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domingo, 9 de noviembre de 2025

Turkey issues genocide arrest warrant against Netanyahu

Warrants were also filed against Defence Minister Israel Katz and National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir

By MEE staff

Published date: 8 November 2025 

https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/turkey-issues-genocide-arrest-warrant-against-netanyahu

Turkey has issued arrest warrants for genocide against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and senior officials in his government over the war on Gaza.

The Istanbul chief public prosecutor's office on Friday announced arrest orders for 37 senior Israeli officials, including Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz, National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir and army chief Lieutenant General Eyal Zamir.

The officials are accused of committing genocide and crimes against humanity in Gaza, as well as ordering attacks on the Global Sumud Flotilla, which was carrying humanitarian aid to the blockaded enclave.

Israel condemned the move, with Foreign Minister Gideon Saar saying it "firmly rejects, with contempt" the charges, and calling them "the latest PR stunt by [Turkish President Recep Tayyip] Erdogan".

The Turkish prosecutor's statement said Israel's actions in Gaza since October 2023 have included systematic attacks on civilians, hospitals and critical infrastructure. 

It cited incidents including the bombing of al-Ahli Baptist Hospital, the destruction of the Turkish-Palestinian Friendship Hospital, and the killing of six-year-old Hind Rajab, who was hit by Israeli fire while trapped in a car with her family.

The investigation also covers Israel's interception of the Global Sumud Flotilla in international waters. Activists who were on board at the time of the raid have provided testimony and forensic evidence that contributed to the case.

The prosecutor's office said the proceedings are continuing "with precision and in all aspects".

Turkey last year joined South Africa's case accusing Israel of genocide at the International Court of Justice.

Israel's former foreign minister Avigdor Lieberman wrote on X that the arrest warrants for senior Israeli officials "clearly explain why Turkey should not be present in the Gaza Strip - directly or indirectly".

Turkey is seeking a role in the international stabilisation force envisioned for post-war Gaza under US President Donald Trump's plan.

However, Israeli leaders have repeatedly expressed their opposition to any Turkish participation in the international stabilisation force in Gaza.

sábado, 8 de noviembre de 2025

The beast’s bargain: Arab states, Israel, and the price of ‘peace’

When peace is demanded from the weak and defined by the strong, it ceases to be peace at all – it becomes submission disguised as justice.


Radwan Mortada

NOV 5, 2025

https://thecradle.co/articles/the-beasts-bargain-arab-states-israel-and-the-price-of-peace

In the aftermath of the Israeli war on Lebanon, a whisper began circulating in political corridors: the possibility that Lebanon might join the Abraham Accords. This surfaced even before US envoy Tom Barrack floated direct negotiations with Israel – a proposition Beirut rejected in favor of the established “mechanism” of indirect talks mediated by Washington.

Today, the evidence shows that Washington is not pushing for immediate normalization with Tel Aviv, but rather for direct negotiations over an “American paper” as a first step on the so‑called “peace” road. The paradox is stark; these calls for peace ignore the reality on the ground with continued acts of aggression. 

Israel has yet to honor a ceasefire, while voices in Lebanon are calling for peace with a party that remains at war. That contradiction traps advocates of “diplomatic solutions” in a genuine dilemma.

Indeed, Lebanon’s army commander, Rudolphe Haikal, found himself forced to order fire on Israeli drones violating Lebanese airspace, before the president instructed him to respond to any ground incursion following the incident in which Israeli troops stormed the southern village of Blida, and killed a civilian municipality employee in his sleep. 

When ‘peace’ equals ‘surrender’

Two years on from the launch of Operation Al‑Aqsa Flood in October 2023, after Israel's atrocious massacres and genocidal war on Gaza that killed tens of thousands of Palestinians, and the war on Lebanon that also killed thousands of Lebanese, the question of peace resurfaces in Arab discourse. Amid renewed calls for peace with Israel from Arab states and media, one truth is unavoidable: peace from a position of weakness does not end domination; rather, it often enshrines it.

Peace under those terms does not reverse the equation of power unless the strong acknowledges a partner of equal standing. That is not Israel’s agenda. Tel Aviv does not seek equal peace; it seeks domination and expansion

The late, martyred Palestinian writer Ghassan Kanafani captured this succinctly when asked why he rejected dialogue with Israel. His response: 

“What is the point of dialogue between the sword and the neck?”

What kind of dialogue exists when the strong alone hold the decision‑making power while the weak simply ask?

The more accurate question is: is Israel even seeking a just settlement that ends occupation and establishes sustainable peace – or is it instead forging security–economic arrangements that cement its superiority and require Arab and Palestinian submission in return for what is misleadingly called “peace”?

On 21 January 2024, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared, “I will not compromise on full Israeli security control over all the territory west of the Jordan [River],” which directly contradicts the idea of a sovereign Palestinian state. 

This political posture coincides with unprecedented settlement acceleration. Reports by European and UN agencies show that 2023–2024 recorded record levels of settlement and land seizure in the occupied West Bank, erasing even the possibility of the two‑state solution.

In the Arab world today – especially in Lebanon – media lines now say: “We want peace”; “It’s not a crime to ask for peace”; “Breaking the taboos is a duty.” 

Lebanese broadcaster Marcel Ghanem declared in his program opener: “Break the taboos … we cannot endure more procrastination … Yes, we demand peace. It’s not a crime to demand peace.” Makram Rabah, managing editor at Now Lebanon and an Assistant Professor at the American University of Beirut (AUB), opined that “There is no shame in peace when peace is made by a sovereign people. The only shame is to keep dying for the wars of others.”

The desire for peace is not in itself misguided. But what if the other party views peace only as a tool to deepen its dominance, further subjugate the region’s people, and seize their wealth and land? When ‘peace agreements’ are signed by a weak actor conceding massively while the strong retains its colonial structure, then peace becomes absolute surrender. That dynamic reinforces the notion that Israel loses far more in peace than in war – hence “peace,” properly defined, is a threat to Israel.

The Qatar model of mediator-enabled domination

Far from the frontlines, the state of Qatar invested in its role as an international broker with ties to Washington and indirectly to Israel. The UN in March 2022 designated Qatar as a “Major Non‑NATO Ally” (MNNA).  

On paper, such a status grants Doha special defense and security privileges. Qatar sponsored talks, funded aid to Gaza, invested in Israeli business ventures, and maintained strong relations with the US, which uses Al‑Udeid Air Base as a major forward hub.

The irony: despite this strategic positioning, Qatar still found itself targeted by Israel. On 9 September 2025, Israel carried out a strike in Doha targeting members of a Hamas negotiation delegation inside Qatar. That raises a foundational question: as long as Israel attacks even a mediator with no record of fighting it, can its aggressive nature ever change?

Qatar’s experience shows: for “peace” to have meaning, it cannot simply be the weaker party’s initiative – it must be sought and accepted by the strong. Otherwise, it is meaningless.

Consider the example of the Palestinian Authority (PA) led by Mahmoud Abbas. Over decades, it has become a security partner to Israel – coordinating in the occupied West Bank, detaining resistance cadres, handing over lists, and cooperating under the label of “security coordination.” 

Yet Israel accuses it of “funding terrorism” because of prisoner stipends. Even full collaboration, it seems, does not guarantee peace; submission remains the default.

In contrast, the model of the UAE shows a different dynamic: normalization with Israel based on economy and investment, not justice or the end of hegemony. When the weaker becomes an economic partner, “peace” turns into a lucrative commodity for the strong – peace defined as “a service to the strong in return for temporary stability.”

In Sudan, the third Arab state to join the Abraham Accords, Israel never saw Khartoum as a strategic partner; it was a security outpost to monitor the Red Sea and trafficking routes. Normalization came “from above,” not from equal partners.

This shows that Israel is not opposed to peace – but it is opposed to ‘equal’ peace, or peace that transforms power relations.

Historic peace treaties, but no justice

Egypt and Israel signed a peace treaty in March 1979, which mandated Israel’s full withdrawal from the Sinai within three years, and created security arrangements and demilitarized zones. Despite formal normalization since 1980, the relationship is widely described as a “cold peace.” The maxim remains: Arab state signatures do not equate to popular normalization.

On the ground, rare but illuminating security incidents illustrate the fragility, such as June 2023 and May 2024 near Rafah. Meanwhile, energy cooperation deepened: Egypt, Israel, and the EU signed an agreement on 15 June 2022 to expand Egyptian gas exports via liquefaction plants. 

The reality is a dual image of security–energy partnership coupled with popular resistance. That balance illustrates how “peace” as currently structured serves Tel Aviv’s security and energy needs – not Palestinian justice.

Jordan offers another case. Its 26 October 1994 treaty set water and border frameworks. But 30 years on, peace remains elusive. In November 2023, Amman recalled its ambassador over the Gaza war; it froze the signing of a “Water-for-Energy” project. 

Yet practical cooperation continues: water, gas, security channels remain open. Jordan even opened its airspace to the Israeli Air Force to intercept Iranian drone/missile threats –showing Israel offers token arrangements to capitals that serve its interests, without political resolution of the Palestinian issue.

In Syria, the new Al-Qaeda-rooted government offered “goodwill” gestures, returning the remains of Israeli spy Eli Cohen, declaring hostility to Iran, and intercepting weapons bound for Hezbollah’s fight with Israel. 

Yet Israel never engaged in real peace talks. Instead, it occupied more territory, struck Damascus airport, seized Mount Hermon, water resources, and declared it would never leave. Israel does not want strong states – it wants them weak enough to act as border police for its own security, not to defend their land.

In Lebanon, the daily killings, massacres, and occupation will not be forgotten easily. How can Lebanon be asked to sign a peace that ignores justice? Israel killed thousands of Lebanese and continues bombing villages and assassinating people daily. 

How can peace be demanded on soil where war crimes remain unaddressed and the blood still flows? How can arms be surrendered to an enemy that has never shown goodwill? 

Though Lebanon’s prime minister, president, and most ministers share a stance against non-state weapons, they also confirm that Israel never honored what Lebanon did. How then can negotiations be discussed while the enemy has not even respected the ceasefire that Lebanon upheld?

And what of the voices now advocating peace as if it is a possible salvation, coming only after the Lebanese state wins full sovereignty and monopolizes arms? These voices ignore that the presidency and government in Lebanon, despite internal dispute, agree: Israel is not after peace but limitless gains. 

Syria was ravaged, sans firing a single bullet at Israel – and yet Israeli assaults persist. What is the difference then between Lebanon and Syria? The issue is not about the resistance movement, Hezbollah, but Israel’s continual appetite for expansion and control. 

These ambitions were revealed in the maritime border deal, where Tel Aviv aimed to maximize gains, then cancelled it after the assassination of Hezbollah secretary-general Hassan Nasrallah. Territorial greed surfaced again when Netanyahu held up a “new Middle East” map at the UN that omitted Lebanon and Syria. 

That map belonged to the “Greater Israel” fantasy – not political reality. Echoing this, Tom Barrack in Damascus claimed Lebanon and Syria are “one country, not two” in eerie synchrony with Israeli discourse that erases borders and redraws the region to its liking.

Those demanding peace today arrived decades late, over 30 years after the 1991 Madrid Conference, which Israel rejected.

What does Israel mean by “peace”?

Combine the preceding elements – perpetual security control west of the Jordan, accelerated settlements, pushing Arab capitals into bilateral cooperation detached from final resolution or the Palestinian question – and you arrive at the definition of “peace” as Israel sees it. A system of deterrence and subjugation that neutralizes states while perpetuating control over Palestinians.

Netanyahu’s own statements rejecting a Palestinian state after the war and his government’s West Bank policies confirm this conclusion politically and practically.

Peace demanded from a position of weakness is not sufficient. Real peace begins when the strong is compelled to treat the other side as an equal – not a subordinate. Israel sees itself as the “master,” and the rest as its created subordinates

This is the core of its thinking – driven by the myth of a Greater Israel. Weak states cannot rely merely on claiming peace; they must create power equations that enforce respect and force recognition of their rights.

The risk here is that Arab appeals for peace become a pact of submission – branded “peace,” yet in reality a continuation of hegemony.

The first step toward genuine peace is not a signature or press release – but this simple question:
Does this “peace” change reality – or does it legitimize ongoing submission? Is the strong side willing to surrender occupation and aggression?

It is not enough for us only to say “we don’t want peace.” If the other side wants only domination in the name of peace, then our calling for peace is from one side a mere wish, from another side a reward for genocide. 

Demonizing the resistance

For years, a massive Arab and western media machine has generated methodical propaganda to reframe the moral map in Arab consciousness. Iran, Hezbollah, and anyone who resists the US-Israeli project are presented as the root of regional collapse – while invaders and their allied regimes are portrayed as champions of peace and stability.

Every day, the memory of the people is cleansed through one-sided discourse about the “Iran threat,” the “Hezbollah expansion,” the “Shia crescent” – while the crimes committed under the banners of “freedom” and “democracy” by western alliances or Arab proxies are hidden.

The truth remains, it was not the resistance that destroyed Lebanon, it was those who surrendered. Those who colluded with the siege, facilitated the invasion, and funded the media-political-military degradation that swept the region in the name of modernity and enlightenment.

For two decades, Arab and western media have constructed a distorted narrative that made Iran and Hezbollah public enemy number one – and muffled the real causes of our tragedies.

When Afghanistan was devastated under US occupation, no one asked how many were killed or how many millions suffered under the “war on terror.”

When Iraq was illegally invaded in 2003, hundreds of thousands died, infrastructure collapsed, and chaos reigned – all branded “a march to democracy.”

Lebanon is repeatedly targeted by Israeli aggression, and forbidden from building a genuine independent state – because its independence threatened Israel’s “superiority.” Yet media campaigns portrayed the resistance as the source of crises, ignoring those who imposed siege, funded division, and shot the economy.

In Syria, the destruction was not caused by “Iranian influence” as popularized, but by an international project that mobilized thousands of fighters from ISIS, the Nusra Front, and other groups with Persian Gulf funding and western complicity. Iran was one of the few powers that helped prevent Damascus’s collapse. The government eventually fell under crushing economic siege, not from Iranian projection.

As for Yemen, the war was not a proxy conflict, as simplified by the media, but direct aggression by Saudi Arabia and the UAE, backed by Washington, turning the country into one enduring some of the worst humanitarian catastrophes in the 21st century.

In Palestine, people have been slaughtered and killed by bombs and siege for decades, yet their resistance movements are demonized more than the perpetrators. The mainstream media denies the occupied people's right to self–defense, demonizing their rockets while ignoring the occupation's fighter jets that annihilate families and destroy cities.

In Sudan, systematic ethnic cleansing is unfolding – led by the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in Darfur, accused of mass killings, forced displacement, and genocide. Militias regionally backed by the UAE and Israel are implicated. The mainstream treats the conflict as a marginal crisis.

The propaganda effort has flipped the narrative on its head – those who invade and occupy are cast as peacemakers, while those who resist them are branded as threats. If Arab appeals for “peace” continue on these terms, they will read not as a quest for justice, but as a quiet signal of submission.

viernes, 7 de noviembre de 2025

ADL's move to establish 'Mamdani Monitor' decried as scaremongering and Islamophobia

The pro-Israel organisation will establish a 'tip-line' to report on Mamdani's governance

By MEE staff

Published date: 6 November 2025

https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/adls-move-establish-mamdani-monitor-slammed-scaremongering-and-islamophobia

The pro-Israel Anti-Defamation League (ADL) plans to track and monitor the policies and personnel appointments of New York City mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani, according to a press statement released on Wednesday.

“Mayor-Elect Mamdani has promoted antisemitic narratives, associated with individuals who have a history of antisemitism, and demonstrated intense animosity toward the Jewish state that is counter to the views of the overwhelming majority of Jewish New Yorkers,” Jonathan Greenblatt, the ADL's CEO and national director, said in a statement.

“We are deeply concerned that those individuals and principles will influence his administration at a time when we are tracking a brazen surge of harassment, vandalism and violence targeting Jewish residents and institutions in recent years,” he added.

The ADL has long been denounced by pro-Palestinian groups for describing Palestinian rights movements as antisemitic. The organisation has also, in the past, worked with US law enforcement to spy on and target Arab-American groups and has facilitated and funded US police training trips to Israel.

The ADL said it would establish a tipline that will serve as a “hyper-focused resource for New Yorkers to report antisemitic incidents in the city, including on the streets, in schools, in their workplace”.

The ADL-led surveillance would be used to feed information to a “Mamdani Monitor”, which will include information about the mayor’s policies and governance. The pro-Israel group said it would be bolstering its “research capabilities”.

The move sparked backlash online and from Muslim civil rights groups.

"The ADL has never established a special monitor to harass any other elected official, including politicians who have actually expressed real bigotry against Jewish Americans. Singling out Mayor-Elect Mamdani is an act of hypocrisy and anti-Muslim bigotry, pure and simple,” the Council on American-Islamic Relations (Cair) said on Wednesday.

“We strongly condemn the ADL's increasingly unhinged, desperate attacks on American Muslims and other advocates for Palestinian human rights, and we call on New York community leaders to do the same,” Cair added.

Kenneth Roth, the former head of Human Rights Watch, called the move on social media “Awful scaremongering from an organization that pretends to fight racism in all forms but really defends Israel.”

“Why does Mamdani need special monitoring? Because he is Muslim? Because he criticizes Israel for such things as its genocide?” Roth wrote.

Mamdani, the first Muslim mayor of New York City and a self-declared Democratic Socialist, swept to victory on Tuesday night, winning four out of five of the city’s boroughs in the mayoral elections. He will take office on 1 January 2026.

No mayor-elect of New York City has ever been as outspoken about Israel's violations of international law and the cause of the Palestinian people as Mamdani has.

Throughout his campaign, he faced repeated attacks from pro-Israel voices over his positions.

Islamophobic attacks

Mamdani has accused Israel of committing genocide in Gaza, and has said he would arrest Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu - per the International Criminal Court warrant - if he visited New York. Mamdani later walked back that claim.

He was attacked with Islamophobic comments by several pro-Israel groups and his independent challenger, former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo.

The Center for the Study of Organized Hate revealed in a 20-page document on Monday that Islamophobic and xenophobic discourse surrounding Mamdani on X had increased 450 percent between September and October.

Republican Congressman Andy Ogles called for Mamdani to be deported and denaturalised over the summer.

Ogles said:  "Zohran 'little muhammad' Mamdani is an antisemitic, socialist, communist who will destroy the great City of New York. He needs to be DEPORTED. Which is why I am calling for him to be subject to denaturalization proceedings.”

Meanwhile, Stephen Miller, the White House assistant chief of staff, who is frequently referred to as the architect behind Trump’s immigration policies, alluded to Mamdani in a post on X on 25 June, saying that “NYC is the clearest warning yet of what happens to a society when it fails to control migration.”

On the ground, however, Mamdani made deep inroads with Jewish New Yorkers, particularly young Jewish voters concerned about affordability.

jueves, 6 de noviembre de 2025

US may ask UN to mandate force in Gaza for 2 years

https://www.arabnews.com/node/2621566/middle-east

NEW YORK: The US has drafted a UN resolution that approves a two-year mandate for a Gaza transitional governance body and an international stabilization force in the Palestinian enclave, according to the text seen by journalists.

The draft — which is still being developed and could change — was shared with some countries this week, but has not yet been formally circulated to the 15-member Security Council for negotiations, diplomats said. It was not immediately clear when Washington planned to do that.

A State Department spokesperson said discussions with UN Security Council members and other partners on how to implement President Donald Trump’s Gaza plan were ongoing and declined to comment on “allegedly leaked documents.”

The two-page text would authorize a so-called Board of Peace transitional governance administration to establish a temporary International Stabilization Force in Gaza that could “use all necessary measures” — code for force — to carry out its mandate.

The ISF would be authorized to protect civilians and humanitarian aid operations, work to secure border areas with Israel, Egypt and a “newly trained and vetted Palestinian police force, which the ISF will be responsible for training and supporting.

The ISF would stabilize security in Gaza, “including through the demilitarization of non-state armed groups and the permanent decommissioning of weapons, as necessary.”

The Trump plan also ends Hamas governance of Gaza and says the enclave would be demilitarized. Hamas has not said whether it will agree to demilitarize Gaza — something the militants have rejected before.

The ISF would deploy under a unified command agreed by the Board of Peace and in close consultation with Egypt and Israel after detailed status of mission and forces agreements have been reached, according to the resolution.

While the Trump administration has ruled out sending US soldiers into Gaza, it has been speaking to Indonesia, the UAE, Egypt, Qatar, Turkiye and Azerbaijan to contribute to the multinational force.

It remains unclear whether Arab and other states will be ready to commit troops to the force.

miércoles, 5 de noviembre de 2025

Dick Cheney (1941–2025): The Dark Legacy of a War Criminal

by Alan Mosley | Nov 5, 2025 

https://original.antiwar.com/Alan_Mosley/2025/11/04/dick-cheney-1941-2025-the-dark-legacy-of-a-war-criminal/

Former U.S. vice president Richard “Dick” Cheney died on 3 November 2025 at age 84; his family said he had suffered from pneumonia and cardiac and vascular disease. Best known for steering national security policy after the 9/11 attacks, he became the dominant force behind a “war on terror” that unleashed torture, preventive war and mass surveillance. Amnesty International has described him as one of the principal architects of a program that amounted to torture, while the Brown University Costs of War project attributes more than 900,000 deaths and trillions of dollars in spending to the post‑9/11 wars he championed. Cheney’s legacy is one of unprecedented destruction and the erosion of civil liberties.

From prudence to preemption

During the 1991 Persian Gulf War, Defense Secretary Dick Cheney and Joint Chiefs chairman Colin Powell resisted calls to topple Saddam Hussein. Cheney argued that invading Baghdad would force the U.S. to occupy Iraq alone, risk its territorial integrity, and require unacceptable casualties: “It’s a quagmire if you go that far,” he told PBS’s Frontline in 1994, asking how many additional dead Americans Saddam was worth. Those words reflect a prudence that vanished after the attacks of September 11, 2001. Within days, the vice president laid out a radical new doctrine. On NBC’s Meet the Press he said America must operate on the “dark side,” spend time in the shadows, and use “any means at our disposal” to achieve its objectives.

Cheney’s longtime counsel, David Addington, and Justice Department lawyers John Yoo and Jay Bybee drafted memos arguing that the Geneva Conventions did not apply to detainees captured in the war on terror. The State Department’s legal advisor warned that claiming the president could suspend the Geneva Conventions was legally flawed and would reverse over a century of U.S. policy. Cheney pressed ahead, telling the Washington Times that he “signed off” on the CIA’s secret detention and rendition program and, as a principal participant in National Security Council meetings, he authorized the agency’s interrogation program, including waterboarding. In 2006 he called waterboarding a “no‑brainer,” and in 2009 he acknowledged knowing about the practice “as a general policy that we had approved.”

Torture and the repudiation of law

The vice president’s embrace of waterboarding ignored that the technique has long been treated as torture under U.S. and international law. Amnesty International notes that Japanese officials were convicted at the Tokyo War Crimes Trials for subjecting U.S. pilots to waterboarding, and U.S. courts have sentenced sheriffs to prison for using the technique. Amnesty stresses that its status as torture is “not a matter of opinion.” The Senate Armed Services Committee concluded that approving aggressive interrogation techniques sent a message that physical pressure and degradation were acceptable treatment for detainees. Amnesty calls Cheney “one of the principal architects of a policy that amounted to torture.”

Cheney’s legal defense of the program was rife with distortions. He misrepresented Justice Department opinions, falsely suggested Japanese waterboarders were never prosecuted, overstated detainee recidivism, insisted detainees had no rights under the Geneva Conventions, and repeated unproven claims of ties between Saddam Hussein and al‑Qaeda.

The road to Baghdad and the case for war

He cautioned against occupying Iraq in 1994 but became the administration’s leading voice for war nine years later. On March 16, 2003 he declared that Saddam had “reconstituted nuclear weapons” and that Americans would be greeted as liberators. These claims proved false. He insisted there was “no doubt” Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction and ties to al‑Qaeda, yet evidence was lacking. Retired colonel Lawrence Wilkerson later alleged the administration manipulated intelligence to justify invasion and suggested that Cheney’s push to ignore the Geneva Conventions may constitute a war crime.

Cheney’s radicalism was not limited to Iraq. He championed a “unitary executive” theory contending that the president alone decides matters within the executive branch. Legal scholar Martin Lederman observed that he sidelined dissenting views in the military and intelligence agencies. Chip Gibbons, writing in Jacobin, describes him as an enemy of democracy whose agenda included war, indefinite detention, warrantless surveillance, and torture.

Human cost: war, death, and permanent surveillance

The human toll of Cheney’s policies is staggering. Brown University’s Costs of War project estimates that more than 940,000 people have been killed by direct post‑9/11 violence in Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Yemen and Pakistan, including over 432,000 civilians. Indirect deaths raise the toll into the millions. In Iraq alone, about 29,199 bombs were dropped, causing heavy civilian casualties, and a 2006 survey estimated over 600,000 civilian deaths. Current Affairs compares Cheney’s record to that of serial killer Samuel Little, concluding that “Little was strictly an amateur.”

The costs extended beyond foreign battlefields. Ryan McMaken of the Mises Institute writes that in a more reasonable world, people like Cheney would be forgotten, shamed, and disgraced. The post‑9/11 wars did nothing to enhance freedom, yet thousands of American families paid with their blood and millions continue to pay through taxes and inflation. McMaken lists domestic infringements such as the Patriot Act, warrantless surveillance, TSA groping, and FISA abuses, and none of the architects have been held accountable.

Colonel Wilkerson, Powell’s former chief of staff, told ABC News that Cheney “was president for all practical purposes” during Bush’s first term and feared being tried as a war criminal. The Washington Post dubbed him the “vice-president for torture,” and Wilkerson said his push to disregard the Geneva Conventions amounted to an international crime. Chip Gibbons asserts that he “reduced nations to rubble, shredded the Bill of Rights, and enacted programs of surveillance, abduction, detention, and torture.”

The culture of impunity Cheney helped foster has not faded. Politicians continued to accept his endorsements despite his record, while he insisted the CIA’s interrogation techniques did not violate international agreements and his allies still argued for expansive presidential war powers.

An opinion essay by law professor Ziyad Motala in Al Jazeera argues that Cheney is the architect of some of the most disastrous foreign and domestic policies of the early twenty‑first century. Motala contends that Cheney’s policies left “a trail of death and destabilization” and that the havoc unleashed by the Iraq War and the broader “war on terror” continues to reverberate, causing “suffering and instability far surpassing anything Trump has wrought.” He notes that estimates of Iraqi civilian deaths range from hundreds of thousands to well over a million and that the war destabilized an entire region, paving the way for extremist groups like ISIL and ongoing cycles of violence and displacement. The war drained trillions from the U.S. economy and left thousands of U.S. troops dead and many more with life‑altering physical and psychological wounds.

The economic burden of these wars is also staggering. Nearly twenty years after the United States invaded Afghanistan, the global war on terror had cost about $8 trillion. That figure includes not only Department of Defense spending but also State Department expenditures, care for veterans, Department of Homeland Security funds, and interest payments on war borrowing. Brown’s Cost of War Project Co‑director Catherine Lutz said the Pentagon now absorbs the majority of federal discretionary spending, yet most people do not realize the scale of this funding. She warned that these costs will continue for decades as the country pays for veterans’ care and the environmental damage wrought by the wars.

Cheney championed the Patriot Act as a key pillar of the “war on terror” and campaigned aggressively to renew its provisions. In January 2006 he and President Bush launched a “double‑barrelled assault” on critics of domestic surveillance and opponents of the law; Cheney told the Heritage Foundation that Americans could not afford “one day” without the Patriot Act. Civil liberties groups argue that the Patriot Act dramatically expanded government surveillance powers at the expense of constitutional freedoms. Under the law, investigators can monitor online communications on an extremely low legal standard, and secret court orders can compel companies to hand over lists of what people read or which websites they visit. The American Civil Liberties Union notes that the law is enforced in secret, weakens judicial review, and allows agents to seize business and communications records without probable cause. By 2004 the ACLU had filed lawsuits challenging these provisions and denounced the administration’s claim that there were no abuses as a “red herring.” The Patriot Act turned ordinary Americans into subjects of a vast dragnet, chilling free speech and giving the executive branch powers reminiscent of past crises.

Assessing the indictment

The case against Dick Cheney therefore does not rest on partisan vitriol but on the record of his own words and deeds. He reversed his warnings about occupying Iraq and promoted a war based on false claims; advocated operating on the “dark side;” authorized secret prisons and waterboarding despite the practice being recognized as torture; backed legal memos undermining Geneva protections; and misled the public about weapons of mass destruction and al‑Qaeda ties. He championed a unitary executive theory that sidelined constitutional checks. The wars he supported killed hundreds of thousands and created millions of refugees, while at home they ushered in surveillance and curbs on civil liberties. He is the poster child of a modern war criminal in the American neo-conservative tradition.

It would be facile to claim that Cheney alone bears responsibility for America’s post‑9/11 disasters. Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama signed off on the wars and the surveillance, Congress appropriated funds, and the courts often acquiesced. Yet Cheney’s imprint on U.S. foreign policy is unmistakable. Through his mastery of bureaucratic infighting and his ability to marginalize dissent, he institutionalized torture, preventive war, and executive supremacy as tools of statecraft. His death prompts reflection on whether the nation will continue to venerate officials whose legacies consist of bombed cities, dead civilians, shattered constitutions, and a global “war on terror” that has left the world less free and no safer.

martes, 4 de noviembre de 2025

Report: US Preparing Mexico Mission Against Cartels That Would Include Troops and Drone Strikes

According to NBC News, the Trump administration is considering going through with the plan even if the Mexican government objects

by Dave DeCamp | November 3, 2025

https://news.antiwar.com/2025/11/03/report-us-preparing-mexico-mission-against-cartels-that-would-include-ground-troops-and-drone-strikes/

The Trump administration has begun developing detailed plans to send US troops and intelligence officers into Mexico to target cartels in operations that would include drone strikes, NBC News reported on Monday, citing current and former US officials.

The report said that US military personnel have already begun training for the potential mission, though a deployment is not imminent. Many of the troops would come from Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC) and would operate under the authority of US intelligence agencies, with involvement from CIA officers.

Unlike the current US bombing campaign against alleged drug boats in the waters of Latin America, which the Trump administration is conducting without legal authority, the idea of the campaign in Mexico would be to keep it secret and not publicize attacks.

The NBC report said the administration wanted to operate in coordination with the Mexican government but was also considering conducting the campaign without Mexico’s approval, which would mark a significant violation of the country’s sovereignty. Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum has increased law enforcement cooperation with the US and has allowed the CIA to ramp up surveillance flights along the border, but she has repeatedly ruled out US military intervention in her country.

“The United States is not going to come to Mexico with the military,” Sheinbaum said in August. “We cooperate, we collaborate, but there is not going to be an invasion. That is ruled out, absolutely ruled out.”

The Mexican leader has also condemned US strikes on boats in the region, saying she “doesn’t agree” with the policy. The US recently bombed several alleged drug vessels in the Eastern Pacific, and in one case, the Mexican Navy had to rescue a survivor.

The Trump administration has not provided any evidence to back up its claims that the boats it has been targeting were carrying drugs and has admitted to Congress that it doesn’t know the identities of the people it has killed. Since the bombing campaign began on September 2, the US military has extra-judicially executed 64 people at sea.

The strikes on boats and the push toward regime change in Venezuela have come under increasing scrutiny from both Democrats and Republicans in Congress due to the lack of transparency and lack of legal authority.

“People were very frustrated in the information that was being provided. It was a bipartisan briefing, but people were not happy with the level information that was provided, and certainly the level of legal justification that was provided,” Rep. Mike Turner (R-OH) said after a briefing on the military campaign.

The NBC report signals that the potential US bombing campaign in Mexico, which would target alleged cartel targets, would have even less transparency since the idea is to do it in secret.

In response to the report, a senior administration official told NBC, “The Trump administration is committed to utilizing an all-of-government approach to address the threats cartels pose to American citizens.”