The American Conservative, 8 September 2008
Two major articles deal with the fear that haunts many of the “Old Right” contributors to this publication, the fear that America is becoming dependent on foreign powers. An obituary for Lieutenant General William Odom discusses the testimony the general gave to the US Senate in early April, in which he pointed out that US forces in Iraq depend “on a long and slender supply line from Kuwait, which runs through territory controlled by Shi’ite forces friendly to Iran” [a quote from the obituarist, not Odom’s own words.) American service personnel in Iraq are therefore hostages at the disposal of Iran.
Andrew Bacevich attacks American consumerism and its economic consequences. Our insatiable appetite for luxuries, Bacevich argues, has saddled us with debts and a dependence on imported fuels that we can manage only by maintaining a constant war footing, while our wars serve only to increase our debts and deepen our dependence.
The American Conservative, 25 August 2008
Remember George W Bush saying that the fall of Saddam Hussein meant that the “rape rooms” in his prisons would forever close? Abu Ghraib made a sick joke out of that boast. Well, the return of rape rooms wasn’t the end of it. Since the current war began in March 2003, well over 2 million Iraqis have been forced from their homes. Most of them left empty-handed. How have they been surviving since? Kelley Beaucar Vlahos shows how; tens of thousands of Iraqi women and girls have been forced into prostitution. No one in authority is even collecting statistics about these victims of daily rape, much less trying to help them. On the contrary, when it was revealed that a major US defense contractor was shuttling women and girls between Kuwait and Baghdad to be used as sex slaves, the story went nowhere. The matter remained so obscure that even Vlahos misreports the name of the whistleblower who revealed it. She calls him Bruce Halley. His name is Barry Halley.




