JOSHUA WHITE AND GARY PANTER SUPERSIZED LIGHTSHOW

Joshua White, of the legendary Fillmore East’s Joshua Lightshow, and Gary Panter present a supersized  lightshow, with LIVE and TAPED MUSIC

July 15-18, 2004,
at Anthology Film Archives,
32 Second Avenue, (at 2nd St.) New York City (212) 505-5181
$10

* Two shows Thursday, 7 and 9pm, with taped music program by Faye Ryu
* Two shows Friday, 7 and 9pm, Yo La Tengo
* Three shows Saturday, at 3, 7, and 9pm;
Live music at 3 and 7 by Devin Flynn and Adam Autry of Plate Techtonics
and Ara Peterson formerly of Force Field; and
Live music at 9pm by Alan Licht
* One show on Sunday at 2pm featuring Jay Cotton of The Song Gods,
and Edwin (Savage Pencil) Pouncy of Attack Wave Pest Repeller

Visit garypanter.com for photos

(anyone wishing to make reservations for particular shows may  respond to this email with day, time and # of tickets. Tickets can be paid for and picked up at showtime)

CHENEY BOOED AT YANKEE STADIUM

Published: June 30, 2004 New York Times

Vice President Dick Cheney spent about 20 minutes in Manager Joe
Torre’s office and in the clubhouse shaking hands with players before
the Yankees beat the Boston Red Sox, 11-3, last night at Yankee Stadium.
    Cheney studied the photographs inside and outside Torre’s
office and asked Yogi Berra, the Hall of Fame catcher, why he was playing
the outfield in one picture. Cheney started watching the game from the
private box of the Yankees’ principal owner, George Steinbrenner, switched
to a seat beside the Yankees’ dugout for a few innings, then returned to
Steinbrenner’s box.
….      During the singing of “God Bless America”
in the seventh inning, an image of Cheney was shown on the scoreboard.
It was greeted with booing, so the Yankees quickly removed the image.

COURTESY D. MURPHY!


The angry author, a literary storm and ‘one dead armadillo’

By Andrew Gumbel in Los Angeles

The Independent

After the recent flurry of damning political memoirs, not to mention
Michael Moore’s box-office busting documentaryFahrenheit 9/11, the Bush
administration might feel it has been dumped on quite enough for one
election season.
    But the worst may be yet to come, in the unlikeliest
of forms: a slim volume of fiction from the ordinarily mild-mannered minimalist
Nicholson Baker.
     Mr Baker’s new novel, Checkpoint, features two
characters who spend much of its 115 pages discussing how to assassinate
President George Bush. They don’t actually do the deed, or even attempt
it, but the book is – according to early snippets – replete with deep-seated
anger and elegantly nasty epithets hurled at both the President and his
cabinet.
     Mr Baker’s publisher, Alfred Knopf, plans to
release the book on 24 August, on the eve of the Republican National
Convention in New York. To call it a provocation would be an understatement.
The author and publishers have no intention of giving anybody ideas –
to do so would be a criminal offence – but they are certainly playing
very close to the edge in a United States that, in the wake of the 11
September attacks, has shown no compunction about locking people up and
asking questions later, free speech rights be damned.
    There was no immediate official reaction yesterday
after extracts from Checkpoint were published in The Washington Post.
A spokesman for the Secret Service, the uniformed outfit charged with
protecting the President and other officials, told the Post merely that
“without seeing the work, a determination can’t be made at this time”.
    Likewise, it is impossible to tell whether Mr Baker’s
book will become a lightning rod for the competing political passions that
have divided the country, particularly over the war in Iraq and its aftermath.
Unlike Michael Moore, he has never laid claim to a populist mantle or
sought to attract attention to himself through overt rabble-rousing.
    Rather, his invariably short, literary novels – The
Mezzanine, U and I, A Box of Matches – have tended to dwell on such mundane
activities as riding an escalator, tying one’s shoelaces and weeding. Only
Vox (1995) raised any eyebrows because it dealt with the topic of phone
sex. In the pages of The New Yorker and in subsequent published essays,
Mr Baker has also railed against the over-hasty introduction of digital record-keeping
in public libraries and the abandonment of paper – not exactly an issue
to induce the White House security detail to reach for their revolvers.
     Checkpoint, though, is clearly something else.
According to the Post’s account, its two protagonists, Ben and Jay, talk
down and dirty about the Bush administration into a tape recorder during
an in-room lunch at a Washington hotel. Jay announces he’s going to assassinate
the President, and the men proceed to talk about both why and how he might
do such a thing.
     By the sounds of it, the novel is hardly The
Anarchist’s Cookbook – the fanciful methods the two men consider to
take out the most powerful politician on the planet include using radio-controlled
flying saws. Another tactic they discuss is a remote-controlled boulder
made of depleted uranium. Ben asks Jay: “You’re going to squash the President?”
Jay also has a gun and some bullets, but the book
appears to cover its tracks somewhat by having Ben express extreme misgivings
about using them. “If the FBI and the Secret Service … come after me because
I’ve been hanging out with you in a hotel room before you make some crazy
attempt on the life of the President,” Ben says, “I’m totally cooked.”
    More incendiary than Jay’s assassination fantasies,
in the end, may be the deep expressions of anger against the administration
the book dwells on. In that respect it is not unlike Joseph Heller’s 1979
novel Good as Gold, which included an extended rant against Henry Kissinger.
The difference, though, is that Kissinger had been out of power for two
years when Heller’s book was published; Mr Bush is in the middle of a bruising
re-election battle.
    Jay says he hasn’t felt so much hostility against
any other president – not Nixon, not Reagan. Jay says of Mr Bush: “He
is beyond the beyond. What he’s done with this war. The murder of the
innocent. And now the prisons. It’s too much. It makes me so angry. And
it’s a new kind of anger, too.” At one point, he calls Mr Bush an “unelected
[expletive] drunken OILMAN” who is “squatting” in the White House and “muttering
over his prayer book every morning.” At another point, he calls Mr Bush
“one dead armadillo”.

    Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld are described as
“rusted hulks” and “zombies” who have “fought their way back up out of
the peat bogs where they’ve been lying, and they’re stumbling around with
grubs scurrying in and out of their noses and they’re going, ‘We – are
– your – advisors.'”
     Jay expresses outrage at the munitions the United
States armed forces have used in Iraq, including an updated version of
napalm. Jay says of the Iraq bomb material: “It’s improved fire jelly –
it’s even harder to put out than the stuff they used in Vietnam. And Korea.
And Germany. And Japan. It just has another official name. Now it’s called
Mark 77. I mean, have we learnt nothing? Mark 77! I’m going to kill that
bastard.”

    The title of the book is taken from an incident at
a checkpoint south of Karbala last year, in which US forces opened fire
on a Shia family of 17 travelling to southern Iraq to seek a safe haven.
Several family members died, including two young girls decapitated by the
gunfire.


COURTESY JOHN COULTHART!

THE ARTHUR MAILING LIST BULLETIN No. 0004

COMMAND PERFORMANCE – JUNE 29, 2004

THE ARTHUR MAILING LIST BULLETIN No. 0004

“Text beyond the presses.”

(((1))) OH GOODNESS ME, IT’S THE NEW ISSUE OF ARTHUR, WITH KIM GORDON ON THE COVER.

The new issue of Arthur is out this week across North America. Can you believe it? Why it seems just yesterday that the last issue of Arthur, the one with Devendra Banhart Joanna Newsom CocoRosie Godzilla, found its way into your waiting arms. But it wasn’t yesterday, it was almost two months ago, you big dummy. So here are 48 more Arthur pages to add to your collection. Kim Gordon of the still-wondrous rock band Sonic Youth is our cover star and the subject of a big interview by Oliver Hall. Then there’s new artwork by John Lurie, a visit to a convention of Aleister Crowley acolytes with a lovely new full-page art piece by John Coulthart, Daniel Pinchbeck talking some deep talk on the Kali Yuga, James Parker on raving and Daniel Chamberin on the plight of the secret Deadhead. And Kristine McKenna on an artist you’ve never heard of who built giant sculptures from refuse in the Joshua Tree desert. And comics too, and C & D on their own page, and reviews by Paul Cullum and Byron Coley & Thurston Moore, and a recipe from the Reigning Sound, and a letter from Robert Wyatt and and and and….

More info here:

http://www,arthurmag.com

(((2)))  CAN’T FIND ARTHUR? PERHAPS SIR/MADAM/OTHER WOULD CONSIDER A SUBSCRIPTION.

Don’t fear the Empty Rack. Step out of your fear and buy a subscription to ARTHUR.$30 US/$39 Canada/$60 world. And you, yes that means YOU, get a free li’l somethin’-somethin’ of your choice (Arthur t-shirt, Bastet CD) with your order, while supplies last. And they can’t last forever. So do what needs to be done. Accept your destiny. Go to

http://www.arthurmag.com/subscribe/

(((3))) YOUR PERSONAL BASTET UPDATE.

a. ‘The Golden Apples of the Sun” CD (Bast0001), a 20-track contempoweirdfolk compilation lovingly created by Devendra Banhart, is the hotness. We made 1,000 of em. There are still some for sale ($12/14/17) at:

http://www.arthurmag.com/store/bastet_cds.php

b. The SUNN O))) live CD (Bast0002) is SOLD OUT!!!! Thank you all. See Item 7 below.

c. The “Million Tongues Festival” CD (Bast 0003) is out August 1, 2004 and available now for pre-order ($12/14/17)  from

http://www.arthurmag.com/store/bastet_cds.php

We’re only making 500 of these babies, so don’t dawdle if you want one. The CD features new or rare tracks by 20 underground psychedelicish rock artists, assembled,  sequenced and art-designed by the legendary Plastic Crimewave. Features music by Kawabata Makoto (Acid Mothers Temple) with Kinski, Matt Valentine and Erika Elder Medicine Show, Plastic Crimewave Sound, P.G. Six, Espers, Michael Yonkers and the Mumbles, LSD March, Fur Saxa, Josephine Foster and the Supposed, Spires That in the Sunset Rise, Inner Throne, The Civilized Age, Simon Finn, Jutok Kaneko/Shimura Koji/ Takuya Nishimura, Nisennenmondai, Frankie Delmane, Nick Castro, Taurpis Tula, M.V. Carbon and Panicsville.

What is this Million Tongues festival, you ask? Why it’s…

(((4))) FIVE NIGHTS IN CHICAGO THAT COULD CHANGE YOUR BRAIN.

This August 4-8 at the Empty Bottle in Chicago:

*****”MILLION TONGUES FESTIVAL”****

$60 for 5-show Pass; or $15/show — general admission — Sorry! 21 & Over Only.

Info and tickets at http://emptybottle.musictoday.com/EmptyBottle/calendar.aspx

This gala fest will be packed to the gills with stimuli–the second stage, films, odd costumed performers, label reps, lights, freaks, and a real festival vibe.

The fest is curated by PLASTIC CRIMEWAVE aka Steve Krakow, featured in Mojo, The Wire, Arthur, Stop Smiling, etc., creator of the Galactic Zoo Dossier (lysergic rock mag published by Drag City, now in a book collection), record label owner (Galactic Zoo Disk), acid-punk rocker (Plastic Crimewave Sound), Japan psychedelic underground collaborator, illustrator, etc. The common theme of the fest is really just the best in current and past underground sounds, from folky minstrels to the noisegods of Japan, all with that experimental/and or ‘psychedelic” edge. Many bands appear in Chicago for the first time, in many cases their first visits to the USA. 

Would you look at this lineup!!!!:

Six Organs of Admittance, Espers, Josephine Foster and the Supposed, LSD March, Mick Farren (Deviants), Michael Yonkers, Simon Finn, Charalambides,  Kawabata Makoto (Acid Mothers Temple) w/Kinski, Matt Valentine (Tower Recordings), PG Six, Fur Saxa,  Paul Flaherty/Chris Corsano/Matt Heyner, Born Heller, Taurpis Tula, Spires That in the Sunset Rise, The Cherry Blossoms, Nissenenmondai, Jutok Kaneko, By Lightning to the Womb, The Civilized Age, Panicsville, Born Heller, Goldblood, Inner Throne, Monostripe, Tom Carter, Frankie Delmane, Nick Castro, Farms, MV Carbon, Lichens, Davenport and the Plastic Crimeawave Sound.

The esteemed Empty Bottle club has hosted everything from the largest “indie” bands to the most respected free-jazz mavens (with its celebrated jazz series). The club is split into two main rooms, the entrance room, where the second stage will reside; and the main room where the crowd is splt into two major areas to the left and in front of the stage.

Info and tickets at

http://emptybottle.musictoday.com/EmptyBottle/calendar.aspx

(((5))) A HUMBLE PLEA FOR ASSISTANCE.

If you haven’t done so already, please take a few minutes to do our 15-question Arthur Reader Survey.  It’s right here:

http://www.keysurvey.com/survey/24574/144b/

Reader Surveys let us know more about our favorite mysterious person: YOU. We then compile that information, which allows us to solicit more quality advertising in Arthur. Ad sales make Arthur do that little happy leprechaun dance in the corner. He thanks you kindly for helping him help you help us help Them help the world.

(((6))) OBLIGATORY JOYFUL ARTHUR DISCUSSION FORUM REMINDER.

The new and frankly fascinating Arthur Discussion Forum is now online and is fully functional. Come on in and share.  Various Arthur staff and contributors stop in regularly, if you must know.

http://www.arthurmag.com/forum/phpBB2/

(((7))) AND SOME GIG DATES.

Experience SUNN O))) live as they celebrate the release of their new album “White2” with these gigs:

(** = insane lineup)

1st July SOUNDLAB Buffalo 110 Pearl Street, Buffalo NY www.bigorbitgallery.com/

2nd July DETROIT ARTS SPACE Detroit 101 East Baltimore w/ 25 Suaves & Lair of the Minotaur www.detroitartspace.10eastern.com

** 3rd July EMPTY BOTTLE Chicago 1035 N Western Avenue w/ WOLF EYES & Kevin Drumm www.emptybottle.com

4th July TRIPLE ROCK Minneapolis 629 Cedar Ave S w/ Lair of the Minotaur www.triplerocksocialclub.com

** 27th July OTTOBAR Baltimore 2549 North Howard Street w/ COMETS ON FIRE (see Arthur No. 7) and THE HIDDEN HAND (See Arthur No. 9)  www.theottobar.com/

28th July NORTHSIX Brooklyn 66 North 6th Street w/ TBC www.northsix.com

** 29th July KNITTING FACTORY New York 74 Leonard Street w/ COMETS ON FIRE and THE HIDDEN HAND www.knittingfactory.com

So long, it’s good to know ya,

The Arthur Surprise Peace Attack Squad

NICHOLSON BAKER'S BUSH/CHENEY NOVEL/FATWA.


A Novel’s Plot Against the President

Character Fantasizes Bush Assassination

By Linton Weeks
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, June 29, 2004; Page C01

In Nicholson Baker’s new novella, “Checkpoint,” a man sits in a Washington
hotel room with a friend and talks about assassinating President Bush.
     It’s a work of the imagination and no attempts
on the president’s life are actually made, but the novel is likely to
be incendiary, as with Michael Moore’s documentary, “Fahrenheit 9/11.”
      Flush with the headline-generating success of
“My Life,” by Bill Clinton, Alfred A. Knopf is planning to publish Baker’s
work Aug. 24, on the eve of the Republican National Convention. “Checkpoint”
is 115 pages long and will sell for $18.
     In the book, two men — Ben and Jay — meet at
the fictional Adele Hotel and Suites in Washington. It is midday. They
eat a bag of bagel chips and order lunch from room service. They talk
into a tape recorder.

Ben: Obviously you have something on your mind.

Jay: That’s true.

Ben: You could begin with that.

Jay: Okay. Uh. I’m going to — okay. I’ll just say it. Um.

Ben: What is it?

Jay: I’m going to assassinate the president.

Though it is against the law to threaten the president in real life,
a work of fiction is usually protected by the First Amendment.
     “Under a big 1968 Supreme Court precedent, Brandenburg
v. Ohio, speaking of assassinating the president cannot be forbidden
or punished unless the speaker’s purpose is to provoke an assassination
attempt and that is likely to be the effect,” says legal scholar Stuart
Taylor Jr. of the National Journal. “It’s quite possible in the wake of
more recent developments — 9/11 especially — the court might modify that
in some kinds of cases. But it’s almost inconceivable that the court would
allow punishment of a novelist for what one of his characters says about
killing the president.”
    “Without seeing the work,” says Charles Bopp, a spokesman
for the Secret Service, “a determination can’t be made at this time.”
   Books have played roles in certain American tragedies.
Timothy McVeigh handed out copies of “The Turner Diaries” before the Oklahoma
City bombing. John Hinckley Jr., would-be assassin of Ronald Reagan, and
Mark David Chapman, who killed John Lennon, both carried copies of “The
Catcher in the Rye.” James Edward Perry followed 22 of the recommendations
in “Hit Man: A Technical Manual for Independent Contractors” in the 1993
Silver Spring contract killings of Mildred Horn, her quadriplegic son, Trevor,
and Trevor’s nurse, Janice Saunders, according to prosecutors.
     Baker’s fiction is written like a script for
a two-man play. It is satirical at some points, serious at others. There
are fanciful flourishes and fierce, furious fits of anger.
    The critically admired Baker is a master of written-from-a-weird-angle
fiction. His novel “Vox” was basically a phone-sex conversation. And
“The Mezzanine” is a 135-page meditation on an escalator ride.
    In “Checkpoint,” the main character, Jay, rants and
rages against Bush. He says he hasn’t felt so much hostility against any
other president — not Nixon, not Reagan.
    Of Bush, Jay says: “He is beyond the beyond. What he’s
done with this war. The murder of the innocent. And now the prisons.
It’s too much. It makes me so angry. And it’s a new kind of anger, too.”
    He is outraged that the United States armed forces
have used napalm-like bombs in Iraq. He says: “It’s improved fire jelly
— it’s even harder to put out than the stuff they used in Vietnam. And
Korea. And Germany. And Japan. It just has another official name. Now it’s
called Mark 77. I mean, have we learned nothing? Mark 77! I’m going to kill
that bastard.”
   He uses expletives to identify the president. At one
point he says, “He’s one dead armadillo.”
    Much of the book is serious polemic, based on Baker’s
reporting. The title, “Checkpoint,” comes from a story that Jay read in
the Sydney Morning Herald about a Shiite family of 17 that was seeking safe
haven in southern Iraq in 2003. At a checkpoint south of Karbala, U.S.
forces opened fire on the family’s Land Rover. Several family members died;
two young girls were decapitated by the gunfire. Jay chokes up when recounting
the story to Ben.
    Some of the ways Jay envisions killing the president
are ludicrous. One is radio-controlled flying saws that “look like little
CDs but they’re ultrasharp and they’re totally deadly, really nasty.”
     Another is a remote-controlled boulder made of
depleted uranium.
   “You’re going to squash the president?” Ben asks Jay.
    But Jay also has a gun and some bullets. And Ben realizes
at one point that even if Jay is crazy, he is still talking about killing
a sitting president. “If the FBI and the Secret Service . . . come after
me because I’ve been hanging out with you in a hotel room before you make
some crazy attempt on the life of the president, I’m totally cooked,” Ben
says. “Yes, you were talking a lot of delusional gobbledygook about homing
bullets, but basically your intent was clear. I’ll have to say that. I’m
scared.”
    Jay calls Bush an “unelected [expletive] drunken OILMAN”
who is “squatting” in the White House and “muttering over his prayer
book every morning.”
    He calls Vice President Cheney and Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld “rusted hulks” and “zombies” who have “fought their way
back up out of the peat bogs where they’ve been lying, and they’re stumbling
around with grubs scurrying in and out of their noses and they’re going,
‘We — are — your — advisers.’ “
    Cheney, Jay says, is “hunched, man, the corruption
has completely hunched and gnarled him. His mouth is pulled totally over
on one side of his face.”
    The novel, says Knopf spokesman Paul Bogaards, “is
a portrait of an anguished protagonist pushed to extremes. Baker is using
the framework and story structure as a narrative device to express the
discontent many in America are feeling right now.”
    Bogaards says: “It is not
the first time a novelist has chosen fiction to express their point of
view about American society or politics. Upton Sinclair did it. So did
John Steinbeck. Nick Baker does it with more nerve and fewer pages.”

JIHAD SUPER BOWL!

Iraq
Insurgency Showing Signs of Momentum

Analysts and some U.S. commanders say it could be too late to reverse
the wave of violence. Sunnis are seen as the stronger, long-term threat.

By Patrick J. McDonnell
Times Staff Writer

June 26, 2004 Los Angeles Times
BAGHDAD — As this week’s coordinated violence demonstrates, Iraq’s
insurgent movement is increasingly potent, riding a wave of anti-U.S.
nationalism and religious extremism. Just days before an Iraqi government
takes control of the country, experts and some commanders fear it may be
too late to turn back the militant tide.
      The much-anticipated wave of strikes preceding
Wednesday’s scheduled hand-over could intensify under the new interim
government as Sunni Muslim insurgents seek to undermine it, U.S. and Iraqi
officials say.
    “I think we’re going to continue to see sensational
attacks,” said Army Maj. Gen. David H. Petraeus, the 101st Airborne Division
commander who will oversee the reshaping of Iraq’s fledgling security
forces.
      Long gone are the days when the insurgents
were dismissed as a finite force ticketed for high-tech annihilation by
superior U.S. firepower.

    Wreaking havoc and derailing plans for reconstruction
of this battered nation, the dominant guerrilla movement — an unlikely
Sunni alliance of hard-liners from the former regime, Islamic militants
and anti-U.S. nationalists — has taken over towns, blocked highways, bombed
police stations, assassinated lawmakers and other “collaborators,” and
abducted civilians.
      Although Shiite Muslim fighters took U.S. forces
by surprise in an April uprising, the Sunni insurgents represent a stronger,
long-term threat, experts agree. The fighters, commanders say, are overwhelmingly
Iraqis, with a small but important contingent of foreign fighters who
specialize in carrying out suicide bombings and other spectacular attacks,
possibly including this week’s coordinated strikes that killed more than
100 people.
    “They are effective,” said Army Lt. Gen. Thomas F.
Metz, operational commander of U.S. troops here.
     The insurgent force has
picked up legions of part-time nationalist recruits enraged by the lengthy
occupation and the mounting toll on civilians. Whether the result of U.S.
or insurgent fire, the casualties are blamed on Americans.
     The anti-U.S. momentum is evident in both the
nation’s urban centers and the palm-shrouded Sunni rural heartland, where
resentment over military sweeps and the torturous pace of reconstruction
is pervasive. Support for the insurgency ranges from quiet assent to
participation in the fighting.
     “We’re
talking about people who are the equivalent of the Minutemen,”

said Bruce Hoffman, a terrorism expert who served as an advisor for the
U.S.-led occupation here. “They pick up their weapons and join the fight
and then go back to their homes and farms. It makes it so fluid. And the
media functions as the town crier, like the calls from the minaret.”

     The nimble enemy has kept just far enough ahead
of coalition forces to raise the question in Iraqi minds: Who will be
here in the long run, the U.S. and its allies or the insurgents?
    The characteristics of the insurgency in Iraq are
familiar from earlier campaigns in Vietnam and elsewhere, Hoffman wrote
in a recent paper: “A population will give its allegiance to the side
that will best protect it.”
     Also like past insurgency campaigns, this one
combines classic guerrilla tactics — ambushes and other attacks on occupying
troops — with ruthless terror, including the massacres of religious worshipers
and restaurant patrons and the beheading of hostages.
The insurgents’ decentralized command structure,
Hoffman said in an interview, echoes the atomized nature of the Al Qaeda
terrorist network. Thus, the arrest of deposed President Saddam Hussein
in December was not nearly the intelligence windfall that U.S. authorities
had predicted. Nor did his capture dry up funding for the insurgents.

     Although U.S. officials have labeled Jordanian
fugitive Abu Musab Zarqawi a mastermind in the wave of attacks that has
shaken the country since last year, commanders say the insurgents’ coordination
is unclear.
“We can’t find … a particular command and control
structure that leads to one or two or three particular nodes,
” Metz
said. “But I’m confident there are some leaders who have the wealth to continue
… paying people to do business.”
     U.S. authorities have jailed dozens of cell
chiefs but watched in frustration as the groups have regenerated and
fought anew. “These kinds of networks, you chop off one part and the other
part keeps on moving,” Petraeus said.
     The insurgents have other strengths: plentiful
weapons (in many cases, looted from unguarded armories at the end of the
invasion last year); easy mobility, in the form of a relatively modern
highway system; and communications, in the form of cellphones and access
to regional television channels such as Al Jazeera.
Defeating a force this entrenched and energized is difficult, commanders
say.

     “There are some insurgent leaders who wanted
to talk to us,” said Army Col. Dana Pittard of the 1st Infantry Division
in Baqubah, an agricultural city northeast of Baghdad that was the site
of fierce fighting Thursday. “But there are others who are hard-core
and just don’t get it.”
    Trying to defeat such a foe militarily can drag
opposing forces into a withering cycle of violence, especially in a culture
where families feel obliged to avenge the death of loved ones.    
    “The nature of this culture is you can’t win a war
of attrition with them,” said Col. Robert B. Abrams of the Army’s 1st Cavalry
Division in Baghdad, “because it’s a circle of violence — there will always
be someone in the family who will pick up arms. Unless you want to kill
too many people. Which of course we never want to do.”

    The insurgents have time on their side: U.S. forces
are already under pressure to leave. And the Sunni fighters are armed
with another major advantage: They have no need to win, only to sow instability.
Their goal is to stand in the way of the caretaker government as it navigates
a difficult path toward elections scheduled for January. Whether the nation
will be sufficiently secure for free elections in six months is in doubt.
      The murky guerrilla movement first emerged
in the spring of 2003 with sporadic attacks on troops after the ouster
of Hussein’s regime. U.S. forces were just consolidating their control
of Iraq and basking in their relatively easy march to Baghdad.
   At the time, U.S. officials — notably L. Paul Bremer
III, the chief American administrator here — dismissed the embryonic
opposition as “dead-enders” who owed their allegiance to Hussein. Their
initial attacks were amateurish, often involving kamikaze assaults on
U.S. armored vehicles or crude roadside bombs jerry-built from stray
munitions, wires and makeshift triggers.
     Amid the triumphant declarations, it is now
widely agreed, the U.S. leadership was disastrously slow to anticipate
that this primitive enemy could grow into a formidable foe.
     What Bremer and other officials failed to
appreciate fully was postwar Iraq’s combustible character: a nation brimming
with arms, munitions and disenfranchised young men with military training,
all primed to be stoked by ruthless and well-funded Baath Party operatives
embittered in defeat.

    “It’s not clear to me that we ever developed a coherent
campaign plan for conducting a counterinsurgency campaign,” said Andrew
Krepinevich of the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, a Washington
think tank. “We were unprepared for it [and] late to recognize it.”
Perceived U.S. heavy-handedness in Sunni enclaves such as Fallouja,
west of the capital, provided fuel for the movement, as did the mass
roundups and sweeps of thousands of young Sunni men suspected of anti-coalition
activity. The U.S. decisions to disband Iraq’s armed forces and bar many
former Baathists from government jobs fed the growing resentment — and
recruitment.
As disillusionment with the occupation grew, the armed resistance
spread throughout the Sunni heartland, from greater Baghdad to the vast
expanses to the west and north. Many young men flocked to the cause,
whether out of principle or to earn some cash.
Hussein loyalists, including members of his secret police services,
provided funds and logistics for the movement, officials say. Though
themselves largely secular, they played on religious feelings and fears
that Sunnis — long the dominant group in Iraq — faced marginalization
in a U.S.-backed regime favoring the Shiite majority.
“They don’t want this new government to come into power because
they’re fearful that the Sunni will be outvoted by the majority Shia,”
said Abrams of the 1st Cavalry Division. “They’ll go from being the haves
under Saddam to being the have-nots. They’ve got a lot to lose.”
    Sunni imams spurred the insurgency, and Arab jihadists
specializing in suicide attacks beat a path through the nation’s porous
borders.
One U.S. colonel formerly charged with guarding the western borders
with Syria, Saudi Arabia and Jordan said a virtual “jihad Super Bowl”
took place last spring and summer as foreign militants poured in.
The campaign here has again emphasized that counterinsurgency is
not the United States’ strong suit. Its military units today are trained
for swift, high-tech wars against conventional armies — the war they fought
with remarkable success on their way to Baghdad in 2003.
     In the last year, U.S. commanders trained incoming
units in counterinsurgency tactics. They shifted intelligence analysts
from the search for weapons of mass destruction to the search for anti-American
guerrillas. They bolted armor to Humvees and figured out ways to detect
roadside bombs before they detonated. And still they’re struggling to catch
up to the insurgents, although commanders defend the progress made.

    “We made real headway,” said Maj. Gen. Charles H.
Swannack Jr., who commanded the Army’s 82nd Airborne Division in the
region known as the Sunni Triangle for seven months until the Marines
took over in April.
     The key question now, Swannack and others agree,
is not whether U.S. troops can defeat the insurgents in individual battles
but whether the provisional Iraqi government and its fledgling security
forces can stop the bombings and assassinations that make Iraqis feel
unsafe.
All say the new Iraqi forces are ill-equipped
to control the insurgents, and in some cases disinclined to take on their
neighbors and tribal brethren.
U.S. officials hope to change that
by election time. Some hope that the Iraqi security officers, once properly
trained and outfitted, will be able to confront the foe more effectively
because of their cultural familiarity.
      “There is something of a force-multiplier
effect when the Iraqis take the field because each Iraqi soldier should
be more capable than an American soldier in his body language and cultural
knowledge,” said Col. Christopher Langton of the Defense Analysis Department
of the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London.

     On the political front, the new Iraqi government
appears to be looking for ways to co-opt the Sunni hard-liners with talk
of amnesty and reconciliation, but to date there are few takers. The Fallouja
solution — in which Marines retreated from a bloody siege, essentially
turning the town back over to Baathist elements and their insurgent allies
— has reduced clashes, but has also created a guerrilla redoubt. The last
week saw three U.S. bombing strikes in Fallouja that commanders say targeted
Zarqawi’s followers.
    Such prospective accords with the Sunni bloc risk
alienating Shiites and the ethnic Kurds, the nation’s other major population
group.
    Much attention has focused on the insurgents’ grip
on Fallouja, but the recent attacks in Baqubah underscore the guerrillas’
muscularity and range throughout the Sunni region.
    “Since the fall of the regime, not a single penny
was allocated to this town,” said Awf Abdul Rida Ahmad, the mayor of
Buhriz, an agricultural suburb and insurgent stronghold of 40,000 southeast
of Baqubah.
   U.S. and insurgent forces fought a two-day battle this
month that left more than a dozen insurgents and a U.S. soldier dead,
the Army says.
   As in Fallouja, U.S. forces withdrew after days of
gun battles. An uneasy peace prevails today. Many celebrate the mujahedin,
and graffiti praises Hussein and denounces the Americans and those who
collaborate.
    “The people here are very peaceful, and all they want
is stability and peace of mind,” said the mayor, who denied the presence
of insurgents in Buhriz and said calm would prevail if the Americans
just stayed away
. “This is not a town of criminals or thugs.”
————————————————————————
Times staff writers John Daniszewski in London, Mark Mazzetti and
Doyle McManus in Washington and special correspondent Suhail Ahmed in
Buhriz contributed to this report.

 

 

RAOUL VANEIGEM, THE "POETIC" SITUATIONIST


From

Contributions to The Revolutionary Struggle,
Intended To Be Discussed, Corrected, And Principally, Put Into Practice Without
Delay”:

Has it ever happened that, outside your place of work, you have felt the
same distaste and weariness as you do inside the factory’? In that case,
you have come to understand that:

a.    The factory is all around us. It is the morning,
the train, the car, the ravaged countryside, the machine, the bosses, the
chief, the house,the newspapers, the family, the trade union, the street,
one’s purchases, pictures, one’s pay, the television, one’s language, one’s
holidays, school, housework, boredom, prison, the hospital and the night.
It is the time and space of our everyday subsistence. It is the becoming
accustomed to repetitive moves and suppressed emotions, emotions sampled
through the proxy of intermediary images.

b.    Every activity reduced to mere existence is obligatory
work: and all obligatory work transforms the product and the producer into
objects of mere existence, into commodities themselves.

c.    Rejection of the universal factory is everywhere, since
sabotage and re-appropriation are everywhere among the proletariat, allowing
them still to derive some morsel of pleasure from idleness, or from love-making,
or socialising or chatting or eating, drinking, dreaming or preparing to
revolutionise everyday life by neglecting none of the delights of being not
quite totally alienated.

So you see, you are fighting, consciously or otherwise, for a society where
feelings will be all, and boredom and work, nothing. Mere survival has so far prevented us from really living. We
must now stand the world on its head and value those glimpses of authentic
living which are fated to be covered up and distorted in the system of the
commodity and the spectacle…
these moments of real contentment,
of boundless pleasure and passion.