Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Saturday, June 13, 2015

Vadamarachchi – Was President JR a traitor? - IV


article_image
By Izeth Hussain- 

I am adding this fourth and concluding part of this article because I want mainly to clarify one point, and establish it firmly, as otherwise my article – though it contains material of public importance – might seem to amount to a nullity. From the feedback I have been getting it appears that the public mind is fixated on the idea that President JR really had no alternative to caving in to the Indian demand that military operations be stopped after Vadamarachchi, as otherwise India would have invaded this country with very horrible consequences. He therefore did what any responsible leader would have done in his position. Behind that fixation is the realpolitik notion of international relations, according to which what counts ultimately in international relations is power and nothing else. It is a naïve, and indeed ill-informed, notion that fails to take count of the complex realities behind international relations in the modern era.

CBK speaks up for the prospering economy under Maithri-Ranil regime 
hamper
  • Signals on significant foreign investments after general election 
  • Govt. renegotiating prices of projects 
  • Lashes out at Rajapaksa regime for pillaging public wealth
Former President Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga gestures at the press conference yesterday as Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake looks on – Pic by Upul Abayasekara
logoBy Charumini de Silva-Saturday, 13 June 2015
The theoretician of the 8 January ‘silent revolution,’ former President Chandrika Bandaranaike yesterday spokeon the state of the economy and the illegal projects embarked onby the previous regime.

21st Century Socialism: What Is It?


Colombo Telegraph
By Hema Senanayake –June 13, 2015 
Hema Senanayake
Hema Senanayake
Sumanasiri Liyange in a recent article wrote to Colombo Telegraph tried to intimate that the 21st Century Socialism would be different from its old version. In regard to that he presented a list of five points or characteristics quoting from Bolivarian revolutionaries of Venezuela. No socialism or any other economic system would prevail if that system is not efficient than present capitalistic system. These Bolivarian revolutionaries know nothing about economic efficiency. That may be the reason the term “economic efficiency” is missing from the five point list. Let us have a quick look about the five characteristics which characteristics Sumanasiri takes seriously. I quote from Sumanasiri’s article on June 11th, 2015 to CT.
“1. Human development as the center and focus. Socialism is to be governed by the logic of humanism and solidarity and have as its aim the satisfaction of human needs, not profit;
2. Respect for nature, and opposition to consumerism. Our goal should not be to live “better” but to live “well”;
3. Socialism requires a new dialectic of production/ distribution/ consumption based on: (a) socialownership of the means of production, (b) social production organized by workers and (3) the satisfaction of communal needs;
4. A new concept of efficiency that both respects nature and seeks human development;
5. Rational use of available natural and human resources through a decentralized participatory planning process that has nothing do with the hyper centralized bureaucratic planning of the Soviet state. (A World to Build. pp. 57 and 83-84)” As Sumanasiri intimated the author of this book is Marta Harnecker, a Bolivarian revolutionary.
Please read the above quote carefully. Is there any single word about “economic efficiency?” – Nothing. The main weakness of the Soviet Union style socialism was not having “centralized bureaucratic planning” instead of having “decentralized participatory planning” or even lack of “social production organized by workers” or not having “human development as the center and focus.” The main weakness of Soviet system originated from its inability to comprehend the “market mechanism” as a tool of planning of the production and distribution. When you failed to comprehend it, you automatically fail to comprehend the necessity to ensure having the real cost of every produce. When you failed to do both you would fail to establish a currency that freely and flexibly penetrate into the each cell of produce so as to express its value. When these things fail economic efficiency fails. That was what happened in Soviet Union. Its system was not competitive with western capitalism. Didn’t any socialist see this crisis?
A participant carries a child on his shoIn fact Leon Trotsky saw it. So, he wrote, “Market and credit mechanism serve the cause of socialism better than capitalism” (Revolution Betrayed). He highly criticized the Soviet styled price regulations imposed by professors of Stalin regime.                                        Read More

Dissolve expired parliament which is now a spent force forthwith irrespective of 20 th amendment rejected by minority parties- UNP working committee


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News- 13.June.2015, 2.00PM) While all the minority parties are opposing the 20 th amendment, the two main parties getting together, and seeking to amend the country’s electoral system forebodes ill to the country, and is a pernicious precedent , whereby it can well lay the foundation to a huge holocaust involving the country and the people , the executive committee of the UNP decided last evening at its meeting.
This meeting which was chaired by prime minister (P.M) Ranil Wickremesinghe discussed and  decided that the hidden  aim of this proposed  20 th amendment to the constitution is  to delay the dissolution of the parliament which is now a spent force having been rejected by the people ,as its term has expired. This dilatory tactic is part of the conspiratorial anti national aims and agendas of the slaves and minions of the Rajapakses who are by now best recognized as political outcasts rejected in toto by the people , was the consensus of the members at the meeting. Through  empty talk and tomfoolery citing the 20 th amendment it is the dastardly and diabolic aim of these conspirators , to postpone this dissolution until April next year , it was pointed out at the meeting.
In the circumstances , it was the decision of the UNP that measures must be taken next towards holding a parliamentary election without delay.
Meanwhile at the cabinet meeting chaired by president Maithripala Sirisena , the decision and agreement reached  at the earlier cabinet meeting  prior to the proposed 20 th amendment , that the parliamentary seats shall remain unchanged at 225 , was again changed subsequently , and increased to 237.The number of seats at electoral level which was 160 was diminished to 145 , and are to be elected on the first past post system .On district basis , a further 65 are to be selected while the number from the national list which was earlier fixed at 25 was increased to 37.
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by     (2015-06-13 08:48:03)

A stinking story


Editorial- 


Parliament was told a stinking story on Thursday. Okay, okay, everything uttered in that place stinks to high heavens. (A big stench emanated the other day when two heavyweights clashed.) But, this particular story was different in that it was about four toilets among other things.

Media Minister Gayantha Karunathilake revealed that the ceremonial opening of the Mattala and Hambantota fuel storage facilities under the previous government had cost the taxpayers Rs. 6.6 million. Of that amount, Rs. 825,000 had been spent on refreshments, the Minister said. What took the cake, however, was that Rs. 215,000 had been paid for four mobile toilets, of all things, though there were enough washrooms where the ceremony took place.

It looks as if those who went all the way from Colombo to Hambantota had done nothing but eating and …, well, that is left to our readers’ imagination.

We wonder whether the Media Minister has got his facts right about the toilets. Was Rs. 215,000 entirely spent on hiring them? We raise this query because, according to a report we carried the other day, in an Indian state people are being paid for using public toilets as part of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Clean India campaign. Did the guests at the Hambantota ceremony also get paid like the Indians? Else, it defies comprehension how on earth such a whopping sum was spent on four mobile toilets.

Minister Karunathilake named only a few of those who had attended the Hambantota event. Will he release the full list of invitees who wasted their time and energy besides people’s money to travel with their security contingents and officials to Hambantota for that purpose? We bet our bottom dollar that he won’t be able to do so. For, among them must have been the turncoats who have now taken moral high ground, condemning the criminal waste of public money under the Rajapaksa government.

Wasteful expenditure on food and toilets in Hambantota may have thankfully stopped after the change of government in January, but it goes on unabated elsewhere. There is a place near the Diyawanna Lake notorious for generously spending public money on expensive comestibles etc in return for nothing save public entertainment in the form of fisticuffs, exchanges of obscenities and mudslinging. We have reported previously that food sufficient for more than 2,000 hungry mouths is discarded at this place every month. If the starving masses are shown what is available at the posh a la carte restaurant there at ludicrously cheap prices they would be shocked.

The Media Minister, no doubt, deserves praise for having revealed how state funds were wasted on useless ceremonies which only helped boost the egos of the leaders of the previous government. He should also reveal to the people the amount of public funds spent on food and beverages in parliamentary restaurants with menus as well as subsidised prices. Most of those are as thin as a rake when they enter Parliament become horizontally gifted in next to no time while the people are starving. They’ve never had it so good!

Will the Media Minister respect the people’s right to information?
UNP insists on 225; calls for immediate polls with dissolution of Parliament 

03_REVISED_RANIL_ST_175032fPrime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe
logoSaturday, 13 June 2015
The UNP yesterday stuck to its guns demanding that number of MPs should be strictly limited to 225 and urged for immediate dissolution of Parliament leading to the conduct of general elections.
The firm stand on the party position was ratified at the Working Committee meeting chaired by Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe.  Surprisingly the stand came few hours after the announcement of Cabinet at its third meeting for the week yesterday agreeing to increase the number of MPs to 237 from 225 giving in to concerns from different parties including those representing the minorities and smaller parties.
Despite the Cabinet nod, the UNP Working Committee emphasised that there was no mandate to increase the number of MPs 237 and the party has remained steadfast for a Parliament of 225 MPs. 
It was pointed out that the mandate people gave on 8 January Presidential election was to hold Parliamentary elections within 100 days. In view of this, the UNP Working Committee decided to urge President Maithripala Sirisena to dissolve Parliament immediately and go for fresh general elections.

Yesterday’s Cabinet decision to increase the number of MPs to 237 was after it approved on Monday a proposal by Premier Wickremesinghe of sticking to 225 MPs though with a change in composition. 
That day the Cabinet approved Prime Minister Wickremesinghe proposal that the 20th Amendment to the Constitution should introduce provisions for 125 members of a 225-member legislature to be elected through the First-Past-the-Post (FPP) or majoritarian system, with 75 members elected based on proportional representation (PR).  Premier Wickremesinghe proposed that 25 MPs enter Parliament through the national list.

Yesterday›s special and third Cabinet meeting was convened by President Sirisena to reach a compromise after several other parties expressed reservations.

At the UNP Working Committee it was stressed that a small section of the Opposition was holding electoral reforms to ransom to achieve petty objectives. Emphasising the UNP cannot stoop to that level, the party decided to register its strongest reservations on new proposal and urging the President Sirisena to immediately dissolve Parliament and hold fresh Parliamentary elections to enable the people to give a fresh mandate. 

Maithripala Sirisena's moment

Fragments.

Posted by 
It is necessary for politicians to talk. Necessary to explain. Necessary to meditate on some issue or the other. Talk is cheap, however. Rhetoric too. When concerns are raised and people are with one cause or the other, lip-service is easy to get. Actual support isn’t. That is why the 19th Amendment was badmouthed, scuttled, and in other ways cut down. That is why the 20th Amendment is said to face an even bigger setback. Politicians are frail, after all. They’re human.
 
The SLFP has not split to the extent where every issue being debated on has splintered and fragmented between two or more sides. That is why last Monday’s gathering of the SLFP and UPFA near Town Hall stood out.  It was not just Maithripala Sirisena’s faction that stood there. There were other people. Other names. Some didn’t turn up, but they were mentioned too.
 
The 20th is not the 19th. This we know. While the 19th cut down the powers of a man who still can and does call the shots, the 20th is wider and more all-encompassing. It affects everyone and for this reason not everyone wants to see it through. The SLFP’s position is clear, however. It wants enactment. The UNP on the other hand is pettifogging. So is the JVP.
 
There were people who came and spoke at the rally. For the first time since his coming to power, Maithripala Sirisena acknowledged that other parties (he did not mention the UNP explicitly but he needn’t have) were in his way. Rajitha Senaratne asserted the SLFP’s mandate and authority in passing it. So did Susil Premajayantha and Anura Priyadarshana Yapa. So did Thilanga Sumathipala. And so did D. E. W. Gunasekara.
 
The Mahinda faction did not attend (though SLFPers were present whatever their affiliation) but that didn’t show. The gathering was significant not least because the 20th Amendment is seen to be “authored” by the UPFA. The SLFP and more importantly the Sirisena faction showed that they were capable of assertion. There were accusations aimed at the UNP and other parties. Senaratne in particular was vocal. He lambasted the UNP’s role in scuttling the proposed Amendment and accused it and several other parties of hypocrisy.
 
He is correct. The UNP supported the 19th. So did the JVP. Both parties are now silent. The JVP has all but completely given up its (earlier) stand on reform. One can argue that electoral reform and the abolition of the manapa kramaya (which is what the 20th aims at) will fare badly for it. But the Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU) supports it. So does the Liberal Party (Professor Rajiva Wijesinhe was present at the rally). So does the TNA (though it wants adjustments to guarantee representation for minorities). That’s courage. That’s statesmanship.
 
In this context the SLFP’s stand on electoral reform needed to be clear. Both Senaratne and Sirisena spoke for everyone when they mentioned that the 20th is more important than its predecessor. This is true. While pruning the powers of the Executive was all fine and well, one can argue that they didn’t detrimentally affect other parties. Not even the SLFP.
 
Electoral reform is different, however. It can dampen and reduce parliamentary presence. As Premajayantha, Yapa, and even Sirisena reiterated, fears of enacting the 20th on this count are natural. But I believe Premajayantha got it right here: “We must put national interest ahead of personal want.” If the 20th will reduce numbers and support, and this is why certain parties are opposed to it (in secret of course), that is not statesmanship. That is duplicity.
 
Let’s not forget that the electoral system we have at present is flawed. It aggravates inter- and intra-party rivalries and, as seen in the last few years, can even provoke crime and dissension within party. It’s all about big bucks. All about money and power. Now it is true that extrapolating wildly and blaming everything and anything on the system is easy, but then again even such problems as intra-party rifts can be traced back to the manapa kramaya. That is why it must go. Period.
 
There is another reason. Ranil Wickremesinghe was not elected as Prime Minister. His party has relegated the SLFP to the opposition and continues to be in power courtesy of a pre-election agreement with Sirisena. The president is not a puppet, however. He can’t afford to be seen as one. He can assert. He must. The 20th gives him an opportunity to do so.
 
There may be an underside to all this, of course. We can assume that the likes of Senaratne want “show”. We can assume that they are accusing the UNP of not “toeing the line” when it comes to reform to show that they can represent the SLFP that way. That’s coalition politics. We have seen it before, especially during the years 2001 to 2004.
 
But times have changed. The president supports what the government opposes. Whether or not he genuinely opposes the UNP, we don’t know. Nor do we care. What we want is reform. We want to see that through and anyone who wants to scuttle it for reasons of expediency must be scripted out. Purely and simply.
 
Rajitha Senaratne was probably trying to unify the SLFP’s stand on this matter when he referred to both Mahinda Rajapaksa and Maithripala Sirisena as “president”. He called Chandrika Kumaratunge “mathiniya”. Whether or not that was a slip of the tongue, he made one point clear. The SLFP and the UPFA need to be in on this. It has the numbers in parliament. The Cabinet is in the hands of another (unelected) party, but if the president can deal with that (with or without exercising the “Chandrika option” of dismissing them), obtaining support will not be difficult.
 
The message was clear, hence: “Everyone in the SLFP and UPFA is with us. We admit their role in what we’re doing whether they’re here or not. They were with us once, after all: Comrade Vasu, Dinesh Gunawardena, and even the former president to name a few. Besides, it was the SLFP that reformed the Local Government electoral system three years ago. We have the mandate to continue. We can oppose the UNP. And at the end of the day, we will.”
 
Point well made, Mr Senaratne. And well taken.

Bandula Gunawardena had fraudulently pocketed a whopping Rs. 20,000 million through computer purchases !


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -12.June.2012, 11.30PM)  Ex  minister of education Bandula Gunawardena , an owner of tuition ‘dens’ had cheated in a sum of Rs. 20,000 million ! when supplying computers to schools during his tenure of office as minister.
This monumental fraud was revealed in parliament by the present education minister Akila Viraj Kariyawasam yesterday (11). When the deputy speaker Chandima Weerakody occupied the speaker ‘s chair , Kariyawasam while exposing this fraud , pointed out at the time  these  computer  purchases were made by the ex minister , the procedures or the regulations governing such purchases have not been duly followed, and flagrantly violated.
While there were computers that can be purchased at prices between Rs. 40,000.00 to Rs. 60,000.00 , these computers numbering 60,000 had been purchased at exorbitant prices of Rs. 110,000.00 and over . Obviously the ex minister had directly , shamelessly and brazenly committed this fraud, based on information that has come to light, Kariyawasam disclosed .
Always truth stings worst when it is  a worst  crook  is at the receiving end. Naturally, when this shocking exposure was made   the ex minister Bandula was  stung so viciously that he turned most belligerent , and did not allow  the parliament proceedings to progress smoothly by  screaming at and obstructing everyone. Ultimately the speaker had to calm him by reminding him to behave better as an ex education minister  rather than conducting himself like a Montessori class child.
Meanwhile the JVP making a statement informed that necessary measures are being taken to lodge a complaint with the CID  pertaining to this computer science  financial fraud. 
Interestingly ,Bandula who is guilt ridden had earlier on visited the Bribery and corruption commission and inquired whether there are any complaints against him , just like a crook secretly inquiring whether his theft about which he knows  before all others, has come to light.

By T. Jeyakumar 
Translated by Jeff  
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by     (2015-06-12 22:58:03)

58-man army security contingent to protect Gota


 2015-06-13
It was revealed that 58 army personnel have been assigned to provide security for former Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa to ensure his security after he relinquished office after the 8 January presidential election.
This was revealed by an answer tabled by Chief Government Whip Gayantha Karunatilake in Parliament in response to a question directed at Minister of Public Order and Christian Affairs John Amaratunga by United People's Freedom Alliance Parliamentarian Susantha Punchinilame.
The ministry in its answer confirmed that Gotabaya Rajapaksa was being afforded adequate security considering the extent of potential threat to his life. Punchinilame asked which Secretary faced the largest potential threat to his life. The ministry said there was no intelligence that could be used to make such an exact assessment.

The Army: Under The PA Government


Colombo Telegraph
By Rajan Hoole –June 13, 2015
Dr. Rajan Hoole
Dr. Rajan Hoole
The PA government led by Chandrika Kumaratunga was voted into power in August 1994 on a peace platform. Although the LTTE agreed to talk to the Government, to the more careful observer it had clearly signalled its long term intentions. This it did by using a suicide boat to sink the naval vessel Sagarawardene off Mannar in September 1994 and then killing the UNP presidential candidate Gamini Dissanayake in a suicide attack in October 1994. A cease-fire came into force and the LTTE ended the cease-fire on 19th, April 1995 with a suicide attack sinking two anchored naval vessels in Trincomalee.
The Government had entered into peace talks with such optimism that it misjudged the LTTE and failed to come to grips with the military and political challenges ahead. As for the LTTE, it had attacked the Sagarawardene on 19th September 1994 after a cordial exchange of letters between President Kumaratunge and the LTTE leader, and talks had already been fixed for 13th October 1994. During the cease-fire the LTTE demanded the removal of the embargo on banned items to the North, removal of certain army camps and the lifting of the ban on fishing. The Government lifted the ban on fishing everywhere in the Jaffna peninsula except near Karainagar and KKS naval harbours. The LTTE remained insistent. The LTTE ended the cease- fire with a surprise attack on naval vessels anchored in Trincomalee. To many Tamil observers and residents in Jaffna, it had been clear from September 1994, that the LTTE’s main intention had been to cripple the Navy.
Chandrika PoliceObservers in Jaffna opine that the renewal of war was timed to coincide with the LTTE’s acquisition of surface-to-air missiles. Two military flights were downed before April ended. Initially there was panic in Colombo. It was feared that the Government’s sprawling military base in Palaly, the naval base in Karainagar and the Elephant Pass camp would be cut off by land, sea and air. The Government was thus forced to take the entire Jaffna peninsula or pull out. The peninsula was brought under control by April 1996, and this was both a significant military and political gain for the Government (see The Jaffna Exodus, our Special Report No.6).

Colombo Airport Duty Free Tender imminent…..

air port
Saturday, 13 June 2015
With the end of the current 5 year terms of both World Duty Free Group (WDF) and Flemingo at the Bandaranayake International Airport in June 2016, Airport and Aviation is expected to announce the new tender for the Supply and Operation of the Duty Free Shops at the Colombo Airport shortly. As per regular procedures an evaluation period of 3-4months is required for the selection and award of this lucrative business. The tender is usually published approximately 9 months prior to the evaluation.
The Colombo Airport currently handles over 7m passengers annually. Current duty free sales for the airport is estimated at between USD70–80 million annually (over 1 billion rupees per year), shared between the two main players WDF and Flemingo.
Recent rumours indicate both incumbents WDF and Flemingo, are lobbying hard at the highest levels to extend their current terms by an additional 5 years, without tender. It is expected that the Good Governance practices of the current government, won’t allow for any violations of irregularities of the required tender procedures.

8 hospitalised after star class dinner

2015-06-13
At least eight people were hospitalised last night after they fell ill following a dinner party held in the Oak room at Cinnamon Grand Hotel in Colombo organised by the Sri Lanka UK society to celebrate British Queen’s birth day, informed sources said. 

The sources said they had obtained beverages, liquor and starters from outside and that a mushroom starter may have lead to a food poisoning.

 When contacted Police spokesman Ruwan Gunasekara, he said they were admitted to two private Hospitals and were out of danger and that some of them had left the hospital after treatment. 

ASP Gunasekara said food samples and samples of liquor used in the function were taken by the Public Health Inspectors (PHIs) to be sent to the Government Annalist. 

He said police together with the Colombo Municipal Council (CMC) were investigating into the incident. 

CID grills Namal for four long hours over assassination bid on President Maithripala


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -12.June.2012, 11.30PM) The one and  only Sri Lanka ‘s synthetic lawyer Namal Rajapakse M.P.  was grilled by the CID (criminal investigation department) for four long hours today ! 
Namal was questioned in regard to two crimes committed, that is over the assassination bid on president Maithripala Sirisena at Angunakola pelessa where an army corporal  who is now in remand custody got into close proximity to the president suspiciously with a pistol while pretending that he was carrying a a bottle.

The other crime over  which Namala was grilled today is , in connection with the announcement made by a moronic western provincial council member D.V. Upul that every police officer of the Financial crimes investigation division (FCID) from the rank of constable to DIG should be stoned to death .Namal had been present at that meeting , and it is alleged that Namal induced this political outcast Upul to make this  threat. 
The synthetic lawyer who appeared at the CID this morning at about 9.00 was interrogated until 1.45 p.m. 
The one and only synthetic lawyer of Sri Lanka  , speaking to the media following the interrogation  said , since the independence of the judiciary is now in existence , he secured legal protection .By implication he meant that during his brutal despotic father’s reign , such independence of judiciary or safety were non existent.
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by     (2015-06-12 22:53:37)

56 deaths in one week


2015-06-12
Including the three individuals who were killed in an accident this morning, a total of 56 individuals were killed in 44 traffic accidents, within last seven days, Police Media Spokesman ASP Ruwan Gunasekara said.
Three individuals lost their lives this morning when a tipper truck collided with a lorry after running over two pedestrians, on Colombo –Kandy Road, Police said. The accident occurred when the tipper truck driver attempted to avoid a collision with the two pedestrians who were standing in the middle of the road.

‘If you have stress after losing ‘Mul Pituwa’, how should I feel after losing the first chair?

mr bandula
Friday, 12 June 2015
"You devil, if you are under stress after losing ‘Mul Pituwa’, how much stress should I be undergoing after losing the country’s first chair? Do not try to show off. Accept this task and get these papers to do better,” former president Mahinda Rajapaksa told former Lake House chairman Bandula Padmakumara, who is under treatment after experiencing severe stress. The warning came at a meeting on June 10 regarding ‘Rivira’ newspaper, chaired by the ex-president.
Former secretary to the media ministry Charitha Herath and several others participated. There, Charitha told Mahinda that Bandula has refused to accept the CEO position at Rivira Newspapers. Bandula has said that it would be a demotion for him to accept the CEO position after being chairman of Lake House. Losing his temper over this arrogant remark, Mahinda gave a call in front of all. There too, Bandula said he could not accept the position as he was under treatment for mental stress.
The ex-president’s response was, “Do you take us for eunuchs after we looked the other way permitting you to steal? Was it from money inherited from your parents that you bought houses at Queen’s Road at Rs. 450 million? If I get the UNP to dig these up, you will have to obtain treatment for stress from Welikada. Therefore, do what you have been given and get these papers to do better. Or else, do not call me a bad man.”
Hearing the conversation, those present at the meeting talked among themselves, “This one thinks that he is still the country’s president. No one has the backbone to say a few things to his face.”

When the hardest thing is doing nothing: Moral injury caused by inaction in war

When the hardest thing is doing nothing: Moral injury caused by inaction in war
BY THOMAS E. RICKS-JUNE 12, 2015
By Tessa Poppe
Best Defense guest columnist
The counterinsurgency campaigns of Iraq and Afghanistan, in which the line between “non-lethal” and “lethal” missions blurred, create an absurdity where good intentions and ethics collide with the realities of war.
One morning, I stood guard at the edge of our camp in Kunar, Province, Afghanistan. Scanning the area below my position, I noticed a boy about seven years old and a young man, maybe seventeen or eighteen, walking by a nearby house. My instincts told me something was wrong, so I raised my rifle to study them through my scope. I noticed the little boy had bare feet, I’ll never forget that. It was morning still, but the heat was rising, the humidity stuck to my skin. I watched the young man lead the boy to a set of steps outside the house. I couldn’t tell at first why or what was happening, my mind suspended in disbelief, but soon I realized the young man was raping the seven-year-old boy.
I dropped my rifle to my side, my heart racing — confused, disgusted, and torn. But suddenly, I raised it again, my index finger quivering on the trigger. I exhaled, focusing on the target like we were taught to do.
I don’t know how long I stood there, locked on his chest with my rifle, contemplating taking a young man’s life. I wanted to kill him. But I thought — What if they’re brothers? What will the blowback be? Will I go to prison? Those questions lingered for what seemed like hours. A sickening feeling rose from somewhere deep in my stomach, up into my throat and rested there. The knot would stay there for days, weeks, months, years.
I didn’t shoot the man, really a boy himself, but neither did I shout or scream.I did nothing.  
I managed to tell my squad leader and my best friend a few days after the incident. My leader told me I should have shot him, since it was rape of a child. My friend said that I did the right thing, that there was nothing I could have done. I went over it in my mind again and again and again. I imagined the soldiers I would have endangered by killing him, starting a cycle of retribution and political blowback. Yet, my thoughts always returned to the little boy I did not save.
The moment I dropped my rifle, my voice stifled, I lost sight of who I was. I was trained to shoot, to lead men and women, to inspire soldiers, to endure, but I could not endure this wound – a deep transgression against the woman I thought I was. This wound was my moral injury.
After Afghanistan, I couldn’t explain the gnawing on my spirit to anyone—what became an existential disorientation. The mortars or IEDs did not keep me up at night; it was something else that I couldn’t put into words. Others had encountered far worse and lost friends, but I couldn’t understand how my story fit inside the paradigm of war.
Lacking a distinct diagnosis like PTSD, moral injury is often lost in the narrative of PTSD and used interchangeably. A miner trapped in a collapsed mine may suffer from PTSD, driven by his fears of death and enclosed spaces. Yet unlike fear-driven PTSD, moral injury manifests as unabated guilt stemming from a fundamental betrayal of one’s self. In war, moral injury results from a perplexing dilemma, in which either action: killing or not killing results in a loss of humanity, a loss of self.
As soldiers, we were given a mission and rules to guide our actions. But what happens when the rules we must obey betray our own hearts? We are taught to shoot, move, and communicate from day one of boot camp. Action is ingrained in us. Yet, sometimes in war, a soldier can only bear witness, inflicting a deep and abiding wound.
Tessa Poppe served in the Army National Guard as a Military Police Officer for seven years, leaving as a Sergeant. She deployed to Iraq in 2007 and Afghanistan in 2010. She graduated Georgetown University with a Master’s Degree in Security Studies, focusing on human security and stability operations. She is currently a program specialist in overseas safety and security at the U.S. Institute of Peace. The views expressed are her own.
Constantin Mireanu/Flickr

US imperialist strategy in tatters

12/06/2015
A year after ISIS captured Mosul, the jihadist group controls about half of Syria and a third of Iraq – more territory than ever before
Serge Jordan (CWI)
A year after the self-proclaimed “Islamic State of Iraq and Syria” (ISIS) captured Mosul and declared its “caliphate”, it now controls about half of Syria and a third of Iraq - more territory than ever before. The legacy of imperialism, with decades of divide-and-rule policies, power struggles, corporate plunder, support for brutal dictatorships, flirtations with jihadist forces and bloody military interventions, has left these two countries in ruins, reflected in a rapid descent into sectarian fragmentation.
Existing nation States, creations of colonialism, are being increasingly hollowed out, as the old map of the Middle East is redrawn with the blood of the masses. The old imperialist order, established after the collapse of the Ottoman Empire a hundred years ago, is being radically reshaped in a sectarian battleground that has engulfed much of the region. The advance of ISIS is merely symptomatic of this general process. The fight against this group—a common agenda that had supposedly united all nations over the last year--is faltering as the competing powers have failed to come up with any unified strategy.
On May 17, the Iraqi city of Ramadi fell into the hands of ISIS. The takeover of Ramadi, capital of Anbar, Iraq’s largest province, represented the biggest military victory for the Sunni fundamentalist group since the fall of Mosul a year ago. In a replay of the military debacle in Mosul, fleeing Iraqi elite units abandoned a vast amount of their U.S-supplied equipment to ISIS fighters.