Osama Bin Laden — The Truth Be Told

Sy Hersh’s revelations about the systematic misrepresentation by the Obama administration of how it brought Osama bin-Laden to bay are causing a stir. Justifiably so. For they puncture the carefully constructed myth of how America revenged itself and renewed itself through this act of righteous justice. Moreover, the account of unsavory chicanery in high places once again spotlights the deceit that now is the hallmark of how our government works.

A year or so after the event, I wrote a piece in The Huffington Post about the CIA-sponsored film Zero Dark Thirty which has entrenched a cartoon version of this mythic story in the popular American mind. That commentary lays out some of the logical contradictions and false notes in the official story on which the film is based. I have incorporated a condensed, slightly modified version, in the belief that it could help serve as a primer for following the argument that the Hersh reporting has triggered.

Here are a few crucial points essential to assessment of Hersh’s interpretation. The paramount truth is that while his account may not be the final word on this multifaceted affair, it is considerably closer to the truth than the official story line that we have received from the Obama administration. For one thing, the internal contradictions of that account disqualify it as a valid interpretation of what occurred in what sequence. It also raises doubts as to the motivation of those who composed it.

Second, there is now an admission that indeed there was a “walk-in” informant from the Pakistani Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) unit. The CIA’s hurried qualification is to claim that the ISI officer did not provide any critical information and that the original explanation remains the correct one. This assertion is not credible. The unidentified gentleman did not risk his career and person by approaching the U.S. Embassy in Islamabad to sell a rumor that OBL as holed up somewhere in northern Punjab — a “clue” he well knew would not convince the American authorities to fork over big money.

Moreover, the “walk-in” was a story that has been circulating in intelligence circles for four years. Indeed, it was recounted to me shortly after the OBL killing by a former very high intelligence officer of impeccable credentials who was informed of it by a principal. Furthermore, a careful reading of the Hersh account makes it pretty clear that his unnamed CIA source was Bank — the former CIA station chief in Islamabad. It’s hard to imagine Bank’s interest in making up this story. The name leaked by the ISI is a retired Brigadier, Usman Khalid (now deceased) — according to a Pakistani journalist. However, I have been informed by another senior retired Pakistani officer who is familiar with Khalid that “he couldn’t have since he has been living in the UK for a couple of decades.” So, it looks like he is the designated fall-guy and diversion.

Hersh has an excellent record as an investigative reporter. He won a Pulitzer Prize for breaking the My Lai story in Vietnam. He also broke the Abu Ghraib story. There clearly is now an orchestrated attempt to discredit him. People like Peter Bergen are trotted out; this is the CNN so-called security specialist who wrote the popular book on the Seals’ OBL mission. He swallowed whole what was fed him by the CIA and the White House and now his reputation turns on defending his witting or unwitting role as the purveyor of pulp fiction. This sounds harsh — but this is the harsh truth about a nasty business. Overall, Hersh’s record for veracity over decades is far superior to that of the Obama administration which has fed us a steady diet of untruths and distortions in regard to every aspect of the GWOT..

Obama’s precipitate decision to announce the killing immediately, and to reveal that it took place in Abbottabad, violated the agreement with the Pakistani Army leaders Generals Kayani and Pasha that his death would be reported as happening on the Afghan-Pakistan border. Obama’s vague press conference nod to the Pakistani assistance cut no ice In Islamabad. The personal and political cost to Kayana and Pasha stemmed from their allowing the Americans to conduct a military operation, without permission, on national soil. Obama, in his typical fashion, was just massaging his own conscience. That placed Kayani/Pasha in the near impossible position of pleading either complicity or incompetence. They chose incompetence as being less damaging to themselves and to the Army. They convened an extraordinary meeting of 300 active duty senior officers to explain the dilemma and to lay out a strategy of damage control.

The weakening of the Army politically is what encouraged an abortive move to cut them down to size which involved the CIA, the Pakistani Ambassador in Washington and President Zardari. It aimed to sideline Kayani and Pasha, thereby opening the country to unconstrained American operations — military and CIA. This was despite the unprecedentedly cooperative attitude they had taken to clandestine operations In Northwest Pakistan behind the façade of public complaint. The plan was to concoct a fictional Army putsch and use that as an excuse to oust the then current Army leadership. Then followed the embarrassing affair of the CIA’s misbegotten Raymond Davis mission, and a general deterioration in relations. So the cumulative negative consequences of Obama’s betrayal for the American position in the area were of the first order.

Zero Dark Thirty aimed to write our collective history for us — engraving it on the American psyche. The graphic images of who we are and the deeds we have done are intended to inspire confidence and to soothe qualms — now and in the future. We are a Resourceful people. We are a Righteous people. We are a Resolute people who do not shrink from the necessary however hard it may be. We are a Moral people who bravely enter the shadowy precincts where Idealism collides with Realism — and come out enhanced.

In truth we are an Immature people — an immature people who demand the nourishment of myth and legend that exalt us. Actual reality intimidates and unsettles us; virtual reality is the comforting substitute. Zero Dark Thirty is fiction. It is the cartoon version of the official fiction. Yet critics and many commentators have taken as given the story line, the highlight events, and the main character portraits as if the film were a documentary. That helps to explain their sharp putdown of the Hersh report that leaves them looking foolish.

The one big debate that was allowed is on the question of whether torture works. The film’s paramount message is that it does, that it did lead inexorably to the killing of Osama bin-Laden, and that anyone who gives precedence to ethical considerations had better be prepared to accept the potentially awful consequences. The heroines and heroes make the right judgment after struggling with their consciences.

That is a dubious conclusion. Moreover, the question itself is wrongly framed. For the intelligence supposedly extracted was of no value in finding bin-Laden ten years later. Even members of the Senate Intelligence Committee have testified to that. Simple logic should lead any thoughtful person to the same conclusion. After all, if so valuable, how is it possible that it took a full decade for the information to lead anywhere — the indefatigable fictional lady notwithstanding (the lady who does not exist in the real world)?

For both the official and film versions, it all comes down to the fabled courier. Without him, the narrative collapses completely. We didn’t have a clue where OBL was between Tora Bora and Abbottabad five years later. His odyssey from one safe house to another in the Tribal Areas, and Northwest Frontier Province (Swat and Bajaur) escaped the CIA with all its ultra-sophisticated high-tech gadgetry. We had next to no human intelligence assets anywhere in the region and did not until the very end. We learned of OBL’s whereabouts only when tipped off by the anonymous Pakistani officer in 2010. It was just a week or so after OBL’s killing that the White House and the CIA approached Hollywood with promises of cooperation if a film were made that properly hallowed those who brought OBL to “justice” and satisfied the national thirst for vengeance. Both sides kept their side of the bargain.

What of the courier al-Kuwaiti? The official cum Hollywood line is full of inconsistencies, anomalies and logical flaws. A systematic scrutiny of the evidence available makes that abundantly clear to the unbiased mind. That task has been undertaken by the retired Pakistani Brigadier Shaukat Qadir. His account, and interpretive analysis, draws as well on extensive interviews with intelligence and military officials in Islamabad – and with principals in both Northwest Pakistan and across the Durand Line in Afghanistan.

Here is a brief summary of a few key points regarding the official story’s self-contradictory elements.

· According to the CIA, Hassan Gul, was a courier for senior Al-Qaida operatives including OBL and Khalid Sheikh Muhammed (KSM). Gul revealed to the CIA under interrogation the name Al-Kuwaiti, the fact that Al-Kuwaiti was still alive, that he was OBL’s most trusted courier. CIA further stated that it was Gul’s statement that provided detailed insight into his working routines which led (four years later) in 2009 to the feeling that al-Kuwaiti lived in Abbottabad! Assuming all this to be true, it seems a little surprising that it should take them almost four years to move.

· What is even more improbable is that, despite providing such a wealth of information for the CIA, Gul was released as early as 2006 by the CIA into ISI custody. If Gul had provided all the information on Kuwaiti to the CIA and the CIA did not wish to share this information with the ISI, as asserted, how can their releasing him to ISI custody make any kind of sense?

· Is it credible that it took the CIA so long after 2005 to discover Al-Kuwaiti’s identity since Al-Libi, his close collaborator, was also captured by the ISI and handed over to CIA in 2005! Yet, Al-Libi was not questioned regarding Al-Kuwaiti’s real identity — despite Gul’s revelations, despite “enhanced interrogation” techniques? In short, why did it take the CIA from 2004 till 2011 to find “actionable intelligence” to locate and execute OBL?

· Khalid Sheikh Muhammed, captured by the ISI in March 2003, was handed over to CIA soon thereafter. KSM not only knew Al-Kuwaiti by his real name, Ibrahim, according to OBL’s wife, Amal, he had also visited al-Kuwaiti’s house outside Kohat when OBL was resident there in 2002. Yet, he too never was questioned as to Kuwaiti’s identity.

There are two fundamental flaws in the official CIA (and Hollywood) account:

a) the CIA seems to have been unaware of the intimate relations between Al-Libi and Al-Kuwaiti despite all those Al-Qaida leaders in their custody (most of whom were arrested by ISI) who knew exactly who and where Al-Kuwaiti was — and, therefore, the CIA actually was unaware of the latter’s identity until early 2011;

b) yet they still insist that the ISI did not provide the lead that ultimately led them to OBL’s hideout, which looks to be equally untrue.

Let us recall President Obama’s words when he announced that OBL had been killed. Even as he stated that the U.S. acted unilaterally on actionable intelligence, he added, “It is important here to note that our counter terrorism cooperation with Pakistan helped lead us to bin Laden and the compound he was hiding in.”

Against that backdrop, it was logical for the U.S. and Pakistan to collaborate. The agreed plan, as Hersh relates, was to kill OBL at his home in Abbottabad and later “discover it” in the Hindu Kush as the casualty of an air strike launched against another al-Qaeda target. They agreed to a joint operation in Abbottabad. But the White House double-crossed the Pakistanis by broadcasting the Abbottabad raid immediately after it occurred. Why? Apparently, Obama and his advisers feared the story would seep out before they had the chance to milk the drama for all its political value. They also wanted the glory and flourish of a drama with Americans in all the starring roles – they wanted a Hollywood blockbuster.

John Brennan, the White House terrorism chief, gave the game away the next day in offering the world a vivid description of the assault featuring a concocted shootout between the Seals and a pistol wielding Osama bin-Laden who held his young wife as a shield while firing off shots. Made for Hollywood indeed.

After a decade of impulsive vengeance, of brutality, of killing, of deceit, of hypocrisy, of blindness and incompetence — we have an encapsulated myth that expiates all that in a drama worthy of our greatness. We have Closure. The American pageant moves forward.

What in fact we have is a roughly-spun yarn woven post-hoc to give a semblance of discipline and direction to a fitful, adrenaline driven manhunt that belatedly stumbled upon its objective — only thanks to the critical help of others. Unable to generate any human intelligence, we relied on technology and torture. It didn’t work

The claim that the official U.S. version provides an honest, forthright accounting is no longer sustainable. The version offered by Zero Dark Thirty went a step further in substituting pulp fiction — of the mythological kind — for truth. It satisfies a gnawing hunger; it meets a powerfully felt need. It allows us to avoid coming to terms with how America went off the rails after 9/11. It fosters the juvenile in us.

The instinctive denial mechanism at work in the response to Hersh’s revelations tells us that we indeed are politically immature.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

School's Out: A Guide for Summer 2015

For many students across the nation, Alice Cooper’s “School’s Out” becomes their anthem around May or June.

No more pencils
No more books
No more teacher’s dirty looks
Out for summer
Out till fall- Alice Cooper

The joy of school ending leads one to wonder what they will do for those moments when they are away from school. The freedom you experience at school is nothing compared to going back to your parents’ house and being “under their rules.” So what should I do for the summer? This is the question you are probably asking yourself now and this post will give you general ideas of what a college student can do for the summer:

1. Find an Internship or Fellowship

In today’s world, earning a bachelor’s degree is just not enough anymore. With an increase of degrees being awarded and the decrease of available jobs we saw circa 2009, it is imperative to gain some sort of experience in your field of study. Internships and fellowships are the gateway to acquiring a job once you graduate. Not only do you gain experience, you learn the necessary skills to operate within your field that you did not learn in school. Keep in mind that not all internships and fellowships pay, but the experience you gain will pay out. Check your school’s career service center, and if they do not have any opportunities, send me an email, and I am more than willing to share some opportunities I know of.

2. Volunteer

Educator and activist Marian Wright Edelman once said, “Service is the rent we pay for being. It is the very purpose of life, and not something you do in your spare time.” Whether you volunteer in your school’s local community or your hometown, find something to do to give back. Attending a university provides you with a privilege that many others may not have, and a great way to share your talents is to serve the community. Find a place that interests you most, and go for it. Check out Volunteermatch.com for opportunities where you live, and help strengthen your community.

3. Work

You may not be ready to participate in an internship or fellowship for a number of reasons (grades, deadlines past, inability to relocate, etc.) and this is ok. Finding a cool summer job not only gives you something to do during your days, but gives you the extra cash you need to do what you want. Find somewhere that not only interests you, but keeps you busy. If you love fashion, head to your local mall and find out what stores are hiring and apply. If you are interested in food services, find your favorite restaurant and work there. There are benefits to working at your favorite store or establishment, and all it takes is 20-30 minutes to apply.

4. Travel

The summer offers you an opportunity to leave your comfort zone and explore the rest of the world. Whether you take an adventure in your own city or scuba dive in the Great Barrier Reef, the opportunities are endless when it comes to traveling. I suggest being strategic in planning your trip, and executing your plan.

When it comes to Summer 2015, anything is possible. If you can dream it, you can make it happen. Congrats on finishing another year in school, and make the most of your time away from books.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Why Kindness Is Contagious, According To Science

Seeing someone perform an act of kindness can warm your heart. That feeling has a name — it’s called moral elevation, and it’s that warm-and-fuzzy-on-the-inside sensation you get when you’re in the presence of true human goodness.

The feeling helps to explain why kindness is, quite literally, contagious. Studies have found that this natural high makes people want to behave more altruistically towards others.

New research published in the journal Biological Psychiatry aimed to find out what moral elevation actually looks like in the brain and body. Researchers measured the brain activity and heart rates of 104 college students while they watched videos depicting either heroic acts of kindness or humorous situations.

When the students were viewing the heroic acts, activity in both the sympathetic and the parasympathetic nervous system peaked — an unusual combination that suggests both a fight-or-flight response and a calming, self-soothing response. When they were watching the amusing videos, there was no activation in either system.

“This is a really uncommon pattern, where you see both of these systems recruited for one emotion,” Dr. Sarina Saturn, a psychologist at Oregon State University and one of the authors of the study, told the Greater Good Science Center.

This may be because viewing a compassionate act requires us to witness suffering, which enacts a stress response and activates the sympathetic nervous system. Then, once we see the suffering alleviated through an act of kindness, our heart feels calmed and the parasympathetic nervous system is activated.

The researchers also found that activity in the medial prefrontal cortex of the brain, an area that deals with empathy and the ability to predict others’ thoughts and behavior, lit up in scenarios involving someone being helped after they were physically injured — but not in the act of kindness that was performed on someone who was not injured. That suggests that this brain region likely has some role in moral elevation, but further research is needed to determine exactly what the role is, and whether it’s only activated when we see someone in pain.

Want a little moral elevation of your own? Try watching this emotional scene from It’s A Wonderful Life, psychologist Jill Suttie advises:

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Sweet Briar Commencement Speaker Slams Decision To Close School

SWEET BRIAR, Va. (AP) — A visitor to Sweet Briar College would be hard-pressed to find signs of the financial stress that is shuttering the tiny women’s school.

Twenty-one buildings on the 3,250-acre campus are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Days before Saturday’s planned commencement, seniors astride horses rode through a quad worthy of a putting green.

This campus on the eastern slope of Virginia’s Blue Ridge Mountains is called the “pink bubble” for a reason. Its idyllic setting seems plucked from another era.

But hidden beneath the trappings of apparent prosperity are familiar signs of trouble: declining enrollment, rising tuition, debt and an endowment that is largely restricted.

Add to all those factors, Sweet Briar’s remote location — a 2-hour drive into the mountains west of Richmond.

In announcing the planned closure of the 114-year-old school in early March, Sweet Briar leaders described the reason as “insurmountable financial challenges.”

They are the same kind of challenges that have driven dozens of all-women’s colleges out of existence. In 1960, there were about 230 women’s colleges and that number had slipped to below 50 last year, according to Women’s College Coalition.

Commencement keynote speaker Teresa Tomlinson, a 1987 Sweet Briar graduate, was critical of the school’s closing.

Speaking to the graduating class Saturday, the two-term mayor of Columbus, Georgia, said to loud applause, “What is so poetic, so tragically beautiful, is that Sweet Briar, in what some say is her last aching breaths, is providing you a leadership lesson of a lifetime.

“The truth is, had you been at the table, had you been called to action, we would not be here today at the proposed end of an era which is in desperate need of continuance.”

Sweet Briar isn’t alone these days, either. Mills College in Oakland, Calif., is facing many of the same challenges, though its president, Alecia DeCoudreaux, insisted in an interview with Inside Higher Ed, “We are not Sweet Briar.”

Closer to home, two small Virginia colleges have closed since 2013: St. Paul’s College in Lawrenceville and Virginia Intermont College.

With U.S. college enrollment declining for two straight years, education experts say Sweet Briar represents the canary in the coal mine for similar institutions.

“The small, private, tuition-dependent nonprofit institutions face an uphill battle in many places,” said Andrew P. Kelly, director of the Center on Higher Education Reform at the American Enterprise Institute.

“The ones that can adapt and focus on their comparative advantage will be successful and those that can’t will have a really hard time continuing to attract enough students to pay the bills,” he said.

For Sweet Briar, the obvious move would have been to go coed, as its neighbor to the south in Lynchburg, Randolph College, did in 2007. The private liberal arts college formerly was known as Randolph-Macon Women’s College.

As early is 1988, Sweet Briar’s faculty voted “no confidence” in the administration because of how the college was dealing with declining enrollment, The News & Advance of Lynchburg reported.

Now, as Sweet Briar’s problems have mounted, there are too many hurdles to overcome.

“All of those things put us in a position that, from my perspective, makes this an unsustainable business model for us,” said Amy Jessen-Marshall, vice president of academic affairs and dean of faculty at Sweet Briar. “It certainly is heart-breaking.”

Of any missed opportunities, she said, “Hindsight is always 20-20.”

Going coed, Jessen-Marshall said, would be a “significant undertaking,” requiring a court-approved change in the will that created Sweet Briar.

In 1901, Indiana Fletcher Williams left her entire estate, a former plantation, to establish Sweet Briar in memory of a daughter who died at age 16.

Almost immediately after Sweet Briar’s announced closure, shock turned to anger, then a fierce resolve to keep the school open. On the eve of the commencement, anger was still simmering as President James F. Jones Jr. announced he would not participate Saturday because of the fears of unspecified disruptions.

The announcement also has united Sweet Briar graduates from around the world in hopes of reversing the decision and the local county attorney has attempted to blunt the closure through the courts. It is among several court challenges that arose from the planned closure, including one filed by a majority of the faculty.

What shocked many is the sense that Sweet Briar was in seemingly good financial health. Many cited its endowment of more than $80 million.

But then administrators revealed less than 20 percent of that is available, with the rest restricted to other purposes. The school also has $28 million in deferred maintenance and is in debt by nearly that sum.

Seniors Anna Callicoe of Hot Springs, Arkansas, and Nicky Palmer of East Canaan, Connecticut, are among those on campus who believe Jones hasn’t been forthright about the college’s finances.

Campus meetings to explain the decision didn’t help, they said.

“Half the questions, if not more, were answered with ‘I don’t know, I don’t know,'” Callicoe said. “The endowment was a huge, confusing situation.”

Jones told students $250 million would be needed to keep Sweet Briar afloat. The school did not make Jones available for an interview.

“We want to know the real reasons,” Palmer said. “There has been no transparency whatsoever.”

Taneal Williams, a rising senior from New Orleans, had her choice of other schools but went with Sweet Briar. She said she had no regrets.

“The amazing thing is how much we grow here and how much we thrive because of a really great women’s education,” said Williams, who wore a green ribbon in her hair. Green and pink are the school’s colors.

Sweet Briar has arranged for about 15 other small schools, many of them women’s colleges, to give Sweet Briar students priority acceptance. But there’s no guarantee that all of their credits will transfer.

Sweet Briar’s closing has not only affected the 530 students on campus, but the 300 people who are employed by the college. It’s one of the county’s largest employers.

One of those workers is Steven Woody, who was painting the graduation stand ahead of commencement ceremonies. He’s thinking of going to technical school.

Woody, too, hopes Sweet Briar can somehow buck the odds.

“I think that people out there trying to save the school has helped attitudes around here a little bit,” he said. “There’s still some hope that the college may have a shot at staying open.

“It would be a shame if something this old would close down,” he added. “There’s a lot of history here.”

Sweet Briar’s board has not dealt with the future of the campus, its buildings or other holdings.

Steve Szkotak can be reached on Twitter at http://twitter.com/sszkotakap .

Associated Press writer John Raby in Charleston, West Virginia, contributed to this report.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Flash Flood In Colombia Sweeps Away Homes, Kills At Least 45

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) — Disaster relief authorities are rushing to a Colombian town where more than a dozen people have been reported killed when a flash flood swept away ramshackle homes in the dead of night.

The massive flooding triggered by heavy rains early Monday in the town of Salgar. Media reports say 500 people lived in the path of the ravine that broke its bank and as many as 45 people had been killed. Authorities on the scene have not yet issued a report of casualties.

President Juan Manuel Santos ordered authorities to provide immediate assistance to those affected.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

The Overdue, Under-Told Story Of The Clitoris

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Bobby Jindal Forming Presidential Exploratory Committee

Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal (R) announced Monday that he is forming a presidential exploratory committee, and that he would announce his decision about jumping into the 2016 race in the coming weeks.

“For some time now, my wife Supriya and I have been thinking and praying about whether to run for the presidency of our great nation. We’ll make a final decision in June,” Jindal said in a statement.

“While other Republican leaders are talking about change, I’ve published detailed plans to repeal and replace Obamacare, rebuild America’s defenses, make America energy independent, and reform education for our nation’s children,” Jindal added, in a reference to the crowded GOP field will face if he throws his hat into the ring.

Jindal has long been considering a presidential run. A formal exploratory committee will allow him to raise funds to travel and hire staff in support of a White House bid. Should he ultimately declare his presidency, Jindal will likely make an appeal to social conservatives, tout his school choice program, and highlight efforts to lower taxes in Louisiana.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Cool video of Tokyo made mind bending blurry effects by stacking frames

This is super cool, for both the slick visual effects we see and the clever behind the scenes work that allowed it to happen. Photographer Aaron Grimes made this video of Tokyo, IN MOTION, and blurred certain movements of the city and its people by stacking frames of multiple shots he took and then taking those stacked frames to create a video.

Read more…




On Game Of Thrones, The Stark Girls Learn The Cost Of Becoming Monsters

Both Sansa and Arya Stark have been apprenticed to monsters lately on Game of Thrones. But in last night’s horrifying episode, they both learn that imitating their mentors may come at a higher cost than they realized. Spoilers ahead…

Read more…




How Anabolic Steroids Make You Stronger — And How They Destroy You

The quick and dirty route to gaining strength is to take some kind of anabolic steroid. These drugs actually trick the body into building up muscle mass and endurance — but they can also age you far beyond your years.

Read more…