direction. However, we do not believe that their Report goes far enough in identifying and denouncing the misuse of psychological theory and practice in military interrogations and on rendition teams.

Both the APA and the CPA have asked for member psychologists’ input. We find that the PENS Task Force Report, as currently written, does not represent us as psychologists, and is in fact detrimental to our profession. Within the context of ongoing media reports of cruel, inhumane, and degrading practices used in military interrogations and on rendition teams, the APA’s focus on responsibilities to society rings hollow. To participate in unethical practices under the guise of protecting the general social welfare is simply wrong. As an organization, the Monterey Bay Psychological Association believes that the APA Ethics Code is clear in its prohibition of the use of torture, and clear that psychologists should have no part in this aspect of military operations. Further, we recognize the dilemma of military psychologists forced to choose between their role as psychologists and their role as military officers.

We fervently believe that if we do not speak out against practices that violate human rights and dignity, we are complicit in those practices. We would hope that the PENS Task Force and APA administration understand the fundamental admonition in the APA Ethics Code to Do No Harm, and continue to question their current interpretation.

Respectfully,

Jon Girvetz, Ph.D.
President, Monterey Bay Psychological Association
Jennifer Kaupp, Ph.D.
President-Elect, Monterey Bay Psychological Association
Co-Chairs, Contemporary Issues in Psychology Forum

1 comment February 14th, 2007

More Levine on APA and torture

Art Levine has built upon his excellent Washington Monthly piece on APA’s policy toward interrogations [Collective Unconscionable: How psychologists, the most liberal of professionals, abetted Bush’s torture policy] with a blog post on today’s Huffington Post that brings the article up-to-date [Psychologists, Torture and the Fight to Close Gitmo]. The piece outlines the issue and describes the background to the issue as well as our latest efforts to change APA policy: the Moratorium on psychologist participation, and candidacy of Steven J. Reisner for APA President.

Read and pass on Levine’s new piece.

Add comment February 13th, 2007

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