September 4, 2002
Media Compilation #85: Setting The Record Straight
Dear journalist
I found the following 2 articles helpful in better understanding where the truth lies in the current propaganda efforts to try to rally support for the morally indefensible and unprovoked imminent war agression by the sole remaining superpower against nearly defenseless Iraq.
If this is allowed to go ahead, then which countries are next?
Remaining silent on all this is tantamount to condoning it...
Jean Hudon
Earth Rainbow Network Coordinator
http://www.cybernaute.com/earthconcert2000
"The war frenzy is being driven by two fundamental factors. First, the US is seeking to assert control of some of the worlds key oil and gas resources, in Iraq and throughout the Middle East. (...) The war on terrorism is meant to serve as a diversion from the consequences of economic recession, compounded by corporate criminality on an unprecedented scale."
- Taken from the first article below.
"What they are introducing is chaos in international affairs and we condemn that in the strongest terms."
- Nelson Mandela at the Earth Summit, on the U.S. government's talk of attacking Iraq.
CONTENTS
1. Cheneys brief for war: a mass of lies and historical falsifications
2. Behind the official debate, US builds up forces for attack on Iraq
3. Greenhouse Gangsters vs. Climate Justice
See also:
The Charnel House Future: Why Bush&Co. Must Be Stopped Now
http://www.truthout.org/docs_02/09.03C.bw.stop.htm
American public left in dark on US war aims in Iraq http://www.wsws.org/articles/2002/aug2002/iraq-a12.shtml
Cheney's Oily Rhetoric
http://www.progressive.org/webex/wx082802.html
1.
From: http://www.wsws.org/articles/2002/sep2002/chen-s02.shtml
Cheneys brief for war: a mass of lies and historical falsifications
By David Walsh and Barry Grey
2 September 2002
US Vice President Dick Cheney spoke on two occasions last week, opening a political offensive by the Bush administration to propel the US into war with Iraq. The two speeches, which were virtually identical, were aimed less at making the case to the American public than at rallying support within ruling circles for the administrations war plans.
Over the past several weeks a ferocious conflict has been raging within the political elite, including the Bush administration itself, over plans for a US military assault in the coming weeks for the purpose of toppling Saddam Hussein and installing a puppet regime.
Prominent figures in the first Bush administration (1989-93) have come out openly against the present governments plans for unilateral action. Brent Scowcroft, a former national security adviser, earlier this month argued that an immediate conflict with Iraq could destabilize the region and undermine the war on terrorism. He further suggested that the lack of evidence that the Baghdad regime represented an immediate threat would prevent the mobilization of an international coalition in support of a new war.
Former secretary of state James Baker, the man who two years ago directed the Bush campaigns machinations to block the counting of votes in Florida, published an opinion piece in the New York Times on August 25 arguing that the current administration was not going about regime change in Iraq in the right way. Baker urged Bush to go to the United Nations Security Council and press for passage of a resolution requiring Iraq to submit to intrusive, inspections anytime, anywhere, with no exceptions. If Iraq should refuse to accept such a resolution, or resist its implementation in any way, argued Baker, the US would occupy the moral high ground and could go to war with international support.
Cheney was directly responding to these critics in his addresses. He speaks for the most reckless and militaristic faction within the political establishment, which is intent on using American military superiority to imposeby forcea new division of the world, in which the US occupies a position of global hegemony.
The fact that it was left to Cheney, rather than President Bush, to make the case for a preemptive war against Iraq underscores the real relationship of forces within the administration. It is Cheney who calls the shots. Bush is little more than a front-man, held in well-earned contempt even by those who nominally serve under him.
The critics against whom Cheney is speaking do not oppose US aggression against Iraq in principle; rather, they argue for a somewhat more cautious approach to expanding American dominance of territory and resources in the Middle East. These elements are concerned that the Cheney faction is heedlessly pushing the US into a war without sufficient military or diplomatic preparation, without having adequately prepared public opinion in the US, and in a manner that will needlessly alienate Europe, undermine the Arab bourgeois regimes and destabilize international economic and political relations with incalculable consequences.
The venues for Cheneys speechesthe national convention of the Veterans of Foreign Wars in Nashville, Tennessee on August 26 and a gathering of Korean War veterans in San Antonio, Texas three days laterhave their own significance. Aside from assuring a receptive audience, the choice of veterans groups reflects the administrations strategy of first overcoming resistance within the military itself to an imminent attack that could entail substantial casualties and a prolonged military occupation of Iraq.
Beyond that, it is entirely in the nature of this administration to begin a public relations campaign by turning to the military for support. Cheney is quite consciously appealing to the military as a counterweight against critics in Congress, the State Department and the foreign policy establishment, including those within his own party, as well as figures within Bushs cabinet who are wary of a unilateral war in the Gulf.
The speeches were generally praised by the media, including its erstwhile liberal wing. They were treated as serious contributions to a political exchange. A Washington Post editorial (August 27), for example, termed Cheneys first speech the Bush administrations most extensive and forceful statement about the danger posed by the regime of Saddam Hussein and the reasons for taking preventive action against it, and described Cheney as passionate and persuasive in delivering his warmongering message.
In fact, Cheneys remarks were composed of unsubstantiated allegations, historical falsifications and lies.
In making his case for war against Iraq, Cheney began by stressing that the war in Afghanistan and the proposed invasion of Iraq were merely the initial shots of an open-ended conflict. He told his Nashville audience, But as Secretary [of Defense Donald] Rumsfeld has put it, we are still closer to the beginning of this war than we are to its end. The United States has entered a struggle of yearsa new kind of war against a new kind of enemy. He went on to describe the military advantages possessed by the US that will only become more vital in future campaigns.
In terms of the geographical limits of this conflict, Cheney asserted, There is a terrorist underworld out there, spread among more than 60 countries. There are 189 members of the United Nations; according to Cheney, therefore, nearly one-third of the world is home to this terrorist underworld and presumably a legitimate target of US intervention.
Cheneys message was unmistakable: the American people must get used to decades of continual warfare.
To justify this bloodthirsty perspective, Cheney resorted to the tactic favored by the Bush administration since September 11, i.e., to deliberately sow fear and panic in the population. He declared, 9/11and its aftermath awakened this nation to danger, to the true ambitions of the global terror network and to the reality that weapons of mass destruction are being sought by determined enemies who would not hesitate to use them against us.
Such characterizations are intended to create a permanent state of anxiety among the American people. This has several purposes. It bolsters the effort to present the government, military and intelligence apparatus as the sole protectors of the population against impending destruction, thus facilitating the gutting of democratic rights and the implementation of authoritarian measures.
This incendiary language is calculated, moreover, to undermine any rational appraisal of the September 11 attacks and any effort to investigate them. The Bush administration has relentlessly opposed an investigation into the terrorist attacks because it has much to hide. A serious probe would demonstrate that the government was, at the very least, guilty of criminal negligence, and, more likely, a deliberate stand-down of intelligence and security agencies. It would establish that the Bush administration seized on the events of September 11 to implement war plans that had been drawn up well in advance.
In last weeks speeches, Cheney took his panic-mongering to absurd heights, warning of a new Pearl Harbor and comparing ravaged and impoverished Iraq to Imperial Japan and Nazi Germany.
The core of Cheneys brief for war against Iraq was based on several premises, none of which withstand scrutiny.
Preemptive war instead of containment
Reiterating the line advanced by Bush in his West Point speech last June, Cheney sought to drive home the idea that the old doctrines of security do not apply in the new world situation. In the days of the Cold War, the vice president remarked, we were able to manage the threat with strategies of deterrence and containment. But its a lot tougher to deter enemies who have no country to defend, and containment is not possible, when dictators obtain weapons of mass destruction and are prepared to share them with terrorists, who intend to inflict catastrophic casualties.
Leaving aside the unproven and apocalyptic assertions, Cheneys argument is a series of non sequiturs. The notion that the US faced less of a threat when confronted by a highly developed society, the Soviet Unionwhich was armed with thousands of nuclear warheads aimed at every major American citythan it does today when faced by bands of guerrillas is a proposition that flies in the face of logic and common sense.
Moreover, the claim that preemptive war is a novel doctrine dictated by a new world situation is false, as is the attempt to present this policy as a defensive measure. In reality, the Bush doctrine is a revival of the strategy of roll-back advocated in the Cold War period by the most right-wing and bellicose faction of the American ruling elite. The roll-back proponents rejected the dominant policy of containment of Soviet influence. They advocated the aggressive use of military pressure and economic and political subversion to overthrow Soviet-backed regimes and isolate and destabilize the USSR. Now the ideological heirs of the roll-back zealots have become the dominant force in the political and military establishment.
Nor has a preventive war against Iraq or any other country been imposed on the US by the growth of terrorism, a phenomenon that is hardly new in the world. Rather, the collapse of the Soviet Union is seen within the American establishment to have created a window of opportunity for the US to exploit its military superiority to grab control of oil reserves and other vital resources, and impose American dominance over the entire planet.
Iraq and weapons of mass destruction
In his speeches the vice president asserted that the Hussein regime in Iraq possesses an arsenal of chemical and biological weapons and is on the verge of developing a nuclear bomb.
Cheney declared, Simply stated, there is no doubt that Saddam Hussein now has weapons of mass destruction; there is no doubt that he is amassing them to use against our friends, against our allies, and against us. And there is no doubt that his aggressive regional ambitions will lead him into future confrontations with his neighbors...
Cheney resorts to a rhetorical trick, repeating the phrase there is no doubt, to obscure the fact that he is making bald assertions without any factual substantiation. What is beyond doubt is that there is no proof of these chargesat least, none that has been presented by the US government.
The one instance of Iraqi treachery Cheney cited in his Nashville speech was quickly exposed as false. During the spring of 1995, said the vice president, the [UNSCOM weapons] inspectors were actually on the verge of declaring that Saddams programs to develop chemical weapons and longer range ballistic missiles had been fully accounted for and shut down. Then Saddams son-in-law suddenly defected and began sharing information. Within days the inspectors were led to an Iraqi chicken farm. Hidden there were boxes of documents and lots of evidence regarding Iraqs most secret weapons programs.
On a Public Broadcasting System television news program two days later, former chief UN weapons inspector Scott Ritter refuted Cheneys version of events, accusing him of rewriting history. Ritter told a PBS interviewer, What Vice President Cheney said to the American people is tantamount to a lie. The CIA knows that Hussein Kamal, the son-in-law of Saddam Hussein, when he defected clearly stated that under his instructions all weapons programs were eliminated. This is fact. He didnt lead us to a document. The Iraqi government did.
In his San Antonio speech the following day, Cheney dropped the chicken farm anecdote. No one in the media noticed, or presumably cared. The lie had served its purpose.
Saddam Hussein and chemical weapons
As is the custom with US officials, Cheney attempted in his speech to portray Saddam Hussein as a demon, while ignoring the fact that the Iraqi leader was an ally of the US throughout much of the 1980s, and that Washington supported Iraq in its war with Iran (1981-88). Hussein is one in long line of former allies or CIA stooges who have run afoul of US interests and have been transformed into international pariahs. This list includes Panamas Manuel Noriega, Serbias Slobodan Milosevic, Somalias Mohammed Farah Aidid and Osama bin Laden, one of the Islamic fundamentalists who were armed and financed by the US during the mujahedin war against Soviet troops in Afghanistan in the 1980s.
When Saddam Hussein was using chemical weapons against Iranian forces and Iraqi Kurds in the late 1980s, he was acting with the knowledge and tacit blessing of the US. A recent New York Times article (August 18) pointed out that American intelligence agencies knew that Iraqi commanders would employ chemical weapons in waging the decisive battles of the Iran-Iraq war and did nothing to stop them. One senior defense intelligence officer at the time, Col. Walter P. Lang, told the Times that US intelligence officials were desperate to make sure that Iraq did not lose to Iran. The use of gas on the battlefield by the Iraqis was not a matter of deep strategic concern, Lang commented.
The US supported Hussein and Iraq in its war with Iran because the American ruling elite perceived the radical Islamic regime in the latter nation to be the greater threat. Once the war was over and Iran weakened, Washington became alarmed at the prospect of a secular nationalist regime in Baghdad emerging as a power in the oil-rich region. American officials turned their attention to creating a pretext for war with Iraq, which they found in the Iraqi regimes invasion of Kuwait on August 2, 1990.
It was subsequently revealed that US ambassador to Iraq April Glaspie, in a conversation with Hussein on July 25, 1990, had given a virtual green light, in diplomatic language, to the Iraqi action, commenting We have no opinion on the Arab-Arab conflicts. Furthermore, General Norman Schwarzkopf, on the orders of the then-chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Colin Powell, drew up plans for a massive US military intervention in the Persian Gulf aimed against Iraq months before the invasion of Kuwait. By June 1990, Schwarzkopf was already conducting war games pitting hundreds of thousands of US troops against Iraqi armored divisions.
There are also indications that the US helped Saddam Hussein launch a program to develop anthrax as a biological weapon. The conservative French newspaper Le Figaro reported in 1998 that both the US and France had supplied Iraq with strains of anthrax bacillus during the mid-1980s, after the Hussein regime had begun a secret biological weapons program in early 1985. Researchers at the American Type Culture Collection in Rockville, Maryland confirmed the report.
The US liberation of Afghanistan
Cheney cited the US war in Afghanistan as supposed proof that Americas motives in invading Iraq would be at once selfless and humane. Today in Afghanistan, he declared, the world has seen that America acts not to conquer but to liberate.
Such a statement would be laughable, were not its implications so sinister. Even as Cheney spoke, film and press reports documenting horrific war crimes in Afghanistan were continuing to emerge. American military forces and political leaders are implicated in the slaughter of hundreds, if not thousands, of captured Taliban soldiers. Hundreds more have been indefinitely jailed by the US, in violation of the Geneva Conventions. This is not to mention the many thousands of Afghan civilians who have been killed by US missiles and bombs.
The US intervention has plunged the country into an even more desperate state of poverty and anarchy, while doing nothing to weaken the grip of rival warlords over the people. The puppet regime of Hamid Karzai is so despised that its leading members must be guarded by US troops and are hardly able to travel outside Kabul for fear of being wiped out.
Cheney is, moreover, well aware that US war plans against Iraq call for saturation bombing of all key urban centers and that American military planners assume Iraqi civilian casualties will be far higher in the second Gulf War than in the first.
From an immediate political standpoint, perhaps the most significant aspect of Cheneys speeches was his dismissal of the urgings of James Baker and others, including numerous European leaders, that the Bush administration go first to the UN to secure a legal fig leaf before embarking on war against Iraq. The tactical issuewhether or not to use the issue of UN weapons inspectors as the pretext for warcontinues to divide the Bush administration, according to various press reports.
CLIP
The Bush administration faction around Cheney and Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld is hostile to the UN maneuver because it wants to establish the principle that the US will not be bound in its military actions and diplomacy by any international organization or legal code.
Cheneys speech, according to the US media, is a contribution to a public debate over war with Iraq. To ascribe to such demagogy any positive content, or suggest that it represents a democratic give and take between government and the people, is an insult to the population. In reality, the American people are not to be consulted at all. War with Iraq is to be imposed on the population by a political clique with the closest ties to the military and the far rightone that was brought to power by anti-democratic and fraudulent means. It knows it will face no serious opposition from the Democratic Party or what passes for the liberal establishment.
The war frenzy is being driven by two fundamental factors. First, the US is seeking to assert control of some of the worlds key oil and gas resources, in Iraq and throughout the Middle East. War with Iraq will only be the first step toward establishing a de facto US protectorate in the region.
At the same time the eruption of US militarism is a response by the ruling elite to its malignant social and political crisis at home a crisis for which it has no solution. The war on terrorism is meant to serve as a diversion from the consequences of economic recession, compounded by corporate criminality on an unprecedented scale. The stark contradictions of US society, above all, the vast chasm that separates the wealthy elite from broad layers of the population, are fueling the war drive and endowing it with a particularly violent character.
2.
From: http://www.wsws.org/articles/2002/aug2002/iraq-a24.shtml
Behind the official debate, US builds up forces for attack on Iraq
By Patrick Martin
24 August 2002
While a highly publicized debate continues in the pages of the American press on the subject of when and howrather than whetherto launch a war with Iraq, the US military is pushing ahead with the logistical and technical preparations for the invasion and occupation of the Middle East country.
The White House and Pentagon repeatedly claim that no final decision has been taken on launching a war to overthrow the regime of Saddam Hussein. But the practical measures being carried out belie this, suggesting that war with Iraq is only a matter of time.
More than 100,000 American and British troops are already on station in the region immediately surrounding the country. Significantly, according to several American press accounts, that is well above the minimum number of troops required under the most recent scenario for an invasion of Iraq proposed by General Tommy Franks, commander of the US Central Command.
Franks reportedly briefed President Bush in the White House in early August on plans to attack Iraq with 50,000 to 80,000 troops, a force that could be made ready for operations in only two weeks, instead of the worst-case invasion scenario, requiring 250,000 troops and a three-month buildup, which CentCom originally proposed last May.
Many of the US deployments are new, and publicly explained by Washington as measures being taken in the ongoing war on terrorism. However, the largest groups of American and British troops are in position to attack Iraq, not Al Qaeda. These include 37,000 US troops in the Persian Gulf statesup 12,000 since Marchand 27,000 British troops in the same areaup 7,000 over that time. The most rapid US buildup is in Turkey, with the US force swelling from 7,000 to 25,000 by the end of July. Some 6,400 US troops are in Jordan, with 4,000 arriving in the past week for joint exercises with the Jordanian army.
A diagram of the location of American military forces in the Middle East, Central Asia and the Horn of Africa looks increasingly like a noose around Baghdad. US soldiers, sailors and airmen are now stationed in Pakistan, Afghanistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Georgia, Azerbaijan, Turkey, Israel, Jordan, Egypt, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Bahrain, Oman, Yemen, Eritrea and Kenya, with naval forces offshore in the Persian Gulf, the Arabian Sea, the Red Sea and the Mediterranean.
US-initiated air strikes on Iraqi positions are continuing. US and British jet fighters bombed targets in southern Iraq August 17, the second raid of the week and the twenty-seventh conducted this year in the two no-fly zones, in northern and southern Iraq, which were imposed by the US and Britain in 1991 without UN sanction. The Iraqi Air Force Command said the warplanes struck public buildings and civilian homes in Dhi-Qar province, 250 miles south of Baghdad.
Some US Special Forces troops are already engaged in military operations on Iraqi territory. US commandos entered the Kurdish region of northern Iraq near the end of March to begin training Kurdish militias in preparation for the upcoming war, with Turkish special forces moved into areas with a large Turkmen population, near the oil cities of Mosul and Kirkuk. American and Turkish construction engineers entered the region in June to begin work on lengthening air strips to receive advanced warplanes.
According to an Israeli-based news service, Debka.com, an August 6 strike by US and British bombers targeted the Iraqi command and control center at al-Nukhaib in the desert between central Iraq and the Saudi border, making use for the first time of precision-guided bombs which home in and destroy fiber-optic systems. The same day, waves of US warplanes buzzed the Iraqi capital in a show of force, to demonstrate that the radar system protecting Baghdad was unusable in time of war.
On August 8, according to reports in the Turkish press, US, British and Turkish jets escorted helicopters which carried Turkish commandos to seize the airport at Bamerni in northern Iraq, about 50 miles north of Mosul. US special forces accompanied the Turkish force, which seized the airport after a short battle in which the Iraqi defenders were slaughtered. The occupation of Bamerni gives the US-Turkish forces the ability to strike at will at the Syrian-Iraqi railroad, a key supply link for Baghdad.
The New York Times reported August 19 that the US Air Force is stockpiling weapons, ammunition and spare parts throughout the Persian Gulf region and that stocks of precision-guided weapons heavily used in Afghanistan, both bombs and missiles, should be replenished by the fall.
The amount of US war materiel already in place in Kuwait and Qatar is the equivalent of two armored brigades. According to a spokesman for CentCom, this includes about 230 M1A1 Abrams tanks, 120 M2A2 Bradley fighting vehicles, 200 armored personnel carriers, 50 mortars and 40 155-millimeter howitzers, as well as ammunition and 30 days supply of food and fuel. The 9,000 troops who would operate the equipment could be flown to the region in 96 hours. Equipment for another two armored brigades is on board ships in the Gulf.
The Navy recently signed contracts for 10 huge cargo ships to move tanks and other heavy equipment to the region for use in a ground war against Iraq. Two fast roll-on, roll-off ships were chartered to carry equipment to an unidentified port in the Red Sea, likely in Saudi Arabia. The Scandinavian shipper Maersk was hired to supply eight more roll-on, roll-off ships, with the contract specifying that these vessels would carry US Army cargo such as ammunition and vehicles such as M1A1 tanks and take them to pre-positioning sites off the Indian Ocean island of Diego Garcia. The ships will stand by there, awaiting orders to move their cargo to the war zone.
In mid-August the Pentagon completed its largest ever command-and-control exercise, a three-week war game, costing some $250 million, to simulate a US invasion of an unspecified enemy nation in the Persian Gulf (a combination of Iran and Iraq, according to press accounts). The exercise, called Millennium Challenge 2002, involved 13,500 military and civilian personnel operating in nine live-fire zones in the United States and more than a dozen computer simulations.
According to press accounts of the exercise, the US forces suffered significant losses because they sailed into the Persian Gulf without initiating fire, allowing the enemy to attack first. When the attack came, the commanders of Red, (Iran/Iraq) achieved tactical surprise. Some press accounts focused on this aspect of the drill, highlighting the risk of large US casualties. But they were silent on the likely conclusion to be drawn by Pentagon planners: that it is better to launch a war in the narrow confines of the Gulf with a surprise attack by the United States.
There is other, more indirect, evidence that an American war on Iraq is already well beyond the stage of planning for hypothetical cases. US oil companies have sharply reduced their imports of Iraqi oil over the past five months, in response to the increasingly bellicose language coming from Washington. US imports have plunged from about 1 million barrels a day last March to between 100,000 and 200,000 barrels a day. Iraq supplied 8 percent of total US oil imports in 2001.
Press accounts cited a pricing dispute between the US oil companies and the Iraqi government, but the Washington Post commented that the withdrawal from the Gulf may also signal a desire to locate alternative sources of crude in the event of US military action in the region.
The US State Department has asked private aid organizations to bid for millions of dollars in government funds to carry out relief work in Iraq, a country currently under US blockade where American-financed charities are largely barred. As one humanitarian aid group official told the press, It just seems odd that one part of the government is willing to put $6.6 million into a territory controlled by our sworn enemy, while another part of the government has major plans to depose that enemy. The obvious inference is that the contract is for work to be performed after a US invasion, or perhaps in territory controlled by US-allied groups such as the Kurdish forces in northern Iraq
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See Also:
US seeks Japanese government support for war on Iraq
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2002/sep2002/japa-s03.shtml
British establishment divided over US war against Iraq
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2002/aug2002/iraq-a23.shtml
German chancellor speaks against US war vs. Iraq
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2002/aug2002/iraq-a12.shtml
Bush, Pentagon plot criminal war on Iraq
http://www.workers.org/ww/2002/iraqus0829.php
Top Ten Reasons Why the US Should Not Invade Iraq
http://www.voice4change.org/stories/showstory.asp?file=020830~gx.asp
The Case Against the Iraq War
http://www.progressive.org/webex/wxiraq082802.html
3.
"The reality is that because of their powerful interests, the oil giants are adversaries, rather than allies, in the quest for environmental protection and justice. Their behavior demonstrates that their goal is to obstruct actions to prevent climate change so as to protect their business for as long as possible."
- Taken from "Greenhouse Gangsters vs. Climate Justice" below
From: http://www.corpwatch.org/campaigns/PCD.jsp?articleid=1048
Greenhouse Gangsters vs. Climate Justice
HERE ARE A COUPLE SHORT EXCERPTS FROM THIS EXCELLENT DOCUMENT
Introduction
As we hurtle into the twenty-first century, oil is still King. But it does not rule benevolently. Rather, the reign of those who control the politics of petroleum continues to undermine democracy while fostering human rights violations and environmental disasters across the Earth.
Now, by making a major contribution to a global problem that looms larger than perhaps any before it, big oil may well have met its match. Indeed, climate change (often referred to as global warming or the greenhouse effect) has the potential to radically damage entire ecosystems, agriculture, and the inhabitability of whole countries. Changing the climate affects everyone and everything.
Despite the efforts of a few transnational oil corporations (as well as their cohorts in the coal, chemical and car businesses) to dupe the public into thinking that global warming is not a real threat, the vast majority of the world's climate scientists and a growing body of evidence say it is. No longer does the scientific debate focus on if global warming will happen, but rather on how soon it will occur and on how bad it will be. And if the extraordinary number of extreme weather events the world has recently been experiencing -- killer hurricanes, floods and heat waves in places as far flung as Central America, Bangladesh and the East Coast of the United States -- are a harbinger of what is to come, the greenhouse world will be harsh indeed.
CLIP
Just 122 corporations account for 80% of all carbon dioxide emissions. And just five private global oil corporations -- Exxon Mobil, BP Amoco, Shell, Chevron and Texaco -- produce oil that contributes some ten percent of the world's carbon emissions.
While these five companies and their allies in Congress are busy blaming the American consumer for massive energy consumption, or the "Developing World" for not taking adequate steps to curb global warming, the emissions from the fuel they produce exceed the total of all greenhouse gasses coming from Central America, South America and Africa combined!
CLIP - Get it all from http://www.corpwatch.org/upload/document/greenhousegangsters.pdf
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Check also:
Big business accused of derailing Earth Summit
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/17481/story.htm
Don't Be Fooled: America's Ten Worst Greenwashers (August 29, 2002)
http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=13984
The sham summit (August 30)
http://www.socialistworker.org/2002-2/419/419_05_EarthSummit.shtml