America to the Rescue
/Jon Stewart: A short history of the USA and the Middle East

The Home Office tried to suppress evidence that revealed Philip Lawrence's killer was a model prisoner who had made such excellent progress that he was now suitable for release into the community.
Two senior prison officers, including the deputy governor of Ford open prison in West Sussex, were banned from expressing any opinion on the rehabilitation of 26-year-old Learco Chindamo, sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder of the west London headmaster in 1995, it has been alleged.
Chindamo's lawyers claim that both key witnesses were also prevented from attending the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal which this week ruled Chindamo could not be deported to Italy. The intervention, which happened at the beginning of the year, was portrayed yesterday as a deliberate ploy to try to skew the evidence in favour of the Home Office, which had told Mr Lawrence's widow that Chindamo would be sent back to Italy upon his release.
President George W Bush has warned a US withdrawal from Iraq could trigger the kind of upheaval seen in South East Asia after US forces quit Vietnam. "The price of America's withdrawal was paid by millions of innocent citizens," he told war veterans in Missouri. Mr Bush said the Vietnam War had taught the need for US patience over Iraq.So, having spent the last few years denying any similarity between Iraq and Vietnam Bush now invokes America's last great military disaster as a reason for supporting him in it's present one.
Chindamo is clearly British, having lived here since he was 6 years old. He speaks no Italian, appears to have no connections with Italy other than the accident of citizenship, and grew up in North London. To try to pretend that he is not a British problem, grown on British streets, fostered through a British education system, is a further abrogation of responsibility by the Government. Would that it were so simple; would that we could just deport this social problem, Mr McNulty, sweep it under an imaginary Italian carpet.
The Home Office, at least, are said to be incandescent over the decision made by the tribunal and will appeal. Good. But there's a broader issue here. The level of discord between government offices suggests that the right hand has not a clue what the left is doing. And if Human Rights legislation was introduced for the greater good, why has it left Frances Lawrence more broken, defeated and demoralised than she was on the horrendous day she lost her husband to a killer's blade?
She (Mrs Lawrence) conceded that, had she been a judge on the appeal panel, she too would probably have decided that Chindamo had a right to stay in Britain. The law (a combination of human rights legislation and EU immigration regulations, on both of which Chindamo won) is clear. Yet the politicians have wrongly given the impression that Chindamo would be deported on release. Why? Because it’s an easy headline in the face of public hysteria over youth crime, immigration, and in particular the deportation of foreign prisoners. But Chindamo was always going to be a different case to the adult asylum-seeker who robs, rapes or murders.
Having admitted that Chindamo probably has the right to remain in the UK, having admitted that much of her furiously devastated reaction is due to shock because she was led to believe otherwise, and having so admirably said that she wishes him well and a positive life – “it’s never given me any pleasure to see a young man locked away” – Mrs Lawrence added that she wanted “humanity” to overturn the law in this instance. “In this case it’s to try and say the law is not always what must be our context; humanity is more important . . . people feel so confused, that their needs and fears are second place, squashed by some bureaucratic, insensate law.” But to draw the conclusion that “humanity” should therefore override the rule of law is, however understandable, wrong. The rule of law developed to put humanity on a legal, equal footing; it is an attempt, however imperfect at times, to deliver humanity objectively to everyone. The decision to allow Chindamo to remain in the UK is in fact a perfect expression of that humanity, and I feel proud to live under a system that ultimately took the decision to allow him to stay.
Former CIA chief George Tenet failed to follow through on his 1998 declaration of war against al Qaeda and the agency diverted counterterrorism money for other uses in the years before the September 11 attacks.
A summary of the 2005 report by the CIA inspector general was declassified under protest by agency Director Michael Hayden in response to a law passed by Congress earlier this month. The report said top CIA officers "did not discharge their responsibilities in a satisfactory manner" and it described a "systemic breakdown" in a watch list for tracking terrorism suspects who seek to enter the United States.
One in ten Iraqis has left the country. Baghdad's elite are trying to make ends meet in neighboring Jordan and Syria. Washington wants the United Nations to address the refugee crisis. In the meantime, the country is losing its best minds -- the very people needed to rebuild Iraq. The first stage on the road to safety is a $20 taxi ride. It takes the future refugee past nervous soldiers, through dangerous checkpoints and along streets with nicknames -- like "Grenade Alley" and "Sniper Boulevard" -- that bespeak the perils of travel in Iraq.
The long-held notion that girls prefer pink while boys prefer blue may hold some truth, suggests a new study. And moreover, there might be a biological basis for why women prefer pink – or at least more reddish colours than men, say researchers. The authors of the new study say their findings support the theory that colour vision evolved in humans in part to help females spot ripe fruit such as red berries.
With Rudy Giuliani sprouting missiles under both armpits, the "surge" proving to be another blood-dimmed tide, superpower tensions reverting to Fail Safe perspiration levels, and familiar rumbles in the orchestra pit as the War Party tunes up for its next Wagnerian overture, the Early Warning Bullshit Detection System known as Antiwar becomes an even more vital bulwark against the overthrow of reason. It's one of the few sites which draws together writers from various political denominations on the right and left in common cause against the authoritarian elites that plunge America into one needless, heedless debacle after another.
What is the right thing to do in the face of anti-social behaviour? It's a question being asked after the deaths of a number of people who decided to step in to stop what they saw as troublemakers. Here broadcaster Jeremy Vine explains why for him, sitting back is no longer an option.An honest, self-searching piece from Vine recounting a nasty incident on a train when he did nothing to intervene while another man got the shit punched out of him.
The man who knifed head teacher Philip Lawrence to death has been allowed to stay in the UK after winning an appeal against deportation. Learco Chindamo, 26, is serving a life sentence for killing Mr Lawrence outside his London school in 1995. Chindamo's lawyers argued that deporting him to Italy, where he was born, would breach his human rights. Mr Lawrence's widow said she was "unutterably depressed" by the ruling, adding, "I feel I can't survive this".Had Chindamo been born in the UK (as most murderers convicted in British courts are) the question of his deportation would never have arisen and Mrs Lawrence, for whom I have tremendous sympathy, would have had to come to terms with the release of her husband's killer onto the streets, just as the families of almost every other murder victim have to come to terms under similar circumstances.