I completely agree with this. All over the ‘Western bloc’, media are being ruthlessly used to prepare populations to support – or at least not oppose – the further extension of US-UK-EU imperial reach by way of US-Israeli attack on first Syria and Iran to bring them to heel for the 21st century encitcling and eventual subordination of China. We feel it everyday everywhere in all the media organisations of mass-manipulative opinion.

 

Super-selective ‘humanitarian outrage’ has been an ideological tool of imperial elite mobilisations of their own populations for at least two centuries, if not four or more millennia. Not succumbing completely to such ‘regime messages’ is really difficult and no e-list is immune from such ideological circulation. “We good, them bad” is the message of all elites. It is good that there is no longer a simple non-hypocritical  appeal to “our interests are to smash them and (eg grab their oil) ”; the hypocritical appeal to “simple humanity demands that we (smash them, and (e.g. grab their oil))” is much more difficult to resist. Think of “our”  noble humanitarian intervention in Libya, Afghanistan, Iraq, and the millions killed in America’s ‘Latin American backyard’ for more than 150 years to keep democracy and sovereignty at bay…. And each new time, this is all forgotten and we get mobilised once more for the next ‘just war’ or ‘humanitarian intervention’ planned and prepared for by the appropriate transnational elites.

 

As business destroys the planet and its resources, the struggle for profits and resources will get worse and worse, and we can expect increasing mobilisations by “How long can we stand by and let…” appeals by power-serving intellectuals and apolitical ‘critical intellectuals’ who trust the Financial Times and the ‘financial capitals’ that the mass media serve.

 

No, I’m not bitter, but not totally relaxed and uncritical either. It’s extremely difficult not to get sucked in, ideologically speaking, and nobody manages to avoid this all the time. Read Naomi Klein The Shock Doctrine.

 

 

 

From: A forum for critical and radical geographers [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Mekonnen Tesfahuney
Sent: Saturday, October 06, 2012 12:55 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: [SPAM] Re: Syria Inaction Could Ignite a Fragile Region (Ulgen)

 

So the critical geography forum has become a propaganda organ for a collection of mercenaries? Of course Carnegie – a known imperialist think-tank is helping in spreading the imperialist lies by providing a forum for the imperialist proxy forces that Turkey actively supports, trains and provides weapons with the aim of destabilizing one of the few states that supports Palestine. One Sinan writes of the inaction of "the international community" - a euphemism for the "white international". Not even a third of the nation-states in the world titulates itself "the international community" 

 

The same Sinan throws crocodile tears and talks of "massacre of people" - it is the USA; France, the UK, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, supported mercenaries that murder and wreck havoc. Are we to believe that the government of Syria is willfully killing it's people in order to make it possible for the "white international" to oust it from power? 

 

Did not the Financial Times and other respected propaganda organs of the "white international" write the same bullshit about Libya? Look at what happened and is happening in Libya now. 

 

Some critical geographer it is that peddles in false wares!

 

Mekonnen

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Mekonnen Tesfahuney, 
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Från: "Kevin M. DeJesus" <[log in to unmask]>
Svara till: "Kevin M. DeJesus" <[log in to unmask]>
Datum: lördag den 6 oktober 2012 07.20
Till: <[log in to unmask]>
Ämne: Syria Inaction Could Ignite a Fragile Region (Ulgen)

 

FYI,

KDJ

 

http://www.carnegieendowment.org/2012/10/05/syria-inaction-could-ignite-fragile-region/dz91

 

Syria Inaction Could Ignite a Fragile Region

Sinan ÜlgenFinancial Times, October 5, 2012

Description: Image removed by sender. Turkish armyWith Turkey’s decision to authorise military action in Syria, the wave of Arab uprisings threatens to degenerate into interstate conflict, which will have disastrous consequences for regional stability. However, the emerging conflict between Turkey and Syria is also a stark reminder of the international community’s failure to develop a cogent response to the new challenges it faces in the region.

Description: Image removed by sender.

Sinan Ülgen

Wednesday’s mortar attack by Syrian forces, which killed five Turkish citizens in a border town, was one transgression too many for Ankara to absorb. Turkey retaliated by shelling Syrian artillery. The government had already incurred domestic criticism by sticking to diplomacy when Syrian forces shot down a Turkish reconnaissance aircraft and fired on refugee camps within Turkish borders. This time, a military response was all but inevitable. Despite a lack of support until now for Ankara’s assertive policy of backing Syrian rebels, the loss of Turkish life has fired emotions and overturned previous opposition to military intervention. Turkey’s retaliation has met with public approval.

However, this does not mean that the crisis cannot be contained. A direct confrontation would damage Bashar al-Assad, the Syrian president. More active involvement by a large neighbour can only strengthen the opposition and precipitate regime change. But it would also be very costly for Turkey. Economic growth, the main achievement of the government, is already slowing. The uncertainties ushered in by a crisis with Syria would be bound to hit investment and growth further.

Turkey is also in the middle of constitutional reform, an exercise that does not mix well with war. The worsening security environment may make it impossible for politicians to make the trade-offs that would be required to establish a more liberal social contract. But above all, a direct confrontation with Syria would complicate the Turkish government’s efforts to deal with a resurgence of Kurdish terrorism.

However strong the arguments for containing the conflict, there is no hiding the fact that the dynamics unleashed by the Arab revolts now make the regional order extremely fragile. The international system has so far proved incapable of dealing with these regional consequences. It was relatively easy when revolts turned into reforms, as in Egypt or Tunisia. But when revolts failed and reforms became elusive, the internal fractures became sources of regional tension, now raising the possibility of interstate conflict. The international consensus that emerged for intervention to support the Libyan opposition is very unlikely to be replicated here, given Moscow’s position on Syria.

The emerging conflict between Turkey and Syria must therefore be seen as a reflection of the international system’s failure. The west’s reluctance to act on the responsibility to protect in Syria – an allegedly cherished concept – put Turkey in the vanguard of the reaction to the Assad regime. The international community must now face the consequences of its inaction.

But it must also begin a far broader debate, to reassess how and when safe zones should be set up within war-torn countries to prevent conflicts spreading to neighbouring nations and the region. Any future prospect of collective action based on the responsibility to protect depends on this discussion taking place now. A failure to undertake this critical dialogue will deal a fatal blow to the ability of the international system to uphold a moral order and punish violations of fundamental freedoms.

The immediate conclusion ought to be a shared decision to intervene in Syria and establish havens for Syrians fleeing the massacres orchestrated by the regime.

But in a world where the US is immersed in its election campaign, with little sympathy or attention to spare for international woes, and where the EU continues to battle one existential crisis after another over the euro, this is unlikely to happen. In its absence, the potential for this regional crisis to escalate suddenly is very real. The security blanket the international order once provided to prevent armed conflict breaking out between states, during the bipolar cold war era and the unipolar post-cold war years, is gone. This is a stark illustration of the risks the region now faces in its absence.

This article originally appeared in the Financial Times.

--
Kevin M. DeJesus, PhD
http://independent.academia.edu/KevinMDeJesus
 
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