Monday, May 14, 2012

US Military taught to use ‘Hiroshima’ Tactics for ‘Total War’ on Islam

Source: http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2012/05/total-war-islam/

U.S. Military Taught Officers: Use ‘Hiroshima’ Tactics for ‘Total War’ on Islam



dooley_presentation_slide1

Lt. Col. Matthew A. Dooley's Joint Staff Forces College presentation on "A Counter-Jihad Op Design Model" (.pdf) calls for violent measures in a war against Islam. (emphasis added) 
 
The U.S. military taught its future leaders that a “total war” against the world’s 1.4 billion Muslims would be necessary to protect America from Islamic terrorists, according to documents obtained by Danger Room. Among the options considered for that conflict: using the lessons of “Hiroshima” to wipe out whole cities at once, targeting the “civilian population wherever necessary.”
The course, first reported by Danger Room last month and held at the Defense Department’s Joint Forces Staff College, has since been canceled by the Pentagon brass. It’s only now, however, that the details of the class have come to light. Danger Room received hundreds of pages of course material and reference documents from a source familiar with the contents of the class.

The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff recently ordered the entire U.S. military to scour its training material to make sure it doesn’t contain similarly hateful material, a process that is still ongoing. But the officer who delivered the lectures, Army Lt. Col. Matthew A. Dooley, still maintains his position at the Norfolk, Virginia college, pending an investigation. The commanders, lieutenant colonels, captains and colonels who sat in Dooley’s classroom, listening to the inflammatory material week after week, have now moved into higher-level assignments throughout the U.S. military.
For the better part of the last decade, a small cabal of self-anointed counterterrorism experts has been working its way through the U.S. military, intelligence and law enforcement communities, trying to convince whoever it could that America’s real terrorist enemy wasn’t al-Qaida — but the Islamic faith itself. In his course, Dooley brought in these anti-Muslim demagogues as guest lecturers. And he took their argument to its final, ugly conclusion.

“We have now come to understand that there is no such thing as ‘moderate Islam,’” Dooley noted in a July 2011 presentation (.pdf), which concluded with a suggested manifesto to America’s enemies. “It is therefore time for the United States to make our true intentions clear. This barbaric ideology will no longer be tolerated. Islam must change or we will facilitate its self-destruction.”
Dooley could not be reached for comment. Joint Forces Staff College spokesman Steven Williams declined to discuss Dooley’s presentation or his status at the school. But when asked if Dooley was responsible for the course material, he responded, “I don’t know if I would classify him [Dooley] as responsible. That would be the commandant” of the school, Maj. Gen. Joseph Ward.
That makes the two-star general culpable for rather shocking material. In the same presentation, Dooley lays out a possible four-phase war plan to carry out a forced transformation of the Islam religion. Phase three includes possible outcomes like “Islam reduced to a cult status” and “Saudi Arabia threatened with starvation.” (It’s an especially ironic suggestion, in light of today’s news that Saudi intelligence broke up the most recent al-Qaida bombing plot.)

International laws protecting civilians in wartime are “no longer relevant,” Dooley continues. And that opens the possibility of applying “the historical precedents of Dresden, Tokyo, Hiroshima, Nagasaki” to Islam’s holiest cities, and bringing about “Mecca and Medina['s] destruction.”
 

Dooley’s ideological allies have repeatedly stated that “mainstream” Muslims are dangerous, because they’re “violent” by nature. Yet only a few of al-Qaida’s most twisted fanatics were ever caught musing about wiping out entire cities.
“Some of these actions offered for consideration here will not be seen as ‘political correct’ in the eyes of many,” Dooley adds. “Ultimately, we can do very little in the West to decide this matter, short of waging total war.”

Dooley, who has worked at the Joint Forces Staff College since August 2010, began his eight-week class with a straightforward, two-part history of Islam. It was delivered by David Fatua, a former West Point history professor. “Unfortunately, if we left it at that, you wouldn’t have the proper balance of points of view, nor would you have an accurate view of how Islam defines itself,” Dooley told his students. Over the next few weeks, he invited in a trio of guest lecturers famous for their incendiary views of Islam.

Shireen Burki declared during the 2008 election that “Obama is bin Laden’s dream candidate.” In her Joint Forces Staff College lecture, she told students that “Islam is an Imperialist/Conquering Religion.” (.pdf)

Stephen Coughlin claimed in his 2007 master’s thesis that then-president George W. Bush’s declaration of friendship with the vast majority of the world’s Muslims had “a chilling effect on those tasked to define the enemy’s doctrine.” (.pdf)  Coughlin was subsequently let go from his consulting position to the military’s Joint Staff, but he continued to lecture at the Naval War College and at the FBI’s Washington Field Office. In his talk to Dooley’s class (.pdf), Coughlin suggested that al-Qaida helped drive the overthrow of Egyptian strongman Hosni Mubarak and Libyan dictator Muammar Gadhafi. It was part of a scheme by Islamists to conquer the world, he added. And Coughlin mocked those who didn’t see this plot as clearly as he did, accusing them of “complexification.”

Coughlin titled his talk: “Imposing Islamic Law – or – These Aren’t the Droids Your Looking For!”
Former FBI employee John Guandolo told the conspiratorial World Net Daily website last year that Obama was only the latest president to fall under the influence of Islamic extremists. “The level of penetration in the last three administrations is deep,” Guandolo alleged. In his reference material for the Joint Forces Staff College class, Guandolo not only spoke of today’s Muslims as enemies of the West. He even justified the Crusades, writing that they “were initiated after hundreds of years of Muslim incursion into Western lands.”

Guandolo’s paper, titled “Usual Responses from the Enemy When Presented With the Truth” (.pdf), was one of hundreds of presentations, documents, videos and web links electronically distributed to the Joint Forces Staff College students. Included in that trove: a paper alleging that “it is a permanent command in Islam for Muslims to hate and despise Jews and Christians” (.pdf). So was a video lecture from Serge Trifkovic, a former professor who appeared as a defense witness in several trials of Bosnian Serb leaders convicted of war crimes, including the genocide of Muslims. A web link, titled “Watch Before This Is Pulled,” supposedly shows President Obama — the commander-in-chief of the senior officers attending the course — admitting that he’s a Muslim.

Dooley added the caveats that his views are “not the Official Policy of the United States Government” and are intended “to generate dynamic discussion and thought.” But he taught his fellow military officers that Obama’s alleged admission could well make the commander in chief some sort of traitor. “By conservative estimates,” 10 percent of the world’s Muslims, “a staggering 140 million people … hate everything you stand for and will never coexist with you, unless you submit” to Islam. He added, “Your oath as a professional soldier forces you to pick a side here.” It is unclear if Dooley’s “total war” on Muslims also applied to his “Muslim” commander in chief.
After the Pentagon brass learned of Dooley’s presentation, the country’s top military officer, Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Martin Dempsey, issued an order to every military chief and senior commander to get rid of any similar anti-Islam instructional material. Dempsey issued the order because the White House had already instructed the entire security apparatus of the federal government — military and civilian — to revamp its counterterrorism training after learning of FBI material that demonized Islam.

By then, Dooley had already presented his apocalyptic vision for a global religious war. Flynn has ordered a senior officer, Army Maj. Gen. Frederick Rudesheim, to investigate how precisely Dooley managed to get away with that extended presentation in an official Defense Department-sanctioned course. The results of that review are due May 24.

Ironically, Dooley and his guest lecturers paint a dire picture of the forward march of Islamic extremism right as its foremost practitioner feared its implosion. Documents recently declassified by the U.S. government revealed Osama bin Laden fretting about al-Qaida’s brutal methods and damaged brand alienating the vast majority of Muslims from choosing to wage holy war. Little could he have known that U.S. military officers were thinking of ways to ignite one.
 
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Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Heroes in Real Life: Anthony Omari -- Kenya

Anthony Omari


 


Late on the night of January 23, 2012, a 24 year-old Kenyan uber-hero named Anthony Omari awoke to find three gigantic dudes with machetes standing over his bed. He knew right away that they weren't there to sell Girl Scout cookies or ask him for a jumping mid-air high-five.

Omari is the custodian of Faraja Children's Home in Ngong, Kenya – a sanctuary of healing and love that over the past several years has grown from a tin-roofed one-room shack in the slums of Nairobi into a decent-sized facility that has taken in 37 boys and girls who have been abandoned or orphaned from the street. A place of hope and peace for children who have tragically slipped through the cracks of Kenyan society. Omari's mother, known to her charges only as "Momma", runs the Home, and, ever the diligent son, Anthony lives at the facility and helps his mom make sure that the children are provided for with a warm bed, a hot meal, a primary school education, and medical attention when they need it. As the only adult male at the Home, he's by default charged with ensuring the physical security and safety of all 37 kids in his care. You'd be hard-pressed to find a dude less deserving of taking a  machete to the face.

The second Omari snapped awake, he immediately recognized the jokers standing around him – it was the fourth time this month that the Faraja Children's Home had been broken into, and it was at least the second time that these exact assholes had paid the orphans a visit in the middle of the night. I honestly have no idea what the hell people are doing breaking into an orphanage so dirt-poor that it has to struggle just to provide basic life necessities to its children, but needless to say, it probably ain't good.


A Kenyan machete, also known as a panga.
The last time Anthony Omari had encountered this gang of home invading douchebags, he'd had the advantage of surprise. A noise had awoken him in the middle of the night, and as he Solid Snake'd his way through the Home pursuing the noise, came upon the would-be thieves/kidnappers/child soldier conscription agents/god-knows-what-else jackasses rummaging through one of the rooms.

Omari shouted, and when the guys turned to see what the hell was going on, he whipped a hammer into the face of the closest guy, chucking this thing like a tomahawk and hopefully cracking him in the teeth with the claw end.

The gang had seen enough. They ran for it.


The next night they came back looking for revenge. And now they were all in Omari's bedroom, carrying ferocious machetes like a horrible posse of orphan-hating Jason Voorhees.

But Anthony Omari wasn't impressed by this cowardly display of dickhead behavior. In a super-scary situation that would have resulted in most rational human beings wetting the bed and then dying, he did the last  thing these guys expected.

He reached under his bed and pulled out his thief-smashing hammer.


As soon Omari pulled out the vicious instrument of blunt-force douchebag annihilation that had wrecked their shit so hard the night before, the dude who had been on the receiving end of Omari's 90 mph fastball of blunt force trauma immediately had post-traumatic stress disorder flashbacks and, in a knee-jerk reaction, threw his machete right at Omari's head. Omari ducked, the machete clattering against the wall, then rolled out of bed, weapon at the ready, determined to take down three assholes with machetes at the same time and protect those fucking orphans at all costs. 

The thugs didn't know what the hell hit them. Omari charged in, swinging hard, beating back three giant thugs with machetes. Screaming like a madman, not only to make himself more intimidating but to warn the children what was going on, Omari rushed ahead, furiously clubbing at his enemies. After a brief, intense battle, Omari somehow managed to force the intruders out of his room, down the hall, and finally sending them retreating out the front door of the Home, chasing them out into the yard.

With all three men out in the front yard, Omari continued to menace them with his weapon (a home improvement tool which, somehow, in the hands of this righteously hardcore badass was even more threatening than a trio of gigantic machetes). Then, from behind, he heard the sounds of children crying – the kids had come to the door, and now were frightened by the battle taking place inside their home. 

Overcome with worry for the kids, Omari ran back to the open door, quickly trying to assure the kids that everything was alright. He turned back around just in time to see a machete swing down at his face.


But Anthony Omari didn't go down immediately. Bleeding intensely from the face, his vision obscured by blood and rapidly becoming dimmer and more blurry by the minute, Omari swing wildly, connecting with his assailant, driving the cowardly asshole back once again. Stumbling, his strength failing him, Omari ran to the front door of the home, closed it, and locked it. Only after the orphans were safe did he allow himself to pass out. 

It took 11 stitches, and it's going to leave the kind of badass scar that action movie characters can only dream about (the closest thing that comes to mind is Kurt Russell in Soldier) but after only two days in the hospital Omari was back at the Faraja Children's Home, taking care of his beloved orphans once again. 

In the end, Anthony Omari saved the orphans not only with his hammer, but with his incredible story of personal bravery in the face of incomprehensible danger. When word of his battle reached Ben Hardwick, a 21 year-old Penn State student working as an intern at a facility nearby, Ben came to talk to him. Impressed by the story, and further concerned for the safety of both Omari and the children, Hardwick put the dude's story up on Reddit, asking for $2,000 in donations so Omari could build a bigger fence to keep those assholes out. 

He received $65,000 in the first twenty-four hours. At last count, the total was up to $83k in donations from Blues Brothers in 46 countries, or roughly 40 times the amount requested – more than enough to build the 8-foot stone fence Omari needed, plus new beds for the kids (some of whom were just sleeping on mattresses on the floor), two full-time night security guards, and extra padlocks for the doors, while still having enough left over to purchase dogs that shoot bees out of their mouths and automated robotic anti-douchebag defense turrets. For a tiny, cash-strapped orphanage in a remote part of Kenya that has spent the last decade struggling just to provide food for their children, eighty grand can go a long way.

"I was sitting on the floor just watching the donations come in.
I just couldn’t believe it — $83,000 is what it’s at now.
I still get chills just thinking about it, and it’s only been five or six days"

Thursday, May 3, 2012

May Day 2012 - Around the world

Source: http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2012/05/may_day_2012.html

May Day 2012

May Day was marked once again around the globe with political protests and demonstrations by organized labor. The Occupy Wall Street movement, which formed last year in New York, used the day to spread its message of social and economic inequality. Also known as International Workers Day, May 1 is marked in different ways around the world, and in many countries May Day is observed as a national holiday. This celebration of the international labor movement stemmed from a deadly 1886 labor demonstration in Chicago calling for an eight-hour workday. -- Lloyd Young(39 photos total)

An Occupy demonstrator confronts a police officer during a rally in the streets as part of a nationwide May Day protest in Oakland, Calif. on May 1. (Jana Asenbrennerova/Reuters)

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Demonstrators gather around a fire in Lindenstrasse near the Jewish Museum during a May Day anti-capitalism protest on May 1 in Berlin, Germany. This year marks 25 years since a 1987 Berlin May Day demonstration turned violent and has been followed by clashes between participants and police on May Day in Berlin almost every year since. (Carsten Koall/Getty Images) #

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A protester is detained by police during a rally for International Workers Day outside the Alameda County Court House on May 1 in Oakland, Calif. Demonstrators called for nationwide May Day strikes to protest economic inequality and political corruption. (Eric Thayer/Getty Images) #

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An anti-capitalist protester from the Occupy movement lays in front of a police officer in Paternoster Square, which is adjacent to St Paul's Cathedral, their previous place of occupation on May 1 in London, England. Students, trade unionists, pensioners and activists from the anti-capitalist Occupy movement marched through the center of London before congregating and staging a demonstration in Trafalgar Square to mark May Day. (Dan Kitwood/Getty Images) #

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A man carries an injured youngster during a march held in the framework of Labor Day on May 1 in Bogota, Colombia. (Felipe Caicedo/AFP/Getty Images) #

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People weave in and out of one another as they wind red twine around a Maypole during a gathering of Occupy DC at Meridan Hill Park, also known as Malcolm X Park on May 1 in Washington, D.C. Organized by the Occupy DC Labor Committee, Anarchist Alliance DC Network, Industrial Workers of the World, Washington Peace Center, the Metropolitan Washington Council of the AFL-CIO and the Amalgamated Transit Union local 689, about 300 people gathered in the park to celebrate May Day, also known as International Workers Day, a celebration of the international labor movement. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images) #

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Gabriel Sufi of Vienna, VA, and Nurhussen Ahmed (9) of Baltimore, MD, carry a flag while gathering with about 300 people for a May Day celebration at Meridan Hill Park, also known as Malcolm X Park on May 1 in Washington, D.C. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images) #

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Ricky Evangelio protests while working his ice cream cart during a May Day march on May 1 in Chicago, IL. About 1000 people joined in the march which worked its way for about two miles from the city's West side into the Loop. (Scott Olson/Getty Images) #

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A Bahraini Shiite employee, who was allegedly dismissed from his job for participating in pro-democracy protests, holds a banner during a demonstration celebrating Labor Day in the village of Muqsha, Bahrain. (AFP/Getty Images) #

Bangladeshi activists shout slogans and wave flags during a procession to mark May Day or International Workers Day in Dhaka on May 1. Activists around the world mark the day with marches demanding better working conditions, more jobs and higher wages. (Munir Uz Zaman/AFP/Getty Images) #

Militants and labor union members gather around a burning the effigy of Philippine President Benigno Aquino in Manila on May 1 as part of the May Day protests demanding higher wages and policies that would make it harder to fire workers. Aquino has said he is trying to help labor but has warned that giving too many benefits will make the country less competitive, costing more jobs. (Noel Celis/AFP/Getty Images) #

People protest during a May Day rally in the center of Barcelona on May 1. Tens of thousands took to the streets across the globe for May Day to press for workers rights amid tough economic times and to back an array of other causes. (Josep Lago/AFP/Getty Images) #

A protester shouts slogans during a demonstration in central Athens to mark the May Day celebrations. (Aris Messinis/AFP/Getty Images) #

Pakistani working women carry candles as they march for better wages and conditions during a May Day rally in Karachi on May 1. Pakistan has a workforce of around 56 million people among a population of 179 million, according to Pakistan's official figures compiled by the Federal Bureau of Statistics. (Asif Hassan/AFP/Getty Images) #

A Trafalgar Square Heritage Warden talks with a protester from the Occupy movement after he erected a tent during a demonstration in Trafalgar Square in London on May 1. Students, trade unionists, pensioners and activists from the anti-capitalist Occupy movement marched through the center of London before congregating and staging a demonstration in Trafalgar Square to mark May Day. (Miguel Medina/AFP/Getty Images) #

A demonstrator tries to destroy a surveillance camera during a march held in the framework of Labor Day on May 1 in Medellin, Colombia. (Raul Arboleda/AFP/Getty Images) #

A protester gets sprayed by a water canon during a May Day march in Santiago, Chile on May 1. Clashes with security forces and riots marred the rally to mark International Labor Day. (Luis Hidalgo/Associated Press) #

A police lieutenant swings his baton at an Occupy Wall Street activists on May 1 in New York. Activists with a variety of causes spread out over New York City Tuesday on International Workers Day, or May Day, with Occupy Wall Street members leading a charge against financial institutions. (Mary Altaffer/Associated Press) #

A supporter holds up a framed picture of Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez during a May Day march in Caracas, Venezuela on May 1. Venezuelan workers commemorated May Day with two separate marches, one organized by supporters of Chavez and the other by his opponents. (Ariana Cubillos/Associated Press) #

Demonstrators burn an effigy of Bolivia's President Evo Morales with a sign that reads "Careful, this brute is on the loose," during a May Day march in La Paz, Bolivia. Morales announced Tuesday his government is completing the nationalization of the country's electricity industry by taking over its electrical grid from a Spanish-owned company. (Juan Karita/Associated) #

A Bolivian miner looks out of his car, in front of a police line, during May Day celebrations in La Paz. President Evo Morales announced on May Day that Bolivia is nationalizing the local unit TDE of Spain's Red Electrica, citing the company's lack of investment in the country as the reason. The sign on the car reads, "Long live May Day. Down with changes in the labor law." (Reuters) #

Riot policemen stand guard after getting splattered by paintballs from student protesters during clashes on International Workers Day, or May Day, at the central square of Bogota on May 1. (Jose Miguel Gomez/Reuters) #

A man chants slogans during a May Day march in Revolution Square in Havana, Cuba. (Javier Galeano/Associated Press) #

Indonesian workers shout slogans during a rally to mark May Day in Jakarta, Indonesia, on May 1. Thousands of Indonesian workers staged the rally demanding the government to raise minimum wage and reject outsourcing. (Dita Alangkara/Associated Press) #

A worker shouts slogans during a rally to mark May Day in Jakarta, Indonesia on May 1. Thousands of Indonesian workers staged the rally demanding the government to raise minimum wage and reject outsourcing. (Achmad Ibrahim/Associated Press) #

A Lebanese leftist activist holds up a hammer and sickle, a symbol of communism, during a demonstration to mark Labor Day, or May Day, in Beirut on May 1. (Sharif Karim/Reuters) #

A police officer uses mace on a protester in front of an American Apparel Inc. store during an Occupy Seattle May Day rally and anti-capitalist march in Seattle on May 1. (Stuart Isett/Bloomberg) #

A demonstrator from the Occupy London movement offers a flower to a commuter during a protest inside London Liverpool Street train station in London, U.K., on May 1. Occupy Wall Street demonstrators, whose anti-greed message spread worldwide during an eight-week encampment in Lower Manhattan last year, planned marches across the globe calling attention to what they say are abuses of power and wealth. (Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg) #

Protestors raise their fists while singing "the Internationale" during a labor demonstration on May Day in Madrid, Spain, on May 1. Spain is the crucial front in Europe's battle to contain its economic crisis. (Angel Navarrete/Bloomberg) #

A homeless person sleeps among placards before the May Day workers march in Lisbon on May 1. The placards read in Portuguese: "Fear", "Danger", "Steps from the Abyss" and "Full of Rage". The march was marked by protests against economic austerity measures and labor law reforms, that included cut holiday entitlement, more flexible working hours and cut compensation for layoffs, that have been enacting by the Portuguese government in return to a 78 billion euro ($112 billion) bailout received in 2011. (Francisco Seco/Associated Press) #

Demonstrators hold red umbrellas during a May Day protest in Lisbon, Portugal on May 1. (Rafael Marchante/Reuters) #

An activist of Sri Lanka's Marxist political party, People's Liberation Front, drinks water from a bottle as a billboard of Communist leaders from left, Vladimir Lenin, Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels are displayed in the background during a street march to celebrate international Labor Day known as May Day in Colombo, Sri Lanka. May Day moved beyond its roots as an international workers holiday to a day of international protest Tuesday, with rallies throughout Asia demanding wage increases and marches planned across Europe over government-imposed austerity measures. (Gemunu Amarasinghe/Associated Press) #

A communist supporter attends a rally on International Workers Day, or Labor Day, in central Kiev on May 1. The flag reads, "Gaisinsky region". (Gleb Garanich/Reuters) #

A protester with her hands chained makes a V-sign as she demands freedom of speech during a May Day rally in central Ankara, Turkey on May 1. (Umit Bektas/Reuters) #

A protestor wearing a Guy Fawkes mask carries a sign during May Day demonstrations in Santa Monica, Calif. on May 1. Occupy Wall Street sought to breathe fresh life into the movement that sparked a wave of nationwide protests against economic injustice eight months ago with May Day events across the United States on Tuesday and a call for a general strike that went unheeded. (Lucy Nicholson/Reuters) #

A medic wearing a gas mask is seen during May Day demonstrations in Los Angeles, Calif. on May 1. (Jason Redmond/Reuters) #

Protesters take part in a May Day demonstration in Chicago on May 1. (John Gress/Reuters) #

A Venezuelan worker dressed as President Hugo Chavez waves the national flag during a May Day parade to celebrate the new labor law promulgated by Chavez, in Caracas on May 1. (Jorge Silva/Reuters) #

An Occupy protester gives a gesture in front of a downtown Miami Bank of America building on May 1 as part of the May Day protests. Activists across the United States joined the worldwide May Day protests on Tuesday, with Occupy Wall Street members in several cities leading demonstrations against major financial institutions. (J Pat Carter/Associated Press) #