Carne Ross udostępnił(a) post.

We are going all out on Aleppo at Independent Diplomat. A massacre is happening in front of the world.

Carne William Ross

"We cannot let this go on. We need international action to stop the bombs. Even the children of Aleppo understand this. Over the past week, Aleppo’s children to...ok to the streets to create their own no-bombing zone."

Proud of my colleagues at ID for making Dr Hatem's voice heard. But for god's sake Assad must be stopped.

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To treat my patients, I drive down the only road leading into my city, before sunrise, with the headlights of my car turned off.
telegraph.co.uk

FB has apparently changed the settings of what you see in your feed. If you want to see posts from this account, please can you change your setings so that posts here are shown first.

The Nation asked me to take part in a debate on Larry Summers's recent proposal of "responsible nationalism" as an antidote to the more toxic kind offered by Trump and Brexiteers.

From the Accidental Anarchist page.

This is a great story about some of the Americans who joined the Republican side in the Spanish civil war, which features in the film.

Three stories of black Americans in Spain
warisboring.com|Od: War Is Boring

Diary 160627

I'm sure I'm not alone in having fallen into a kind of dismal political depression in recent days. The party conventions here in the U.S. have been mortifying to watch and have been difficult to avoid thanks to the enormous coverage they are given. I don't really understand why as the speeches are astonishingly free of policy content but replete with absurdly OTT statements of praise for their own nominee or criticism of the other's. For both Democrats and Rep...ublicans, the focus is on personalities and soundbites. Politics as usual then. How one hungers for more. Politics in the UK is barely more inspiring.

The news meanwhile offers yet more misery with ISIS attacks across Europe. The Pope has said the world is "at war". I like the Pope and celebrate his embrace of refugees and the most vulnerable, but this is an absurd statement. It seems to reflect the almost hysterical atmosphere of doom and gloom that currently prevails. Syria is, tragically, at war, but the world is not. The West is suffering occasional extremist attacks but, while nasty, the impact of these attacks amounts to about a millionth of the suffering of the world wars. I was reminded of this while reading Ernst Junger's "Storm of Steel", his astonishing memoir of First World War combat. The violence is incessant and horrific. Of course, one crucial difference between then and now is the visibility of the horror. Today's attacks are immediately broadcast around the world, sometimes while the attacks are actually occurring. In 1917, the home population was largely ignorant of the savagery of the front lines. It took a long time for the maimed veterans of that awful bloodletting to relay their experiences. Cell phone cameras and the Internet have brought wonderful advances (for instance, in capturing police violence here in the U.S.). But one effect has been to amplify the emotional force of terrorism. It's almost as if we are experiencing the attacks too. ISIS terrorism is thus a truly modern phenomenon, and causes widespread effect with relatively small scale acts. Governments, like France's, are unable to combat this new-form propaganda not least since our own press and media are the very ones who propagate it. The communication of the act is an intrinsic and vital component of the act, perhaps the most important component (an invisible act of terrorism is a kind of contradiction in terms). Yet who is doing the communication? Who is receiving the message communicated? What are their responsibilities? They are not culpable, yet they are undeniably complicit. Oh yes, they is us, including me.

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I love these playful and intriguing designs of a 21st century embassy based on the ideals of transparency and collaboration. If you read the article, you will see why this popped up on my Google alerts. The student behind the designs, Muhammad Sahrum, is a man after my own heart. When Independent Diplomat grows up, we will build one of these.

Graduate Muhammad Sahrum has envisioned a 21st-century embassy, with flexible workspaces and games rooms to make diplomatic decision making more informal
dezeen.com

Belatedly, but for the sake of completeness, here is the OpEd I wrote about Chilcot for the New York Times.

The report condemns Britain’s reckless warmongers, yet omits the true cost — Iraq’s unnumbered dead.
nytimes.com|Od: Carne Ross

Chilcot:

- WMD intelligence presented with certainty that was not justified
- containment was working, and alternatives to war were not exhausted
- UK undermined authority of the UN Security Council

...

Am quoted at length in the report. After being treated as a leper and threatened with prosecution by my former colleagues in the FCO and attacked and belittled in public by cabinet ministers, the report confirms that I was telling the truth. But it is far too late for the people of Iraq.

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The "Chilcot Report" on the Iraq war is published tomorrow. I will be doing a lot of interviews. I am rather nervous, but more worried that the report, though grossly overdue, will be a disappointment.

I'm actually in a daze today about what's happened. To see a racist declare that it's Britain's "Independence Day" makes me sick to my stomach. Something is very badly wrong. There is much to think about, for now I'm posting a pretty good essay on what's gone wrong: the political class has ignored the worst off. Not news to me, but a compelling explanation of the vote.

Brexit is about more than the EU: it’s about class, inequality, and voters feeling excluded from politics. So how do we even begin to put Britain the right way up?
theguardian.com|Od: John Harris

160621

After threatening me with prosecution under the Official Secrets Act when I resigned, the Foreign Office has today written to me to offer help and support with media when the Chilcot Report is published. Very thoughtful.

160620

Lambeth Council has failed to send me a postal vote for the EU referendum but it looks like I've managed to arrange a proxy vote by a friend in Kennington. If it works, I shall be voting Remain. The main reason is simple. I believe in open borders and free movement of people. By locking France and Germany in an (almost) unbreakable union, the EU has helped prevent war in Western Europe, a region that hitherto had been plagued by repeated conflict. Stopping mass wa...

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160617

A singularly depressing week with the Orlando attack and now the murder of Jo Cox. I didn't know Jo but many of my colleagues at Independent Diplomat worked closely with her on Syria where she was a fierce advocate for Syrian refugees and civilians. She spoke for them. She put their needs first. She demanded that their plight be given more attention.

I'm sorry not to have met her. She sounded absolutely great. But her death made me read and listen to her speeches... so she inspires even though she's gone. That's a pretty good epitaph. Meanwhile the fight to protect civilians in Syria goes on. Yesterday a group of State Department diplomats sent a memo demanding more aggressive US military action against the Assad regime. I applaud their courage in saying so. The Syrian opposition, with whom Independent Diplomat works, have been saying this since the beginning. Assad's murder of his own people will not stop until he is forced to, and only then will he come to the table to discuss transition to democracy. The parallels with Bosnia are all too glaring, and yet ignored.

I cannot face the arguments for or against "intervention" right now not least because there are no simple arguments, and the Syria case, like all such cases, is complicated. But if you want a simple way through the arguments, ask one of the Syrian civil society groups or the Syria Coalition what they think. It's their country.

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Carne Ross udostępnił(a) post użytkownika The Accidental Anarchist.

A renowned Kurdish commander in Rojava died this week:

"Abu Layla showed his commitment to gender equality by changing his birth name from Faisal Sardoun, to Ab...u Layla, in his daughter’s honor to break away from patriarchal lineage that subjugates women."

Not something you see in the obit of many soldiers.

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By Dr Amir Sharifi Abu Layla, the Syrian Kurdish commander was a genuine and spirited revolutionary echoing a new hope for the anguished Syrians caught in a maelstrom of civil and proxy wars. As a visionary of a pluralistic democracy he cherished diversity and cultivated cultural and religious...
rudaw.net
Carne Ross udostępnił(a) post użytkownika The Accidental Anarchist.

This is an important and fascinating article on the philosophy and practice of Rojava and a necessary corrective to the lazy inaccuracy so prevalent in current journalism that Rojava is a nationalist or "Marxist" project. It's not. It's something very different and important. It's an attempt to build a genuinely inclusive post-state democracy. I wish we had such a thing.

The "commune of communes" is an idea that has animated anarchist thought since Kropotkin and, latterly, Murray Bookchin, and is now coming to life in northern S...yria - Rojava. This article is a really thorough philosophical and practical explanation of the politics of Rojava. It's well worth reading. What's going on in Rojava is a vitally important political project of significance for anyone who cares about what real democracy - for everyone - looks like. That's why it's in the film.

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The demands pushed forward in both parts of Kurdistan are almost identical, both demonstrating an attempt at formally installing a confederal municipal system into the region.
opendemocracy.net

160609

I've decided to go to London for the publication of the Chilcot Iraq Inquiry Report. I feel I have to be there. Meanwhile, the journalist Peter Oborne has published a book based on a radio broadcast he did about Chilcot, called "Not the Chilcot Report". I was on the show and feature in the book. This is a review by Paul Rogers who I've always respected a lot, and not only because he's nice about me:

"A book densely packed with information also contains some real hig...hlights that deserve closer attention. An outstanding example is the evidence of the former senior FCO diplomat, Carne Ross, to Chilcot. Ross left government service early in the war and went on to start a small but potent diplomatic advisory service, Independent Diplomat. His key contribution to the inquiry was to describe the FCO’s cautious view on Iraqi WMD, in sharp contrast to what was coming out of Downing Street."

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An official verdict on Britain's policy towards Iraq, and Tony Blair's role in the 2003 invasion, is imminent. But the journalist Peter Oborne gets there first.
opendemocracy.net

160608

These are dark days for the UN. In recent weeks, Morocco has thrown out the civilian members of the UN peacekeeping mission in the occupied Western Sahara. That mission monitors the ceasefire in the Western Sahara. It is also supposed to organize the referendum on the territory's future which Morocco has consistently blocked. For this and its most recent obstruction, Morocco has faced no consequence from the Security Council.

Soon after that, Israel directly rep...udiated UN resolutions demanding its withdrawal from the occupied Golan Heights, resolutions universally supported by every UN member state including, once, Israel itself. Netanyahu said that Israel would never relinquish the Golan. Again, no serious consequence.

And now we learn that Saudi Arabia has bullied the UN Secretary-General into allowing it to "review" the SG's report into the killing of children by the Saudi-led coalition in Yemen (part of his bigger report on the protection of children in conflict). Saudi Arabia is to be removed the "black list" of child killers reported by the UN. Apparently, Saudi Arabia was supported in this outrageous behaviour by other OIC member states. So, just be clear, a country that is responsible for killing children is allowed to tell the UN how that conduct should be reported upon.

I think Ban should resign. If the UN cannot even talk honestly about the killing of children, what's it for?

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UN accused of giving in to political manipulation as Riyadh hits back at claims over child deaths in Yemen conflict
theguardian.com|Od: Ian Black

160603

A pause in the diary thanks to parenting duties while spouse was in Africa. But during that spell, collapsed on the sofa after the children's bedtime, I watched "The Night Manager" the BBC series based on John le Carre's novel (FB doesn't seem to do French accents). I recommend it. It's highly enjoyable if a little implausible. If you haven't watched it and might, stop reading here as I don't want to spoil the ending for you.

Meanwhile, as my earlier posts indicate...

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160523

The Sunday Times in Britain has run a story with various vague leaks about the forthcoming Chilcot report on the Iraq war. It suggests a number of people, including Blair and Jack Straw, may have their "reputations damaged" by the criticisms in the report. The then head of MI6, Richard Dearlove, will be criticised, it is reported, for not resisting Number Ten's "glossing" of pre-war intelligence reports.

I find it difficult to know what to do with my rage. It takes ...

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The inside story of the creation of ISIS, and how the U.S. missed the many warning signs.
pbs.org