<div>Geachte griffier,</div>
<div> </div>
<div>wilt u mijn e-mail bericht doorzenden aan de Vaste Kammercommissie Defensie?</div>
<div> </div>
<div> </div>
<div>Geachte dames en heren,</div>
<div> </div>
<div>ik lees dat u meevergadert over Nederlandse deelname aan vredesmissies.</div>
<div>De oorlog in Lybië schijnt mij geen vredesmissie toe.</div>
<div>Ik zou graag zien dat Nederland alle steun aan de NATO in deze stopzet.</div>
<div>De NATO draagt bij aan een staatsgreep, waarbij het oude regime zeker verwerpelijk is maar het</div>
<div>nieuwe misschien evengoed verwerpelijk.</div>
<div> </div>
<div>In het bijzonder wil ik uw aandacht vragen voor de stad Sirte.</div>
<div>De BBC rapporteert nog met ingehouden kritiek, </div>
<div><a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-12885322">http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-12885322</a></div>
<div> </div>
<div>maar de berichtgeving van de wereldwijde socialisten is werkelijk schokkend. (zie onder)</div>
<div> </div>
<div>Regime verandering zou mijns inziens bereikt kunnen worden met een international olie-boycot, </div>
<div>gesanctioneerd door de Verenigde Naties, zonder een druppel bloed te vergieten.</div>
<div>Dit zou met diplomatie opgelost kunnen worden.</div>
<div> </div>
<div>Als de politieke wil er is.</div>
<div>En als die er niet is, moeten we vragen waarom.</div>
<div> </div>
<div>Het platbombarderen van burgers om ze te bevrijden is een beschaafd land onwaardig.</div>
<div>
<div>:(</div>
<div> </div></div>
<div>Ik zie uit naar uw reactie.</div>
<div> </div>
<div><br>hoogachtend,</div>
<div>M. Kuiper</div>
<div>Egmond aan den Hoef<br></div>
<div class="gmail_quote">---------- Forwarded message ----------<br>From: <b class="gmail_sendername">Antid Oto</b> </div>
<div class="gmail_quote">Date: 3 October 2011 08:15<br>Subject: [D66] The slaughter in Sirte<br>To: informele D66 discussielijst <<a href="mailto:d66@tuxtown.net">d66@tuxtown.net</a>><br><br><br>The slaughter in Sirte<br>
3 October 2011<br><br>NATO countries led by the US, Britain, and France are committing terrible war<br>crimes in the Libyan city of Sirte. In their frenzied drive to crush all<br>remaining resistance in the North African state, NATO and its proxy militia<br>
forces aligned with the National Transitional Council are unleashing<br>indiscriminate military force, killing civilians and destroying buildings and<br>infrastructure throughout the urban centre.<br><br>Numerous civilian refugees who have managed to escape the siege have reported<br>
seeing schools, hospitals, homes, and other civilian buildings destroyed by NATO<br>bombs. Air raids are now taking place around the clock. Anti-Gaddafi militiamen<br>are firing rockets, mortar rounds and tank shells, without even pretending that<br>
they are aiming at any particular targets within the city of 100,000 people.<br>Sirte is suffering from severe shortages of food, water and medicine supplies,<br>further fuelling the humanitarian crisis. Children, the elderly and other<br>
vulnerable people are especially affected.<br><br>The violence underscores the predatory economic and geostrategic calculations<br>behind the regime-change campaign spearheaded by US President Barack Obama,<br>French President Nicolas Sarkozy and British Prime Minister David Cameron.<br>
Washington and its European allies aim to seize control of Libya’s lucrative oil<br>reserves, at the same time reasserting their dominance in North Africa and<br>countering the challenge posed to their interests by the revolutionary uprisings<br>
in neighbouring Egypt and Tunisia.<br><br>The slaughter in Sirte further exposes the “humanitarian” pretext for the war.<br>Last March the imperialist governments and their mouthpieces in the media<br>claimed, without evidence, that Gaddafi’s forces were on the verge of committing<br>
a massacre in Benghazi. Now in Sirte, NATO is perpetrating an actual bloodbath<br>on the city’s population in an attempt to overcome the resistance in one of the<br>last pro-Gaddafi strongholds.<br><br>Unsurprisingly, the various media pundits and political figures in the US and<br>
Europe who backed the war on the basis of “protecting civilians”—including<br>various so-called “lefts” such as Professor Juan Cole and the Nation<br>magazine—are now uniformly silent amid the unfolding slaughter.<br><br>
According to estimates previously released by the National Transitional Council<br>(NTC), by early September 30,000 people had been killed and 50,000 wounded in<br>the war. The toll continues to escalate. According to NATO’s publicly released<br>
figures, their bombers recorded 121 separate “key hits” in Sirte in the last two<br>weeks of September alone. These air strikes are being conducted on the basis of<br>limited or no intelligence and therefore can only be described as indiscriminate<br>
and in blatant contravention of international law.<br><br>Tens of thousands of civilians remain trapped in Sirte, though the exact number<br>remains unclear. According to the Red Cross, about 18,000 have left the city.<br>
The local population, however, has been swelled by a recent influx of refugees<br>from surrounding areas. This includes a significant number of dark-skinned<br>Libyan families from Tawargha, a town that has been devastated and depopulated<br>
by the NTC militias that conducted a murderous racist pogrom there in August and<br>early September.<br><br>The people of Sirte are being subjected to a brutal collective punishment for<br>their bitter and determined opposition to the NTC and the NATO intervention. The<br>
city is also symbolically identified with the deposed regime. It is Gaddafi’s<br>birthplace and childhood home, and his former legislative body, the General<br>Peoples Congress, convened in Sirte.<br><br>For the US, British, and French governments, the destruction serves as a warning<br>
to the entire Libyan population—any resistance to the post-Gaddafi order that is<br>to be established under NATO auspices will confront violent repression.<br><br>There is a definite parallel between the situation in Sirte and the brutal US<br>
offensive in the Iraqi city of Fallujah during November-December 2004. About<br>10,000 US troops and marines levelled the city of 250,000 people,<br>indiscriminately bombing homes, factories and mosques. The operation was<br>
intended to crush the Sunni insurgency against the illegal occupation by<br>terrorising the entire Iraqi people. As is now the case in Sirte, the fighting<br>in Fallujah was less a war or battle than it was an outright massacre, with a<br>
vastly outnumbered and lightly armed group of resistance fighters overcome by<br>the world’s most destructive and technologically advanced ground and air forces.<br><br>NATO’s conduct of the war in Libya during what appears to be its final stages is<br>
also undoubtedly intended to send a signal to governments throughout the Middle<br>East and internationally. In March, Sarkozy made this clear in no uncertain<br>terms, declaring: “Every ruler should understand, and especially every Arab<br>
ruler should understand, that the reaction of the international community and of<br>Europe will from this moment on each time be the same.”<br><br>Exactly one hundred years ago, on October 3, 1911, Italian forces began a naval<br>
bombardment of Tripoli, as part of their drive to annexe the Ottoman provinces<br>of Tripolitania, Fezzna and Cyrenaica, which constitute present-day Libya. The<br>Italian campaign quickly extended from an assault on the Ottoman military forces<br>
to a campaign of indiscriminate reprisal attacks and massacres against the local<br>population who rose up against the colonial forces. The Italo-Turkish war, which<br>ended in October 1912, featured a one-sided utilisation of modern military<br>
technology, including the world’s first aerial reconnaissance flights and<br>bombing raids.<br><br>Lenin described the war as a “perfected, civilised bloodbath.”<br><br>None of these words would need to be revised to describe what is now unfolding<br>
in Libya. The re-emergence of nakedly colonial-style operations in the<br>twenty-first century is an expression of the deepening crisis of the world<br>capitalist order. The American ruling elite desperately seeks to use its<br>
military dominance as a means of offsetting its rapidly eroding economic<br>position. At the same time, the European imperialist powers see an opportunity<br>to regain lost influence in their former colonies, opening up new export markets<br>
and securing access to lucrative natural resources.<br><br>Even before the fighting has finished, various politicians and accompanying<br>corporate bagmen from the US and Europe have rushed to Tripoli. Everyone is<br>scrambling to secure their cut, above all of the North African state’s enormous<br>
oil reserves—recently described by the US ambassador there as the Libyan “jewel<br>in the crown.”<br><br>As in the period prior to 1914, humanity confronts a descent into imperialist<br>barbarism. A struggle against war and militarism requires the building of an<br>
independent political movement of the working class based on a socialist and<br>internationalist program to abolish the profit system.<br><br>Patrick O’Connor<br><br><a href="http://wsws.org/articles/2011/oct2011/pers-o03.shtml" target="_blank">http://wsws.org/articles/2011/oct2011/pers-o03.shtml</a><br>
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