Sábado, Agosto 30, 2003

----------------------------------------

¡ ASTÉRIX ESTÁ DE VUELTA !

Lo que esparamos por muchos años ha sucedido.

Tenemos un nuevo libro de Astérix. El primero desde la muerte de René Goscinny en 1977, que incluye historietas firmadas por el genial escenarista. Y digo historietas, en plural, porque no es una sino ¡14!

Eso mismo, 14 historietas inéditas, 11 de las cuáles concebidas por René y su compadre, el diseñador Albert Uderzo, quien se encargó de seguir la saga, después de la desaparición de Goscinny.

Este libro
, La Rentrée Gauloise, habia sido editado originalmente en 1993 – de hecho yo tengo una copia que compré en Paris el año pasado en una tienda de libros de uso – pero jamás fue vendido sino ofrecido a medio millón de fanáticos de Astérix en Francia y Bélgica.

Esa edición inicial tenía unicamente 10 historietas y en algunos casos – como el mío – se transformó en un caso raro de bibliotecología, porque tiene un raro error de impresión: le falta la última plancha de la novena historieta y todas las planchas de la última.

Ahora, en esta reedición, Uderzó diseñó una nueva portada y agregó cuatro nuevas historietas.

No voy a hacer un resumen de ellas porque quiero que sientan el mismo placer que yo cuando lo leí. Pero no resisto la tentación de recomendar una: OBELISC’H. Cuenta las aventuras del tataranieto de Obélix, un capitán de barco en un puerto de Bretaña, que es descubierto por Goscinny y Uderzo y llevado por ellos a conocer Paris.

A continuación, tres articulos de Le Monde sobre el lanzamiento mundial hoy de
La Rentrée Gauloise.

Salut,

RUI

Ps. – Al final pueden cliquear en del titulo del libro, que comunica con la Fnac francesa, donde pueden comprarlo. El servicio es confiable, pero el costo de correo es caro, por lo cual recomiendo que sigan buscando dos o tres libros más para compensar. Vale la pena, el ahorro es sustancial.



Genèse d'un mythe

LE MONDE | 30.08.03

Albert Uderzo, le dessinateur, et René Goscinny, le scénariste, se sont rencontrés à 24 ans, à Bruxelles. Ils ont trimé ensemble huit ans avant de concevoir, en août 1959, Astérix, le plus fameux des Gaulois.

C'est une planche de rien du tout, pas même une planche d'ailleurs, seulement quelques esquisses représentant au crayon une sorte de nabot, tantôt irascible sous son casque aux ailes amovibles, tantôt surpris ou songeur comme s'il venait de voir un morceau de ciel bleu lui tomber sur la tête sous l'effet du pastis. Il faut dire que nous sommes en août 1959 et que la canicule, déjà, tape dur sur une HLM de Pantin, face au cimetière, où deux énergumènes, un verre à la main, essaient de réinventer l'histoire de France, l'un à la pointe de sa (bonne) mine, l'autre à coups de gags ravageurs.

S'ils pensent à se rafraîchir, le dessinateur Albert Uderzo et le scénariste René Goscinny sont d'abord obsédés à l'idée de trouver une idée pour le lancement prochain du journal Pilote, leur journal, en octobre. Ils ont bien pensé à exercer leur talent sur une parodie en BD du Roman de Renart, mais d'autres les ont précédés. Donc, scrogneugneu, attablés devant leur pastis, et avec un cimetière pour horizon joyeux, ils cherchent.

Cela fait déjà huit ans que ces deux-là se sont trouvés dans les locaux d'un journal belge. Ils avaient 24 ans. Goscinny avait vécu en Argentine et aux Etats-Unis. Il rêvait d'entrer chez Disney. A New York, il a débuté comme apprenti dessinateur dans une agence de publicité. Son premier travail fut de concevoir une étiquette pour de l'huile d'olive. "J'ai dessiné de très belles olives dans une allégorie de jaunes et de verts, quelque chose de très bucolique. Le client, lui, voulait une femme nue. Allez savoir pourquoi une femme nue pour l'huile ! Il payait. Je lui ai dessiné une femme nue. Mais comme je n'étais pas doué pour ce genre-là, on a dû retoucher mon dessin."

Après sept ans d'Amérique, Goscinny arrive en Belgique avec l'espoir de placer sa série Dick Dicks Détective, une histoire dont il assure textes et dessins. C'est le tout début des années 1950. Après une année blanche, il rencontre enfin Uderzo. "Ça a été une sorte de coup de foudre mutuel, avouera Goscinny. On a parlé des heures. Nous avons décidé de travailler ensemble."

A cette époque, l'un pourrait être l'autre et réciproquement. Tous les deux dessinent et écrivent leurs scénarios. (Une de leurs facéties favorites sera, chaque fois qu'on leur demande "qui est qui ?", de répondre : "moi, c'est l'autre".) Mais Goscinny se sent plus à l'aise pour traduire son humour dévastateur en mots. Il déteste camper des décors grandioses peuplés de milliers de figurants. Uderzo, lui, c'est le contraire. Réservé comme un menhir d'Armorique, c'est en laissant parler sa main dotée d'un crayon et d'un pinceau fin qu'il peut laisser libre cours à sa fantaisie. Les deux hommes se découvrent des passions communes pour l'univers de Disney comme pour Laurel et Hardy. Influencé par la vague américaine, Albert Uderzo signe des dessins Al Uderzo.

L'attelage du rire est donc constitué. Textes pour Goscinny. Vignettes pour Uderzo. Il reste à trouver un personnage et une histoire pour que l'aventure s'emballe. C'est ainsi que huit ans plus tard, à Pantin, devant un pastis...

Entre-temps, la collaboration Uderzo-Goscinny a été fertile. Ils ont créé ensemble Les Aventures d'Oumpah-Pah le Peau-Rouge où ils jouent déjà en virtuoses des anachronismes qui annoncent Astérix.

Pour Libre Junior, un supplément de la Libre Belgique, ils ont lancé le personnage de Pistolet puis Luc Junior, un jeune héros flanqué d'un chien qui n'est pas sans rappeler Tintin. Il leur faut trouver leur style propre. C'est l'humour qui les révélera à eux-mêmes et au grand public. Pour le magazine féminin Bonnes Soirées, ils se verront confier la rubrique... de la politesse. Il n'en faut pas plus aux deux complices pour rigoler sans limites, avec pour vade-mecum un petit manuel de politesse belge rempli de perles et d'obsolescences.

Il arrive au tandem de se scinder, Morris choisissant Goscinny pour Lucky Luke ou Jean-Michel Charlier faisant équipe avec Uderzo pour les aventures de Michel Tanguy. Les temps sont durs pour ces marginaux qui ont choisi de vivre pour la BD, dont l'image de marque est détestable. "Ce métier de scénariste de bandes dessinées, je peux dire que je l'ai inventé, affirmera Goscinny. On lisait couramment dans les journaux que si un malfrat avait assassiné une rentière, c'était parce qu'il lisait des bandes dessinées."

Dans son album consacré à Uderzo, Alain Duchêne rappelle que la condition du scénariste est pire encore que celle du dessinateur. Au début, le nom de Goscinny ne figure pas sur la couverture des histoires de Lucky Luke, le personnage ayant été inventé par Morris.

"A mes débuts, racontait Goscinny, il n'était pas question de gagner sa vie en exerçant ce métier. On me regardait bizarrement et on me demandait : quel est votre vrai métier ? C'est impossible que vous vous occupiez de mettre des lettres dans des ballons !"

Devant ces tracas, Uderzo, Goscinny et Charlier ont créé un syndicat visant à faire reconnaître le métier d'auteur de BD. Les éditeurs belges de la World Press voient rouge et renvoient Goscinny. Ses acolytes démissionnent dans un mouvement de solidarité, et les voilà tous les trois rue de la Bourse, à la tête de deux petites sociétés, une agence de presse et une agence de publicité, qu'ils ont fondées. Ils relancent l'illustré Pistolinpour le compte des chocolats Pupier, "un petit galop d'essai pour créer un journal", dira Goscinny en pensant à Pilote.

Les deux amis ont conçu l'aventurier Bill Blanchart, leur seule série réaliste. Puis ils inventent la série Poussin et Poussif, qui met en scène un bébé risque-tout et son chien souffre-douleur, et La Famille Moutonnet. En 1958, ils reprennent Oumpah-Pah le Peau-Rouge, qu'ils situent non plus à l'époque contemporaine, mais au temps de la colonisation américaine. "Je me suis documenté principalement sur les Shawnees, qui avaient des mœurs amusantes", expliquait René Goscinny. Amusant aussi le nom dont il les rebaptise : les "Shavashavah et Shavah bien pour eux, merci !...".

Cette fois, les duettistes agissent en toute liberté, multiplient les gags et les calembours, s'en donnent à cœur joie. Sans le savoir, ils sont prêts pour le grand saut vers le succès qui leur a tant de fois ri au nez.

C'est donc un Gaulois qui naît dans le marc du pastis, si l'on peut dire, en ce mois d'août caniculaire de l'année 1959. Et, le 29 octobre, le premier numéro de Pilote arrive dans les kiosques, soutenu par Radio-Luxembourg. 200 000 exemplaires s'arrachent dans la journée. Page 20 de l'hebdomadaire, en "fausse page", c'est-à-dire à gauche, par opposition à une "belle page" située à droite, apparaît pour la première fois une planche ainsi libellée dans son bandeau : "Astérix incarne malicieusement toutes les vertus de "nos ancêtres les Gaulois". L'humour de René Goscinny et d'Al Uderzo vous fera aimer ce petit guerrier moustachu, personnage nouveau dans le monde des bandes dessinées."

"Aimer est un euphémisme", note Alain Duchêne. C'est parti pour quarante ans de "gaulitude" plus que de gauloiseries, dont Uderzo a ainsi résumé l'esprit : "L'époque est plutôt tristounette. La France, qui sort à peine du bourbier indochinois, est empêtrée dans la guerre d'Algérie. Les Français n'avaient pas envie de se prendre la tête." Les deux forcenés de la BD travaillent sans répit, jour et nuit. Uderzo dessine jusqu'à cinq planches complètes par semaine, à raison de deux planches d'Oumpah-Pah pour le Journal de Tintin, deux planches de Tanguy et Laverdure et une planche d'Astérix. Un référendum organisé auprès des lecteurs du Journal de Tintin classe les aventures du jeune Peau-Rouge en onzième position. Les auteurs prennent prétexte de ce résultat décevant pour renoncer à la série, au grand dam de la direction du journal, qui tente en vain de les retenir.

Leur avenir s'appelle Astérix. Quand le succès viendra, et il ne va pas tarder, Uderzo abandonnera aussi les aventures de Tan-guy et Laverdure, et c'est le dessinateur Jigé qui prendra sa suite auprès de Jean-Michel Charlier. Entre-temps, l'éditeur Georges Dargaud a racheté le journal Pilote. Et en 1961, sous la pression de ses auteurs, il publie un premier album d'Astérix le Gaulois, dont le tirage initial est de 6 000 exemplaires seulement.

Quatre ans plus tard, Le Tour de Gaule sera tiré à 60 000 exemplaires, et Astérix et Cléopâtre à 100 000 exemplaires. Le succès ne se démentira plus. Le personnage est lancé. Quand un satellite tricolore est mis sur orbite pour l'espace, c'est tout natu- rellement qu'il reçoit le nom d'Astérix. Le Gaulois râleur et ripailleur, colérique et bagarreur, tendre et obstiné, a conquis son public.

Un ministre raconte aux auteurs que le général de Gaulle a fait l'appel de chacun des membres du conseil des ministres avec des noms en "ix". Voyant la partie de carte de Marius et la partie de pétanque de Fanny représentées dans Le Tour de Gaule, Marcel Pagnol dira, comblé : "Maintenant, je sais que mon œuvre est éternelle." Le dessin dynamique d'Uderzo se prête à merveille au sens narratif de Goscinny, qui multiplie les trouvailles de langage et de gags. Le "Ils sont fous ces Romains !" se taille un succès considérable, comme le "n'est-il pas ?" des grands Bretons, ou encore le "tu l'as dit bouffi" romain. Au fil des albums, des personnages connus comme Lino Ventura, Annie Cordy, Jean Richard, Guy Lux ou encore Jacques Chirac (le "néarque" Caius Saugrenus, diplômé de la Nouvelle Ecole d'Affranchis, dans Obélix et compagnie) se voient aimablement - parfois piteusement - caricaturés. (Ainsi Pierre Tchernia en Romain ivre et décadent se saoulant avec une amphore, dans le même Obélix et compagnie.)

Pendant que Goscinny, outre les histoires de Lucky Luke, signe avec Sempé les récits du Petit Nicolas et invente Iznogoud, le méchant vizirdessiné par Tabary, Uderzo s'amuse avec Idéfix, qui fait sa première apparition dans Le Tour de Gaule. "René m'avait dit : surtout pas de chien. Il refusait que le personnage ait un faire-valoir, comme Spirou avec son écureuil ou Tintin avec Milou. Un jour, curieusement, dans le scénario du Tour de Gaule, il a écrit qu'à la sortie d'une charcuterie de Lutèce où les deux héros achètent du jambon un petit chien les attend à la porte. Puis ce petit chien n'apparaît plus dans la suite de l'histoire. J'ai dit à René : ce serait drôle de continuer le gag ; l'animal est si petit que personne ne le verrait. Et, à la fin, Obélix le caresserait en faisant un clin d'œil. René a accepté. Les lecteurs de Pilote ont écrit pour revoir le petit chien. Nous avons lancé un concours pour lui trouver un nom. Cinq lecteurs ont trouvé Idéfix." Le chien d'Obélix est si petit qu'il arrive parfois à Uderzo de l'oublier en route dans une histoire. Et le voilà qui repasse sur ses planches pour le retrouver afin d'étoffer son rôle. Jusqu'aux pyramides, où son flair sortira les courageux Gaulois d'un piège terrible !

En dix-huit ans de collaboration, les deux complices réalisent vingt-quatre albums au succès toujours plus grand, sans oublier les feuilletons radiophoniques et les dessins animés (les films avec de "vrais" acteurs viendront plus tard). Leurs héros seront gladiateurs, légionnaires ou athlètes olympiques, ils visiteront les Egyptiens et les Corses, les Helvètes (une suggestion du président Pompidou) et les Hispaniques, les Bretons et les Normands, les Goths, les Belges et quelques Indiens supposés d'Amérique. Ils se disputeront dans La Zizanie, s'occuperont d'immobilier dans Le Domaine des Dieux, feront toujours en mer des traversées riches en pauvres pirates latinistes ("O tempora, o mores"), recevront de la potion magique (sauf Obélix pour les raisons que l'on sait), massacreront dans la bonne humeur des légions entières de Romains, banquetteront avec appétit autour de sangliers replets non loin d'un barde désenchanté de ne pas chanter, ficelé comme un jeune marcassin.

Mais, le 5 novembre 1977, les héros portent le deuil de René Goscinny qui vient de succomber à une crise cardiaque. L'aventure n'est pas pour autant achevée. Crânement, malgré le chagrin et la conscience qu'il a de ne pas maîtriser le scénario aussi bien que son frère de plume, Uderzo se remettra à sa planche à dessin pour réaliser seul huit nouveaux épisodes d'Astérix le Gaulois, dont le dernier paru en 2001, Astérix et Latraviata, battra tous les records de vente, avec 7 millions d'exemplaires dans le monde, et 3 millions pour la seule langue française. On imagine un Goscinny sur son nuage, répétant en se frottant les mains : "Ça est un morceau de chance, n'est-il pas ?"

Eric Fottorino



Uderzo : "Nous sommes des rigolos"

A 76 ans, Albert Uderzo met en sourdine sa réputation de timide. Mieux, la publication dans Le Monde de l'été d'une série de planches originales lui a ouvert l'appétit. Retour sur un dessinateur d'exception, et place à son nouvel album, Astérix et la rentrée gauloise, publié le 29 août.

Le rendez-vous a été fixé à un jet de menhir de l'Arc de triomphe, signe que le copère d'Astérix et compère inconsolé de René Goscinny, ne dédaigne pas les attributs de la gloire romaine. Au siège des Editions Albert-René, on rencontre des Gaulois de carton-pâte, des statuettes de tailles diverses représentant les célèbres héros d'une bande dessinée qui s'est vendue depuis quarante ans à plus de 300 millions d'exemplaires à travers le monde, en toute sorte de langues et dialectes, du souabe au finnois. Retranché au fond de son bureau comme le petit village d'Armorique derrière les hautes palissades, l'irréductible Uderzo attend l'intervieweur avec l'œil étincelant d'un Astérix gorgé de potion magique. A 76 ans, il a su mettre en sourdine sa réputation de timide, et c'est avec une passion contagieuse qu'il évoque le destin, encore loin d'être achevé, de ses personnages à "gros pifs".

Albert Uderzo, il paraît que vous aviez douze doigts à la naissance, et que vous êtes daltonien.

J'ai en effet deux doigts manquants, deux attaches qui ressemblaient à des breloques. J'avais un mois quand on m'a opéré. (Et de montrer deux légers renflements sur le tranchant de ses mains.) Je tirais dessus et ma mère craignait que je me les arrache ! Ma mère, qui a toujours su le pourquoi des choses, racontait que, lorsqu'elle m'attendait, elle était allée un jour sur un marché. A un étal de bijoux fantaisies, elle avait pris deux pendentifs qu'elle avait laissé échapper. Elle croyait que cette maladresse avait eu pour conséquence la naissance de ces deux formations sur mes mains. Heureusement qu'elle n'a pas fait tomber un kilo de patates !

Et daltonien ?

Je suis français avant tout, mais daltonien... A 5 ans, je dessinais les brins d'herbe en rouge. J'ai du mal avec le vert et le marron. C'est pourquoi j'ai recours à des coloristes. Je me souviens d'erreurs grossières que j'ai commises sur la couverture de Pilote. J'ai par exemple dessiné Blueberry sur un cheval vert. René Goscinny, qui était rédacteur en chef du journal, me l'a fait remarquer. Je ne voulais pas le refaire... Je me suis trompé ainsi à deux reprises. La Jument verte de Marcel Aymé avait dû m'influencer. Autrefois, je dessinais au crayon et au pinceau. Mais je n'ai plus la maîtrise du pinceau, maintenant, et je donne ce travail à un studio. Je dois établir un crayonné très précis pour que le coloriste ne cherche pas le trait.

Trouver le trait juste. C'est venu facilement, pour Astérix ?

C'est la seule fois où nous ne nous sommes pas compris, avec René. L'image classique du Gaulois, c'était le grand Celte blond et carré. J'ai d'abord dessiné ainsi. René m'a dit : "Non, ce n'est pas comme ça que je le vois. Je veux un antihéros, plu-tôt petit, pas forcément intelligent, mais débrouillard, champion du système D, à l'image du Français." Comme je suis têtu, j'ai rajouté à côté un personnage grand et fort qui n'était pas prévu au programme. Il n'apparaît pas beaucoup dans le premier album, Astérix le Gaulois (paru en 1961). Comme je ne sais pas quoi lui faire faire, il porte un menhir. René a eu l'occasion de l'utiliser...

Je n'oserais affirmer que vos héros sont gros, mais disons, un peu enveloppés, n'est-il pas ?

Obélix a pris du poids, et je l'ai un peu imité, moi aussi... Il me plaisait par sa rondeur. Il ne devait pas être un athlète. Dans les premiers albums, il était trop costaud comparé au personnage principal, et ça ne me convenait pas. Au fur et à mesure, il a perdu en épaules pour gagner en hanches et en derrière. Quant au gros pif, c'est maladif, chez moi. Le moelleux du nez... Les enfants ne s'y trompent pas. Quand ils vont au parc Astérix, le malheureux personnage d'Obélix, ce qu'il peut prendre comme gnons ! Un vrai punching-ball !

C'était rigolo d'inventer au côté de Goscinny ? Vous avez dessiné une planche sur laquelle on vous voit tous les deux à la terrasse d'un bistrot, très moroses. Vous cherchez une idée. Et soudain, c'est l'étincelle, vous vous renvoyez la balle en éclatant de rire et le serveur affolé appelle la police.

On n'a jamais été emmenés dans un car de police... Nous avons travaillé huit ans ensemble, René et moi, avant de créer Astérix. Nous étions dans notre petite société rue de la Bourse, là où est né le journal Pilote. Quand on cherchait une histoire ou un gag, on se parlait avec un dialogue bizarre car on entrait dans le jeu des personnages. Forcément on faisait : "Et paf, et tac, et là il en prend une, et crac !" Une fois, un gars de notre équipe nous rejoint et commence, en nous écoutant : " C'est comme ma petite fille, l'autre jour elle a..." René l'a coupé aussitôt : "Oh ! dis ! tu vois pas qu'on travaille !"

Mais pourquoi un Gaulois ?

Nous sortions d'une période difficile car nous devions créer des personnages à la demande des directeurs de journaux pour qui nous travaillions. Il fallait un archétype facilement identifiable par les enfants. On a fait des sous-Tintin pour gagner notre vie. Avec Pilote, le responsable nous donnait comme seule contrainte de tirer nos personnages de la culture française. Aujourd'hui, cela pourrait sembler xénophobe. Mais à l'époque, nous étions envahis par la BD américaine. Le paradoxe est que notre héros, créé pour des petits Français, a largement échappé aux frontières de la Gaule.

Quelle idée d'inventer tous ces noms à coucher dehors...

Goscinny adorait ça. Il avait de petits calepins que je garde précieusement, sur lesquels il notait les noms de personnages nouveaux pour ne pas les réutiliser. Je continue de les remplir. (Un silence.) J'ai peur de reprendre des noms, ou des gags, que je pourrais croire nouveaux mais qui ont trente ou quarante ans. Il faudrait que je relise mes albums... Goscinny voulait aussi trouver le nom le plus long, comme Soupalognon y Crouton. Il avait déjà inventé des noms à charnière dans les aventures d'Oumpah-Pah : "N'a-qu'une-dent-mais-elle-est-tombée-maintenant-n'en-a-plus". J'ai dû aussi prévoir deux bulles pour faire entrer le nom le plus long de la bande dessinée. (Ce nom, que Goscinny s'enorgueillissait de prononcer d'un trait, est : "Katzenblummerswishundwagenplaftembomm".)

Accepteriez-vous, pour les lecteurs du Monde, de livrer enfin la recette de la potion magique servie par le druide, Panoramix ?

Un druide, c'est Merlin l'Enchanteur. Il fallait faire en sorte que ce petit village gaulois puisse résister à l'envahisseur. Nous voulions prendre le contre-pied de l'histoire car nous sommes des rigolos. La potion magique a donné de la crédibilité au récit. Le lecteur attend cette scène. La difficulté, après 31 albums, c'est de concocter une cuisine nouvelle avec ces passages attendus.

Vous n'avez pas répondu à la question sur la potion magique.

Je peux vous dire qu'il y a du gui, et aussi du homard, mais seulement pour donner du goût. J'ajoute qu'il faut prévoir une goutte de pétrole. Peut-être des feuilles de thé depuis Astérix chez les Bretons. Malheureusement, je suis dans l'impossibilité de vous donner la recette complète.

Ordralphabétix est un poissonnier très snob. Vous avez une dent contre la corporation des poissonniers ?

Non, le mien vend un poisson très frais. Il m'est aussi arrivé de participer à des banquets avec des bardes bretons. Ils se sont mis à chanter en fin de repas. Personne ne les a empêchés. Et je répète que le poisson de Bretagne est très frais. Tout ça, c'est pour rire. Je dois aller à Rome, bientôt. Mes origines sont italiennes. Parfois, je suis un peu gêné, vu ce que mes Romains prennent sur la tronche. Parfois, les Romains d'aujourd'hui me disent que j'y vais un peu fort. Le producteur du film Opération Cléopâtrea eu du mal à convaincre le comédien Roberto Benigni de jouer le Romain Détritus. Il a hésité...

Les lecteurs du Monde ont pu découvrir en avant-première plusieurs planches de La Rentrée gauloise qui sort en librairie. A quand un nouvel épisode complet d'Astérix le Gaulois ?

Je vais me pencher très sérieusement sur la question. Il faudrait que je m'y mette. D'abord pour mon plaisir, et aussi pour continuer à faire vivre le personnage, qui a aussi besoin d'éclairages qui ne sont pas des événements cinématographiques. Je me suis refait la main avec plusieurs planches inédites de La Rentrée gauloise. Maintenant, je vais devoir me mettre devant ma page blanche. Et trouver une idée !

Propos recueillis par Eric Fottorino



Une rentrée gauloise inédite

"Je me suis refait la main", dit Albert Uderzo à propos du nouvel album La Rentrée gauloise, qui comprend, entre autres, 5 planches inédites qu'il a réalisées en 2003. Deux ans après l'immense succès commercial d' Astérix et Latraviata, le célèbre petit Gaulois se manifeste pour 56 pages d'un hors-série riche en surprises. D'abord, l'auteur offre à ses lecteurs le plaisir de revivre cet âge d'or où l'œuvre était fille de l'amitié : des histoires inédites en recueil, signées par le tandem Goscinny- Uderzo, comme avant. On y retrouve l'humour tantôt tendre et parfois féroce, jamais méchant, du premier, la maîtrise du trait - pour ne pas dire le trait de génie - du second. Les fidèles se souviennent que, sur la couverture d'Astérix et Cléopâtre (oh, ce nez...), pastichant une superproduction hollywoodienne, les auteurs avaient précisé en couverture : "14 litres d'encre de Chine, 30 pinceaux, 65 crayons à mine grasse, 1 crayon à mine dure, 27 gommes à effacer, 38 kilos de papier, 16 rubans de machine à écrire, 2 machines à écrire et 67 litres de bière ont été nécessaires pour sa réalisation". Pour cette "rentrée gauloise", Uderzo a établi un catalogue raisonné de toutes les planches d'Astérix qui n'étaient pas parues en album, réalisées dans les années 1960 et 1970.

Au total, 14 histoires courtes cosignées Uderzo et Goscinny, ainsi que 11 planches inédites en album, réalisées en 1969, 1986 et 1994, s'ajoutant aux 5 planches toutes nouvelles de la cuvée 2003. Chaque planche a bénéficié d'un nouvel encrage et d'une nouvelle colorisation, d'un crayonné original. On y rencontre le coq Chanteclérix et les parents d'Astérix, Astronomix et Praline. - E. F.

Astérix et la rentrée gauloise, Albert Uderzo et René Goscinny, éditions Albert-René, 56 p., 8,60 € .

• ARTICLES PARUS DANS L'EDITION DU 31.08.03

Droits de reproduction et de diffusion réservés © Le Monde 2003

Sexta-feira, Agosto 29, 2003

----------------------------------------------

LA FOTO MAS VISTA EN EL DIA DE HOY EN INTERNET.

MADONNA Y BRITNEY SPEERS EN LOS PREMIOS MTV...

---------------------------------------------

----------------------------------

The Washington Post

PERU PANEL DETAILS TOLL OF VIOLENT 2 DECADES

Over 69,000 Perished; Rebels, Military Blamed

By Scott Wilson
Washington Post Foreign Service
Friday, August 29, 2003

LIMA, Peru, Aug. 28 -- A civilian commission examining Peru's political violence has concluded that more than 69,000 Peruvians died or disappeared from 1980 to 2000, a period of barbarous civil war and authoritarian government that the investigators labeled "a time of national shame."

In a nine-volume document drawing on two years of testimony and investigation, Peru's Truth and Reconciliation Commission reported today that most of the killings of civilians were committed by the Shining Path, a radical Maoist insurgency that ravaged the countryside during the mid-1990s in its war against the Peruvian state.

But the report was equally critical of Peru's aloof political class and its armed services, attributing just under half the atrocities committed over that time to the security forces and renewing a bitter debate over who bears responsibility for the war. Three of every four victims of the violence during that period -- in massacres, kidnappings and assassinations -- were Peruvians whose native language was Quechua or another indigenous tongue.

Salomon Lerner, president of the 12-member commission, said Peru's security forces employed a "systematic or generalized practice of human rights violations" that could support charges of crimes against humanity.

"Today is Peru's moment to confront a time of national shame," Lerner told a hushed audience at the National Palace during a ceremony marking the report's official release. "This report exposes a double scandal -- the killings, disappearances and torture on a huge scale, and the indolence, ineptitude and indifference by those able to intervene in this human catastrophe and who did not."

The report is an attempt to reconcile Peruvians with their brutal past by offering an official acknowledgment of what transpired and why. The commission was created in June 2001, seven months after President Alberto Fujimori's flight into exile ahead of corruption and murder charges stemming from his alleged connection to anti-guerrilla death squads.

Like similar panels in El Salvador, Guatemala and South Africa, Peru's truth commission was created after a period of intense internal conflict to help unite a country traditionally divided along racial and economic lines. But in assessing blame for the most horrific chapter in Peru's recent history, the findings have stirred up political passions at a fragile moment for President Alejandro Toledo, whose popularity since his 2001 election has fallen to the lowest level of any Latin America president.

In the weeks preceding the report's release, political allies of Fujimori and Alan Garcia, two of the three presidents whose terms fall under the investigation, have accused the commission of attempting to recast the war in terms favorable to the Shining Path and the Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement, a smaller Marxist insurgency held responsible for 1.5 percent of the civilian deaths. Defenders of the Peruvian military have also criticized the commission, fearing that the detailed report will set the stage for criminal trials.

Peru's leading human rights groups, as well as the thousands of victims' families, want the report to serve as the foundation for broader prosecutions of military officials implicated in massacres, disappearances and other crimes detailed in its pages. Lerner called today for the "criminal justice system [to] act immediately without vengeance, but at the same time with energy and without vacillation."

Almost all of the Shining Path's leaders are either dead or serving prison sentences, including its founder, Abimael Guzman. The former college professor from the southern city of Arequipa, who called on his followers to kill 10 percent of the population to make way for a new political system, was captured in 1992.

But the Shining Path is showing tentative signs of rising again, mostly in the coca-producing regions of Peru's eastern jungles. Hundreds of jailed members are scheduled for new trials in the coming months, following a high court decision that their convictions in military tribunals were unconstitutional. The report concludes that the Shining Path was responsible for 54 percent of the civilian deaths.

The defeat of the Shining Path "was a great victory for the armed forces -- with excesses, no doubt," said Jose Barba, a conservative congressman who has sharply criticized the truth commission. "But I don't know of such a thing as a clean war. This report is vengeance, vengeance by the Shining Path. And it is going to divide Peruvian society totally and absolutely."

The commission's findings show Peru's political violence to be far broader and more intense than earlier believed, even by human rights experts who have been trying for decades to track the number of victims. Until now, the number of Peruvians who died or disappeared during the war and its aftermath was thought to be about 30,000. The commission, which comprises human rights activists, academics and other prominent Peruvians, confirmed 24,000 deaths through witnesses and used statistical projections to arrive at the final toll.

The report draws on testimony from about 17,000 people, collected in emotional public hearings and private interviews over the past two years. Guzman participated in more than a dozen interviews with commission members. The project, which began under the interim presidency of Valentin Paniagua, who served between Fujimori's flight to Japan and Toledo's inauguration, cost an estimated $13 million.

During the years immediately following the Shining Path's declaration of war in 1980, the political violence remained concentrated in Peru's central highlands before spreading across the country and into the cities.

Of the estimated 69,280 victims, 85 percent came from six poor political divisions known as departments that ranged from Apurimac in the south to San Martin in the north. But the most severely affected was Ayacucho, southeast of Lima, home to more than 40 percent of those who died or disappeared.

The violence ebbed and flowed over the 20-year period studied by the commission. The report shows that 1984 was the single bloodiest year of the war. The upsurge followed the government's October 1981 emergency decree in Ayacucho, which placed the region in the effective control of army Gen. Clemente Noel. An estimated 4,500 people died or disappeared that year as Shining Path massacres mounted in the central highlands and the government used increasingly brutal methods against the insurgency.

The report also shows a sharp decline in deaths after 1992, the year Fujimori dissolved the Peruvian parliament and instituted a form of martial law. But human rights officials here say the numbers are misleading because Fujimori and his domestic intelligence adviser, Vladimiro Montesinos, began employing such techniques as mass arrests and trials by hooded anti-terrorism tribunals that have since been ruled illegal.

The report, which will be presented in Ayacucho on Friday by the truth commission during a special ceremony in memory of the victims, has shown few signs of healing the country. Toledo, who has never been popular with the Peruvian military, now faces the politically delicate task of weighing the growing public cries for justice against allowing the report to stand as the final word on the war.

In accepting the report today, Toledo said justice and reparations for the victims were "a state imperative," but also offered a general statement of support for the armed forces.

"It is indispensable that we look into the mirror of the past," Toledo said. "We can't open the doors to the future without looking first at the past."

Coming so soon after the end of the strife, the report poses a threat to a number of Peru's leading politicians and military officials who are still central figures in the national arena, including Fujimori and Garcia. Fujimori has suggested he might return to Peru and run for president, despite facing murder charges stemming from his alleged connection to squads that carried out two massacres in Lima early in his tenure. Garcia already has said he will seek another presidential term.

During an evening rally in support of the truth commission outside the Palace of Justice here this week, Teodora Cardenas, 26, held a small sign aloft bearing the word "Reparations." In 1990, her brother Federico, then 26, was taken away by a military-trained peasant militia in her village of Satipo in the Junin department, allegedly for belonging to the Shining Path. She never saw him again.

"We don't know where he was buried," Cardenas said. "We demand justice for his death, and the return of his body."

But just a few feet away, Rolando Pimental, who had two uncles murdered by the Shining Path in the Apurimac department, was unable to forgive. One uncle, a mayor, was stoned to death in front of his family. The other, an agricultural engineer, was taken away, never to be seen again.

"We always knew the truth. Do they think I am blind, that I am stupid?" said Pimental, 33, an engineer for a cell phone company. "This commission never wanted to hear from us, and now the terrorists want to return. Is it possible to reconcile with killers?"

© 2003 The Washington Post Company

-------------------------------------------

ANALYSE

Une armée américaine au four et au moulin

LE MONDE | 29.08.03 | 13h03

Contrairement à sa doctrine qui organisait jusqu'à présent les forces américaines dans la perspective d'un déploiement sur deux théâtres et demi d'opérations simultanées (un qualifié de majeur et les autres de moindre intensité), le Pentagone reconnaît aujourd'hui qu'il a du mal à être au four et au moulin. Certes, il l'admet du bout des lèvres. Mais le débat qui monte aux Etats-Unis, suite aux attentats en Irak et aux embuscades en Afghanistan, sur les capacités militaires du pays en est l'illustration.

Quelque 370 000 soldats de l'armée de terre - sur un effectif total de 1,4 million dans l'ensemble des forces américaines - sont répartis dans une centaine de pays, à des titres divers et selon des modalités très variées. Parmi eux, 134 000 en Irak, 62 000 en Europe pour le compte de l'OTAN, 40 000 au Japon et 10 000 en Afghanistan constituent le gros de la troupe hors du sol américain, sans compter les GI dans les Balkans, la corne de l'Afrique et jusqu'au Sinaï.

OMNIPRÉSENTE SUR LA PLANÈTE

Signe des temps : il faut revenir à la guerre du Vietnam, il y a une trentaine d'années, pour retrouver une situation où les soldats américains arrivent à servir plus d'une année d'affilée hors de leur pays sans l'espoir d'une rotation qui les ferait renouer avec leurs familles.

Après la première guerre du Golfe, l'armée de terre américaine, qui supporte l'essentiel des engagements internationaux de Washington, avait dû réduire son format. De 750 000 hommes, elle était passée à 550 000, et elle est aujourd'hui tombée à 491 000 personnels d'active. Pourtant, avec des effectifs moindres, le soleil ne se couche jamais sur une armée américaine omniprésente sur la planète.

Le résultat est que cette armée de terre, pour tenir ses positions à l'extérieur avec 370 000 hommes et femmes, a été contrainte, cette année, de convoquer 136 000 membres de la réserve et de la garde nationale. C'est sans précédent.

Rapporté par le sénateur (républicain du Texas) Kay Bailey Hutchinson, président de la commission sénatoriale des crédits militaires, un fait en dit long : au Kosovo, en Bosnie et au Sinaï, des unités de la Garde nationale relèveront les forces régulières américaines à l'issue de leurs six mois de présence.

A propos de l'Irak, le général Peter Schoomaker, qui vient de prendre ses fonctions de chef d'état-major de l'armée de terre, n'est pas loin de penser comme son prédécesseur, le général Eric Shinseki, évincé pour incompatibilité d'humeur avec le "patron" du Pentagone, Donald Rumsfeld.

"Intuitivement", a confié le général Schoomaker, il aurait tendance à considérer qu'il faudrait déployer plus de monde pour tenir le pays. A quoi M. Rumsfeld rétorque qu'on ne peut pas réorganiser des forces à partir d'intuitions. Le secrétaire à la défense concède qu'il faudrait attribuer davantage de tâches administratives à des civils, pour redonner des missions opérationnelles aux militaires, et qu'il conviendrait de réexaminer la mobilisation de réservistes sélectionnés, à l'occasion de contrats temporaires ou partiels, quitte à ce qu'ils se fâchent avec leurs proches ou avec leurs employeurs.

Aujourd'hui, M. Rumsfeld s'en remet à une option qui consiste à solliciter le renfort d'autres pays.

En témoigne le rôle reconnu, début septembre, à la Pologne : prendre la responsabilité de la sécurité d'une zone en Irak - sous la tutelle du haut commandement américain - à la tête d'un corps de 9 200 hommes. La Pologne y engagera 2 300 soldats, à côté de détachements fournis par les armées de treize autres nations d'Europe et d'Amérique latine. L'expérience mérite d'être observée de près. Comment, en effet, éviter que l'autorité opérationnelle des Etats-Unis ne fonde ou se dilue dans ce qui ressemblera à la tour de Babel.

Quatre mois après la fin déclarée de la guerre contre Saddam Hussein, les Américains ont, à ce jour, perdu autant d'hommes dans des embuscades ou des attentats que pendant les trois semaines de conflit. M. Rumsfeld est donc aussi confronté à des considérations tactiques, voire à une réflexion d'ordre qualitatif sur la nature même de son dispositif militaire.

A la différence, par exemple, du Royaume-Uni, dont l'armée de terre a accumulé des années d'expérience en Irlande du Nord, ou de l'Espagne, qui rejoint la division polonaise avec 10 % de Guardia civile sur les 1 300 hommes de son contingent, Washington manque de ces unités de maintien de l'ordre et de police militaire qui peuvent faire la différence sur place.

DISSIDENCE MAL IDENTIFIÉE

Les sociologues de la chose militaire outre-Atlantique les appellent une "constabulary force". Autrement dit, des gendarmeries à l'européenne dont le savoir-faire militaire, la tradition séculaire, le sens du renseignement, la pratique du contact avec la population et la formation juridique les prédisposent plus que d'autres corps au contrôle de la sécurité publique.

L'après-guerre en Irak ou en Afghanistan, avec le défi du terrorisme aveugle, et l'œuvre de reconstruction, avec le risque d'attentisme d'une population travaillée de l'intérieur par une dissidence mal identifiée, ne conviennent pas à des parachutistes ou à des marines mieux préparés à faire ce qu'ils ont réussi à Bagdad : la conquête éclair d'un territoire hostile, face à une armée régulière qui, même si elle a déserté le champ de bataille, a tendance à respecter certaines règles du jeu.

En quelque sorte, les Américains font l'apprentissage du fait qu'un soldat est entraîné à prendre l'initiative d'ouvrir le feu quand et où son homologue d'une constabulary force est instruit dans l'art, difficile et périlleux, de ne tirer qu'une fois sa vie menacée directement et en cas de légitime défense.

D'un côté, l'hyperréaction qui peut s'expliquer par l'environnement chaotique de la guerre. De l'autre, une vigilance de chaque instant, face à un ennemi insaisissable, et l'usage maîtrisé de l'arme en des circonstances extrêmes.

Jacques Isnard

(c) LE MONDE DU 30.08.03

---------------------------------------

Recordatorio…

Hace 18 días que la hija de Fidel Castro, Alina Fernández dijo en San Salvador que El Fifo se acababa en dos semanas. Seguiremos contando…

---------------------------------------------------------

Esto es una versión muy interesante de lo que está pasando en Irak, publicado en una revista con la cuál ni siempre estoy de acuerdo. El articulo es un poco largo, pero el fin de semana que se nos avecina, también.

The Nation - [from the September 15, 2003 issue]

IGNITED IRAQ

by Peter Davis
BAGDAD

During his final year and a half as lord of misrule, Saddam Hussein liked to joke that Iraqis should win the contract to rebuild the World Trade Center since they had so much experience at reconstruction after the Gulf War of 1991. As events unfolded, something like the opposite happened. The military-industrial complex that recently destroyed so much of Iraq will now be hired to repair the damage. Few Iraqis this summer believe that the postwar contractual arrangements are a coincidence. "You encouraged the looting and burning after you got finished bombing," a maintenance worker at the Baghdad Polytechnic Institute told me, "so you could get paid for putting it all back up again."

When the war began in March I was in Hanoi, where the US Embassy helpfully sent a fax to "American citizens in Vietnam" warning of the danger posed by "armed conflict with Iraq." "Remain vigilantly aware of surroundings, avoid crowds and demonstrations, keep a low profile.... This Public Announcement is being updated to alert Americans to an increased potential for anti-American violence," and on and on. Since Vietnam is neither a Muslim country nor one where threats against Americans have occurred--it is only a country we invaded a few wars ago--the conclusion was inescapable that the government knew how widely unpopular its action would be. Intellectual isolationism had led to global unilateralism, with the British as the tail of the kite. September 11 had both scared and emboldened us into the second of our new blitzing wars.

Dry, blazing, ignited Iraq is a country whose capital does not loom over its landscape but instead shimmers up out of the desert as though it may or may not eventually materialize. As soon as I arrived in the second week of July it was apparent the country's needs are so simple as to be alliterative: security, services and structure are the mantra, the liberté-égalité-fraternité of this proposed revolution from despotism to something resembling a representative distribution of power. There was still only sporadic electricity, the water was polluted and Baghdad was considered so dangerous Americans were warned not to go out at night and never to go anywhere without a driver and translator. "This is a rule," an American said to me the day I arrived. "Don't break it."

Yet there was something else, even more obvious than danger though easily overlooked in the rush to keep up with unfolding crises, that quickly became clear. Between most Americans and most Iraqis is a gulf more unbridgeable than the nearby Persian Gulf itself, both in terms of worldview and self-recognition. Like Americans, Iraqis have all kinds of opinions, but almost all of our new subject citizens have such utterly different concepts from ours of words like "freedom," "liberation" or even "country" and "national identity" that to speak of these where they are concerned is to court major misunderstanding before we have even begun. "Democracy," of course, has been pounded out of shape on the postwar anvil.

The best time of day in Iraq is between 5:30 and 7:30 in the morning, when everything is still in shade or shadow yet there is enough light for observation. Tradespeople are coming to work and merchants are filling the souks, offering a range of goods from air-conditioners to shoelaces to newly available magazines to fresh lamb. You could almost be anywhere east of Greece, and if you looked only at the market stalls and not at the scarred, charred and blasted buildings above, you would not know at such a time that although its army and government did not so much lose as melt away, this is now a conquered country. The worst time of day is late afternoon, when you expect the onset of coolness, relief from the inferno of noon, yet it is still so hot you could bake bread in your car, and no one is moving who doesn't have to. Again, if you kept your eyes on the somnolent bazaars and the vendors who are now bestirring themselves only to ward off flies, you could easily forget you are in a territory occupied by a foreign force whose nationality you share and whose presence is the occasion for both earnest gratitude and violent resistance. The Bradleys rolling down the littered streets tell you where you are.

Know your colony. With a population of 26 million, Iraq possesses the approximate area of California and at least as many citizens who consider themselves candidates for leadership as are running to become that state's governor. Culturally, the land between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers was thriving 4,000 years before Christ. Take numbers, for example. In A History of Mathematics by Carl B. Boyer, the author finds "a high order of civilization" with "progressive mathematical achievements" that include a Mesopotamian numerical base of 60 rather than the more common 10, a system that "has enjoyed a remarkably long life, for remnants survive even to this day in units of time and angle measure." Examples of their mathematical facility abound: "The fundamental arithmetic operations were handled by the Babylonians in a manner not unlike that which would be employed today.... One finds among the Old Babylonian tablets some table texts containing successive powers of a given number, analogous to our modern tables of logarithms.... The solution of a three-term quadratic equation seems to have exceeded by far the algebraic capabilities of the Egyptians."

All right then, politics. This is where we run into some problems. Hammurabi brought forth a system of laws admirable for its day, which was 1,750 BCE, but its commonly remembered feature was the vengeance code of an eye for an eye. Nebuchadnezzar defeated the Egyptians while extending his territory in the sixth century BCE, and his Babylonian magnificence was supported by slaves. Saladin, a Kurd to whom Saddam Hussein has likened himself, successfully beat back the twelfth-century Crusade, captured Jerusalem and built himself an empire extending from what is now Egypt to Syria to Yemen. It didn't last.

In recent centuries Iraq has seen itself traded from the Ottoman Empire to the British Empire in a deal that led to an ocean of oil for the West. With boundaries settled by a League of Nations mandate in 1920, Iraq gained its independence from Britain in 1932 and was ruled by kings until the monarchy was overthrown in 1958, which happens to be the only time I was in the Middle East until this past July, a detail whose usefulness I'll try to make clear presently. There followed a series of brutal coups until the Baath Party emerged, leading in due time to Saddam Hussein's ascendancy in 1979. Moreso than his predecessors, Saddam maintained himself through what has been described as the exemplary use of violence. According to the historian Charles Tripp, Saddam "reinforced certain tendencies in the history of Iraq, building up a powerful apparatus that brooks no opposition and provides scarcely any space for political activity other than on terms set by him." Just before I left for Iraq, the UN's chief weapons inspector, Hans Blix, explained Saddam's weakness to me: "He saw himself as the emperor of Mesopotamia, but unlike the Roman emperors who always kept one slave nearby to whisper to them that they were mortal, Saddam forgot to have that particular slave." Charles Tripp concludes that once Saddam is run off into history, "the contest for control of the narrative of the Iraqi state will continue, but in these circumstances there is a strong possibility that existing privileges will be entrenched and Iraqis will have good reason to fear subjection once more."

"Of course, Saddam Hussein's men tortured and imprisoned indiscriminately, that is true," said Memdi Salih, a former journalist who was my first interpreter in Baghdad. But there was a hesitancy in his tone, as well as in his use of the word "men" instead of personalizing the acts to Saddam himself as Saddam's more fervent enemies do, that pointed to Salih's own complex history. Many of the educated elite in Baghdad are tainted, if one is looking for purity, by some association with Baathists. Salih himself, a furrow-browed, thoughtful man, was in the party because, he said, "You had to be to do anything at all. We were all Baath Party members." This has rendered him unemployable by the returned exiles who Americans have put in charge of certain fields. "The new communications czar won't let any of us be hired," Salih said, "because he lived abroad and hires only exiles, who aren't really welcome by most of the public."

Salih's anger at the United States is only a membrane from the surface. He expresses it by criticizing American-appointed Iraqis, such as those members of the governing council who either lived abroad or have no following, or both. He remains even more critical of the former regime, making a transitive verb of "vanish"--"Saddam's men vanished people for no reason at all." Then he returns to his earlier hesitancy. "The Baathist crimes are statistically exaggerated. It was possible to live in Iraq decently and comfortably under Saddam if you weren't actively opposing the regime." He said he had been patient with the US-British coalition, but so far he had seen very little progress. "Right now we need someone to issue orders, pay salaries, make communications work which are so very backward, educate people to the new tasks," he said, possibly with a shade of nostalgia for the days of firm leadership. "Maybe the coalition has made a step forward with the governing council, but I'm not too hopeful."

You can find support in these postwar, pre-peace days for any prix fixe opinion in Iraq. The coalition is in trouble. Easy. The occupation is popular. Also easy. Americans should stay/go/print new money. All well represented. The occupation is increasingly unpopular. Slam-dunk. You may have to wear thicker blinders to draw the conclusion that everything is rolling along smoothly after a predictably rocky start, but you can find that if you're determined to. I was looking for something beyond opinion, something including feelings and beliefs that would point to the American footprint and the Iraqi response. As we drove into a neighborhood that has seen vociferous arguments between pro- and anti-American factions, Salih and I noticed a placard in English. Leave Us, someone had painted in red; someone else had come along and crossed it out in a splash of blue. Your guess is as good...

Sahih's own mixed opinions found another outlet; he was fond of taking reporters to the Abu Hanifa Mosque, an important shrine dedicated to one of the principal saints of Islam. It had been a center of support for the Baath Party and in fact was the last place Saddam Hussein appeared in public. I visited a number of mosques in Iraq; they are social as well as religious gathering places, especially for men, and students even come to them to study for exams. My wife, Alicia Anstead, writing for the Bangor Daily News in Maine, accompanied me to this mosque, which required some preparation. Salih took her to a clothing store and had her buy a long black dress; given that the thermometer that morning was 122 degrees Fahrenheit and rising, this amounted to a gender fine, but Alicia was willing to pay it. She also had to put on socks under her sandals and of course a hijab, or headscarf, that hooded her thoroughly.

In the cavernous hall that surrounds the mosque's sanctuary were the intricate designs of a faith that does not permit representations of the deity or of saints. On the columns, walls and ceilings every variation was present that I could imagine a line becoming--circles, squares, rhomboids, lines soaring, dipping, lines playing games with other lines, swirling, pointing, angling, sharp, soft, eight-pointed stars, winged lines, more shapes than I've ever seen. Lines and curves were raised to a level beyond mere art forms to unassailable facts of the universe. Carpets and prayer rugs were spread over the floors, their own designs of such a celestial nature that people I know would happily convert and pray the requisite five times a day to get these coverings into their living rooms.

I was permitted into the sanctuary while Alicia remained outside. This was similar to the hall but even more elaborately decorated with stars and geometric shapes on its columns and walls and in its vaulted arches and curved ceilings. The tomb of Abu Hanifa is the sanctuary's sacred altar.

In the hall before the service we were surrounded by boys and young men, who were curious and friendly. We asked them how they felt about Americans. They all spoke at the same time, but one voice, belonging to a student training to become an imam, was most authoritative. "We like you if you come as visitors and go back home," he said as Salih translated and smiled approvingly, "but we don't want you to stay as soldiers and run the country. Be our friends, not our occupiers." The young men parted to form a path as a courtly gentleman came up to us and, in impeccable English, introduced himself as the former minister of industry, retired since 1989. What did he think of the current situation? "Ah," he said, "ask the young lads here, we'll all give you the same answer." Salih nodded his own agreement as the former minister turned and passed into the sanctuary.

When he had completed his prayer service, the imam of Abu Hanifa, Sheik Mouyad Al-Adhami, sat with us on one of the prayer rugs. He is a vigorous, rocklike man in his early 40s, from a line of imams in a 600-year-old family that measures its descent from Mohammed himself. He had been more or less exiled from this mosque until the overthrow of Saddam Hussein, after which the former imam disappeared and Sheik Al-Adhami returned. I asked if Saddam had worshiped here regularly, and he said, "Saddam Hussein is the devil, and devils cannot worship." The imam has not seen one of his brothers for twenty-three years. "They made it a crime if your relative flees from Iraq," he said, "and my brother went to live in England. I was arrested and beaten, and after they let me go I remained under surveillance."

We asked the imam what he tells his congregation now. "I am trying to find a way to help them recover from psychological wounds brought on by the American war," he said. "There are other ways to change even this bloody regime, not through war. I have told high-ranking American officers we need security and settled conditions. The people need jobs. They feel the Americans are not serious and don't work for their betterment. The officers promise to do something, but we have seen nothing." As for the newly appointed governing council, the imam was skeptical. He did not feel it was truly representative of Iraqis. This seemed to be the moment to ask Sheik Al-Adhami, who is considered a moderate, whether politics and faith each have distinct places in the life of Iraqis. "Islam is not confined to the mosque," he said, "but is linked to economics, politics, every field of life. I tell my people, 'Do not store Islam in the mosque.' Some of those on the governing council want a separation of mosque and state. This is wrong and unacceptable. Iraqis do not want a secular regime. We will be questioned one day by God about all these matters of religion and politics. In Islam there is no right to separate policy from faith."

That seemed to invite no further clarification, so I asked what kind of government he would like to see. "We do not accept any dictatorship," he said, "any unjust group of men who want to impose principles on us or to limit our freedom. But there is a big difference between the Islamic idea of democracy and Western democracy. An election based on money and propaganda is wrong. We believe in controlled freedom, and freedom in the Western world is not controlled. The looting and burning that occurred here were accidents that happened because of unjust treatment and a lack of control. This is not the normal way of the Iraqi people. In Western society, crime is normal. Here it is an accident."

Are Islam and Western society destined, then, to be enemies? "The Almighty creates different societies in order to maintain life," said Sheik Al-Adhami, "and in the Koran all people are created as male and female. He who is good is closest to Allah. If the societies have bad will and are run by sick souls, they will clash with each other. If they have good will, they won't clash. It's simple."

This was surely a holy man of good will himself. But it was hard not to worry about power residing in true believers. Before leaving for Iraq I had gone to Washington, where I was briefed by a number of officials, including one at the State Department and one at a Defense Department think tank. To a man and woman, they all shook their heads at what one of them called our highly ideologized policies. We have our own true believers, and they currently have more power than ever before. If true believers come to power in Iraq, our two societies will have even less in common. Alicia and I decided to pursue the imam's social policies.

We asked Sheik Al-Adhami if a woman can be equal to a man in Islam. "Women in Islam are highly admired, autonomous, and a husband cannot interfere in his wife's property but must spend whatever he can on her to benefit her and satisfy her needs. She can become a doctor, an engineer, a teacher, whatever she wishes." This was protective, of course, but it did not add up to equality. The imam turned to Alicia, and though he didn't address her he seemed to be appraising her. Then he looked back at me and asked me how I like having Alicia all covered up. Before I could say, How do I know, she's barely visible, the imam answered his own question. "You like her better," he instructed. "You appreciate her more covered in this manner. This is how she should always be." I looked over at Alicia, wrapped and hooded, but for all I could tell she might have been Trent Lott and I wouldn't have known the difference.

Alicia asked why a woman has to be so completely covered. "To be covered gives a sign to all men," the imam said, "that they must be kind to women. There is no right for any man to enjoy a woman except only her husband. Women shouldn't be treated like animals and go around without cover." We let it go. It did appear, however, that the imam feels that men are so out of control they immediately turn predator if they see as much as an ankle of the opposite sex.

It was time to go, and I asked the imam if he had ever traveled abroad. "No, never," he said. Then he shook his head at himself, smiled, and added, "Well, yes, I went once to Syria, on my honey-moon." He smiled again. I said we were on our own honeymoon now in Baghdad. He raised his brows and looked from one of us to the other with a question mark. Really? Yes, just married. With a satisfied smile he congratulated us, and then he said, "You deserve each other." While we were left wondering how to take that, he chanted a verse from the Koran about Muslims doing no harm to non-Muslims. Then he looked up at us and said, "We will all meet in Paradise, all of us of different faiths." Not too soon, I hope.

American soldiers in Iraq are as differentiated as Iraqis. They believe firmly in their mission of pacifying an enemy people and bringing democracy to them, or they think they're wasting their time as peacekeepers, or they hate it and want to go home, or they grit their teeth and follow orders. Morale is mixed; some soldiers I met feel they were misled and have to stay in Iraq much longer than they were originally told, but others maintain a steely resolve to see the job through, whatever the job turns out to be.

Sweltering as they protected a US compound in Baghdad, two GIs from Florida said they came to Iraq as part of a QRF--quick reaction force--whose wartime job was to rescue downed pilots. What they do now is stand guard, day after day, wearing heavy flak jackets and helmets. Each is Latino and in the National Guard, one originally from Puerto Rico, the other from Mexico. Both are fathers. The Mexican is training to become a policeman, and the Puerto Rican drives a bus at Disney World. "The duty here is OK," the policeman said. "We've done what we came to do, took over the country. Mission-wise, we're done." Three men from their unit of 130 had recently been killed, and they were still thinking about that. "Ambushes, man," the bus driver said. "This country is not under control, and it never will be under control." His buddy took a swig of bottled water. "I guess I'm glad we came and did what we did," he said, "but a lot of the Iraqis, now, they have a big problem with us staying here because they want to take over their own country. Us staying here doesn't give them a chance to start anything, run anything on their own." I wondered if their not being Anglos possibly contributed to their understanding of how an occupied people feels, but other GIs were equally wary of being part of an occupation force.

Romeo and Juliet, almost. Dating between soldiers and the local population is forbidden not only for security reasons but because it is offensive to Muslims. When it happens it is furtive. A young Muslim woman--not Iraqi but a Lebanese import--who works for the US government in Baghdad was flat on her back on a couch, drying her eyes, the first time I met her. Her name is Randa and she told of her relationship with a GI named Jeff. Jeff's ambition to become a lawyer was diverted when he enlisted patriotically after 9/11. Stationed in Iraq, he met Randa. "We really bonded," Randa said. "We both loved debating, and we'd debate anything from a favorite ice cream flavor to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Jeff was an only child, and Jewish, and he said, 'Gee, Randa, you're the first Muslim I ever met in my whole life.' We kept exchanging books and magazines. I gave him a book on Islamic fundamentalism and told him to get up to chapter six by the next time I saw him, and he did it, so then we debated some more."

Randa and Jeff couldn't see each other often, but they e-mailed constantly, then met when they could after her office hours were over and he finished duty at Baghdad University. Randa said Jeff was so full of charisma, charm and intelligence that she was sure he'd become President of the United States. Jeff was shy, which increased his attractiveness to Randa. After two months they were very close. "We were both 23, and I really liked hanging out with him," Randa said. Then it ended. "It's so hot here, you know," Randa said, "and one day Jeff went into the cafeteria at Baghdad University for some ice cream. He came out and while he was walking down the steps of the building someone just came right up to him and shot him dead. As quick as that. I guess you could say I'm in mourning now." The next time I saw her Randa was busy again, plunging back into her work, which involves interviewing Iraqis, especially but not exclusively women, who have been mistreated. Recently she sent an e-mail. She still thinks about Jeff, still is certain he'd have become President. Her job continues, she finds it rewarding to help people, and she likes her colleagues. "I'm doing much better," Randa wrote, "taking it one day at a time."

How about the arts? A theater director came to see me several times. Rasim Mansour, a long-faced man with a severe yet quizzical expression, manages to look like both James Joyce and Samuel Beckett. He seemed to want nothing more than a conversation, and he was fresh from a postwar triumph, his presentation of Desire Under the Elms, which he said was a smash hit in Baghdad and had just closed. Beneath his black-framed round glasses, his eyes flashed as he explained that O'Neill's play is close to Iraq's situation now because a cruel father--i.e., Saddam Hussein--had doomed his entire family--in this case his country--to tragedy. He also admired Arthur Miller, who he felt had joined Eugene O'Neill in communicating American civilization to the world.

Rasim, now 32, made his start in the theater by playing Macbeth, for which he was praised so much he began to receive grants and commissions to direct plays. Chain-smoking very long cigarettes, Rasim said his Macbeth, even though it deals with a usurping king, slipped by Saddam Husein's censors, but many other plays, such as Caligula and Richard III, did not. "Our second most important export, right after oil," Rasim said, "became our artists and intellectuals. I wouldn't leave because I felt my country needed me to stay here, and good or bad I love it." The censorship is gone now, he said, but half the theaters in Baghdad are destroyed while the other half are used by Americans for storage. The O'Neill play had been presented in a borrowed auditorium. "An American captain told me, 'Kiss my ass,' when I asked if we could have a theater. I'm glad Americans got rid of Saddam, but conquering us was not a good idea. Americans have harmed this country, and traces of the occupation will remain a long time. You never thought how to save Iraq, only how to conquer it in order to terrorize and warn the entire world. I can't believe that four months after they won the war they have still not restored basic services like electricity and water. So who's worse, Saddam or the Americans? I'm a great fan of George W. Bush as an actor and I hope he'll be performing in a theater one day very soon."

At the Polytechnic Institute in Baghdad, I felt I was on a campus that had substituted rage for electricity as its power source. By now my translator and guide was Sa'ad Al-Izzi, a tall, stout man of 29, though he seemed older due to his having had to mature quickly at the age of 10 in order to take care of his mother and sister after his father died of diabetes. Izzi, an English major himself, was appalled at the condition of the institute, which he had not visited since the war began. The custodian of buildings and grounds, who lives in a house just inside the college gates, displayed a broken tooth he said he'd received while defending the institute against a gang of looters that included Kuwaitis, Syrians and Palestinians. He brought out his 4-year-old daughter and 8-year-old son; the daughter had shrapnel in one of her eyes, the son had shrapnel in his head, both from wild firing, the custodian said, by US troops. The soldiers, he said, fired a few times into the grounds of the institute but otherwise simply watched from their tanks across the street while the college was looted and burned. Becoming angrier as he spoke, the custodian said Americans had refused him the money to pay for an operation to restore his daughter's eyesight.

A professor of computer science told Izzi the vandals had burned every book in the library, which he said had been the largest scientific collection in the Middle East. The gutted and hollowed library is now being used as a cafeteria because the cafeteria itself was burned to the ground. Two women professors--of geography and mechanical engineering--very politely said they hoped Americans would stay until there is a secure and stable government. An older student, who said he is in his 30s, agreed with the women professors and said most Iraqis want Americans to stay for now.

Anger resurfaced when we went inside the former library, where the students were eating lunch. Izzi and I were surrounded by students who pushed toward us with complaints. Civil servants haven't been paid; some of their professors have been months without salary; how dare Paul Bremer, the American administrator, not come to see us; we don't want the Baathists back but right now nothing's working; if Bremer won't listen to us he's the second Saddam; I demand to see Bremer, this is my right; Bremer is the new thief of Baghdad; since Americans have the most power and money in the world, they can at least buy us some books. Bringing up the rear, two women students were more soft-spoken but determined to be heard. "It's so unsafe for a woman or a girl to go about now," said one. "Before, we couldn't talk freely but we could walk," said the other, "and now we can talk freely but we can't walk."

By the time Izzi and I were back outside, a crowd of students were shouting at us. "Americans are here for oil, nothing else!" "The oil ministry is secure for the Americans, fuck the rest of the country!" "I hate Americans because they're free and I'm not!" "My friend brought his pregnant wife to the hospital, but before they got there they were stopped at an American checkpoint where the soldiers shot him. Who will be the father of his baby?" "Basra is secure under the British, why not Baghdad under the Americans?" "Bush is a liar!" "He promises and does nothing!" "Go tell the American people what happens here so they can hate Bush the way we hate Bush and we hate Saddam!"

I was beginning to think about Randa's friend Jeff who was shot on the other campus. Izzi himself looked concerned, and though he is a rapid translator he couldn't keep up with the epithets and oaths being thrown at us. "Can't you stupid Americans understand what you've done here!" a student yelled, and we left quickly.

"That's the thing," Izzi told me as we drove off. "You don't know when you're in danger and when you're safe." This had also been true for Izzi himself under Saddam Hussein, when one of his jobs had been to translate movies for Saddam and his son Uday. Saddam's favorite movie was Braveheart, and he claimed that if he had an enemy like the Mel Gibson character he would never kill that man but would keep him around for his valor. Uday's own favorite film was Gladiator. The brutal prince loved to see arms and legs and heads go flying, and essentially used the movie as an instructional video for his assassins and torturers. When one movie Izzi translated had a ten-second audio dropout, Uday sent his men to the film office where Izzi worked; Izzi's boss said the translator was out, which wasn't true, and took the beating himself on behalf of Izzi. What worried Izzi now, in addition to the safety of journalists he translated for, was that armed insurgents were beginning to pick off Iraqis just for working with Americans.

One evening, when our confinement in the hotel was beginning to seem as unnecessary as it was claustrophobic, Alicia and I asked Izzi and our driver, a former Iraqi Air Force jet pilot named Abu Mustafa, to drop us at an Internet cafe. We told them to go on home, and we'd take a taxi after we used the Internet. Abu Mustafa, whose antennae were particularly sensitive, said he didn't think it was a wonderful idea. Izzi thought it would be all right, as there were a lot of cabs going up and down the wide street we were on in what he said was a relatively placid neighborhood.

The proprietor of the Internet cafe was the sort of man who runs the candy store in one of those movies they release around Halloween; you don't know if he wants to help you or turn you over to Stephen King. We were unable to send or receive messages on his computers, and we left quickly while it was not yet fully dark. The street was reassuringly busy; Baghdad at night is both lively and deadly. Getting a taxi was easy, although the taxi itself had a desperately sick engine. The driver spoke a little English and said he knew where our hotel was. He didn't, and he had a swimming eyeball. As his taxi lurched forward around an altogether unfamiliar neighborhood, taking turns we knew were wrong, the cabbie asked if we were Europeans. No, Alicia said. Canadians, I said. We were getting nervous but we couldn't clutch one another's hands because we'd been told it was unacceptable for men and women to touch in public. The driver, groping around for our hotel on streets we didn't recognize, asked if we had children. Alicia said we had a 15-year-old. Boy or girl? the cabbie asked. Alicia said boy at the same instant I said girl. That was the only night we disobeyed the rules.

Americans working for the government, despite inconveniences and delays, seemed upbeat. "The state of human rights here is improving every day," said Sandra Hodgkinson, a lawyer in the office of human rights and transitional justice. "For over twenty years people couldn't express a view. Now they can speak, write, march, demonstrate." Her husband, David, also a lawyer, is a senior adviser on transitional rights, and the couple are involved variously with torture victims, helping Iraqis recover property, and reintegrating former political prisoners into society. Sandra became a member of Amnesty International while she was still in high school, and David is an idealist about their work. "What we do," he said, "is so much more interesting and exciting than the big money on tax issues or corporate mergers." The couple, in their early 30s, are the kind of optimists and loyalists who can't wait to get to work in the morning. When I asked them to compare Jay Garner, the first postwar administrator, with his successor, Paul Bremer, Sandra fairly bounced. "Garner got us working together in Kuwait," she said, "and Bremer got us all up and running in the governing phase after we arrived here. All I've seen is two great bosses." A team needs team players. This is the kind of enthusiasm that moved mountains in postwar Europe and Japan.

To the victor. Saddam Hussein's opulent Republican Palace, which still displays four massive sculpted heads of the dictator, is now the American headquarters as well as Bremer's office, re-inforcing Iraqi suspicions that the new governing authority is not a different form of leadership but simply a replacement of the old. As Izzi and I approached the throne room, which he had never seen before, he told me Iraqis had been known to vomit or even faint when they were summoned here. They did not know whether Saddam was about to reward or behead them, and he liked to keep them guessing. The throne room is now used as a chapel for the US military. Inside the vast chamber, just above one of the gold thrones, is a mural of SCUD missiles soaring skyward either toward an opposite mural of Jerusalem or possibly toward the other Republican Palace 8,000 miles away. Three chaplains--one each from the Army, Navy and Air Force--took turns posing with a long, shiny ceremonial sword that had belonged to Saddam Hussein. The Air Force chaplain clapped one of Saddam's Gothic World War I helmets on his head and sat on the throne with the sword while the Navy chaplain photographed him. When I approached the Air Force chaplain he put his hand over the name plate on his uniform and turned away. The victors have the spoils but may not want you to know exactly who they are.

One American I met at the Republican Palace is, if anything, even more cheerful about the occupation's prospects than the Hodgkinsons. Steven Connolly works for a private firm contracted to USAID, renovating such facilities as fire stations, clinics and elementary schools. A veteran of the Peace Corps in Africa, Connolly has lived abroad most of his adult life and has already hired more than a thousand Iraqis for his current projects. "The reason the electricity is still not fully on in Baghdad," he said, "is not because Americans aren't paying attention. It's years of neglect compounded by sabotage. Fifty thousand Baathists out there are trying to wreak havoc." Connolly is fully supportive of the war itself--"Saddam Hussein had a repressive regime, he wanted any weapon he could acquire and he had a history of using whatever he could get his hands on"--as well as the aftermath. "We're off to a good start," he said, "but we need replication a thousandfold. The big players are coming in, Bechtel and the others. Now we'll see some real progress."

On the other hand.

The following day an imam, who looked like Christ if he'd lived to be 50, told me solemnly he believes that Iraqis killed under the American occupation are several times more numerous already than under Saddam Hussein. "Saddam was a terrorist," he said, "but Bush is also a terrorist. We demand the Americans withdraw immediately." Like Sheik Al-Adhami, he said Islam specifically rejects any separation of religion and politics. "Shia and Sunni are united as sons of this land in opposing the crime you committed with your decision to come here." The imam urged me, as an American visiting his country, to go to the Mother of All Battles Mosque to see how Iraqis feel.

On the way to the Mother of All Battles Mosque I had to stop at a hotel that is entirely rented to ABC News. A producer there told me the network had just taken a year's lease on a smaller hotel, indicating they're in this, like our government, for the long haul. I wondered what the Iraqis would think about our attention to them, and whether the attention would last a year or fade, as it has in Afghanistan.

The Mother of All Battles Mosque, which was built by Saddam and has minarets shaped like weapons, was the scene of the largest demonstration I saw in Iraq. The demonstration was peaceful, but it was also passionate. "This is a special day," an intense man with a black beard said to me as crowds flocked toward the mosque, "because we are here to resist the occupation." Many of the men wore white skullcaps and long white robes, dishdashas, and the women were either scarved and covered or in the full abaya, a black nunlike garb. Alicia asked a small group of women why they had come, but she was answered by a man. "We're here to resist you, and if you won't listen in your democratic way to our wish that you leave, we'll make you listen in another way."

Two Humvees rolled by with soldiers standing manning their guns. I thought they were on the wrong road at the wrong time, either accidentally or provocatively. But no one showed the slightest interest in them, and the Humvees kept right on rolling.

The crowd, which had arrived in cars and double-decker buses from homes, businesses and other mosques, sat around the outside of the mosque in blistering heat to listen to speeches over booming loudspeakers. The first cleric welcomed a throng he estimated at 20,000. Although the attendance was large, almost circling the mosque itself, I'd have cut his estimate in half. We were not in the section reserved for the press and television trucks, but it was well placed to view both crowd and speakers; the White House media team may have an opposite number among the mosques in Baghdad. The next cleric said it was unacceptable for the governing council to declare April 9--the day Baghdad fell to the Americans--a national holiday because it was a day of disaster for Iraq and Islam.

Speaker after speaker alternated religious chants with exhortations to resist the American occupation. There was special condemnation of the sweeps conducted by US forces. "The invaders are false, and when they make their raids on our homes they spread their destruction and corruption everywhere," an imam said. "They should save their blood and their money and go home. Shia or Sunni, we don't care, but whoever governs us must be an Arab." Loud cheers interrupted him. "The UN Security Council does not deny the right of resistance to occupiers. It is the right of Iraqis to fight the American and British invaders." One of the imams emphasized national reconciliation. "Do not be vengeful toward the Baathists," he said, "but instead let the courts do their work. We must not let the occupation be an excuse for revenge. The occupation will end, a weak shadow never lasts."

A speaker sounding like a cheerleader at a political rally yelled out "no to ethnic and religious division, yes to the liberation of iraq!" The crowd responded with "yes!" I wandered among the demonstrators and saw that many were praying or fingering their prayer beads at the same time as they were responding to the speakers. There was no division, as the imams had told me, between their politics and their faith. A particularly impassioned sheik focused on women and Iraqis working with the Americans. "The occupier humiliates and searches women. A man should sacrifice himself so no one puts a hand on his woman. And you translator agents who work with the occupier, you should know we can issue a fatwa on whoever works with the Americans and you will be killed. We prefer to negotiate, to restrain our anger, but when a man restrains his anger a long time and then releases it, the result will be overwhelming." (This imam had read his Freud along with his Koran that morning.) "Now we are only speaking, but if the occupier keeps on provoking us, we will use the other option."

Before we had entered the mosque grounds, Abu Mustafa told us, in a rare burst of English, "If what anything happens, you come quick to my car." Izzi thought the moment had arrived after the last speaker as the crowd began surging toward the buses and cars. "It's not that anyone is necessarily violent," he said, "but when a demonstration ends things can happen."

When we were back in Abu Mustafa's car, Izzi said the speakers we had heard were only moderates. I asked what was his definition of a moderate. "The moderates say it's your duty to resist the occupation," he said. "The extremists come right out and say kill the infidel. Now." Izzi believed the crowd at the mosque represented only a minority of Iraqis, but it was a growing minority. I asked how he himself felt. "No one wants his country invaded," he said, "but imagine if you had leukemia. You can't get rid of it with surgery, so you have to have chemotherapy, which is hateful and kills your immune system and is even more hateful because it makes you ugly. But it keeps you alive. Once it's over and you're recovered, though, you don't want any more chemo. Saddam was leukemia. Iraq looks ugly after the American chemo, which makes us weak and vulnerable to other diseases, yet the chemo was needed to keep us going and give us a chance. Now the US occupation is a chemo we don't want." Did that mean Izzi was ready for the Americans to leave? "Actually, no," he said. "You created this mess. You put the mud in the muddle we now have. You have to clean this up before you leave."

But don't expect thanks. When I was in the Middle East the first time, in Egypt in early 1958, the streets of Cairo were thronged with revelers rejoicing in the proclamation of the United Arab Republic formed by Egypt and Syria. The force behind the merger was Egypt's president, Gamal Abdel Nasser, who was hoping to initiate an expanded Greater Arabia that could defy the West and be the scourge of Israel. Because President Eisenhower had prevented Great Britain, France and Israel from reversing Nasser's nationalization of the Suez Canal two years earlier, Americans were greeted in a very friendly manner. An Egyptian at the Pyramids told me the United States was pretty good, then added, unforgettably, "I hate the British and French like I love my eyes." Nearby was an American from the Ford Foundation, who was in Egypt to teach scientific farming methods that would allow Egyptian cotton and other crops to compete successfully on the world market because they would be grown so much more efficiently. I said I guessed that between Eisenhower's intervention on Egypt's behalf and the work of people like himself, Egyptians must really like Americans. "I think you'll find," said the agricultural specialist, who had been working abroad since the end of World War II, "that gratitude is a difficult emotion to bear for very long. After a while, it turns to resentment."

The larger point from the United Arab Republic, which was shortly joined--or rivaled--by Jordan and Iraq, forming the Arab Union, is that the vision of pan-Arabism in 1958 remained just that. Arab nationalism, which looked to me both hopeful and frightening when I watched it celebrating itself in Cairo, stumbled over disagreements, contending interests and tribal vendettas going back centuries. Both earlier and later attempts to coalesce the Arab world have ended ingloriously, abetted by Western ruses, with the vision remaining a rainbow. In Iraq, despite feuds between sects, factions and tribes, pan-Arabism has so far not competed successfully with the resolute nationalism expressed in every province, even in the north by the Kurds.

The Jewish question. At a significant number of stops along my journey Jews and Israel were identified as major problems. Jews were once estimated to constitute almost 20 percent of Baghdad; they've been gone for decades. Iraqis have worked for the cause of Palestine since the 1930s, when they tried to mediate between the Arabs, the British authorities and what was then the Jewish Agency. In the 1948 war that followed the establishment of Israel, and in the Six Day War of 1967, Iraq fought somewhat desultorily against Israel's existence. What I found this summer was something like an article of faith that Israel equals belligerent Zionism equals Jews.

At the Polytechnic Institute, a student had identified his own fury at the governing council as rooted in one member who had done business with the Israelis. "Can you imagine that," he yelled, "dealing with Israelis? Shaking hands with Jews!" He almost spat out his words. One day while I was at the American headquarters, I was told that extremists in a Toyota Land Cruiser had fired a volley of bullets into the lobby of a Baghdad hotel because they heard Jews were staying there, which was untrue. The imam who looked like Christ at 50 had warned his congregation that Jews were buying up houses in the neighborhood. He complained that the American authorities had summoned and questioned him for doing this. I asked what evidence he had that Jews were investing in Baghdad real estate. "It's only a rumor," he said, "but I felt it was my duty to pass it along. The Americans say they're staying for five years, and if that's accurate then Iraq will be transformed into a second Palestine."

"Never forget the Palestinians!" one of the speakers at the Mother of All Battles Mosque had commanded. "As soon as the roads are open we will go to fight in Palestine to support the Palestinians as part of our jihad!" Another imam led the crowd in a chant: "oh jews, oh jews, the army of mohammed will be back!" He followed the chant by intoning prayerfully, "God condemns Zionism. We will make no other decision but jihad."

Rasim Mansour, the theater director who had scored his first success playing Macbeth, maintained that Desire Under the Elms achieved a fuller meaning because O'Neill wrote the play about a Jewish family destroyed by its corrupt, aggressive patriarch. I pointed out that the families in the play are the Cabots and Putnams, venerable New England names, anything but Jewish. Rasim held his ground. "No," he said, "this shows what O'Neill thought of Jews and it is also our opinion as Arabs." I reminded Rasim that his other American playwright hero, Arthur Miller, is Jewish. "Yes, it's possible," he said, "but Miller knows the American soul. I'm not against Jews but against some of the Jewish ideas."

What might those be?

You can imagine my surprise when Rasim said the Jewish ideas he doesn't like have to do with money. "Thanks to Israel the American movie industry is great and rich, and movies are mostly in the hands of Jews," he said. "Hollywood is very advanced technically, but I admire the Italian movies more because they have real ideas. Titanic is all the Americans can do well. Spielberg is a Jew and he gives his money to Israel. He's the model for American movies, and he's a good model but he bears Jewish ideals. Why didn't American movies find a place for Orson Welles to work? He only got to make Citizen Kane and afterward he was banned because he didn't adopt the ideas of the Jews." (Somehow it didn't seem worth pointing out that the original screenplay for Citizen Kane was written by a Jew, Herman Mankiewicz.) "Yes," he went on, "it's true the blacklist happened to some Jews as well, but eventually Hollywood adopted Jewish ideas, the main one of which is to run after what is profitable."

I asked whether, as a creative person himself, he admires other artistic Jews besides Arthur Miller. "Oh yes," he said, one of my favorite poets is a Jew." He paused, and I wondered who this educated and well-read man was going to name. "Ezra Pound," he said. For the first and only time in Iraq I found myself yelling, "no, ezra pound was not a jew! in fact, he hated jews so much he made broadcasts for our enemy during world war ii and was arrested for treason afterward. he was not a jew, rasim, please!"

Rasim remained admirably calm. "No, no," he said benignly, "Ezra Pound was a Jew." He smiled. "And a very talented one, too." It occurred to me that when Rasim was having his triumph as Macbeth, perhaps Macduff, just for one performance, could have used a real sword. Rasim is not an Iraqi everyman but neither is he atypical. A high level of culture and education exists in Iraq, along with a persistent strain of tribal superstition, and sometimes these can both be found in the same person.

The point is not that Iraqis are about to mount a pogrom or march on Jerusalem. The point is that anti-Jewish feelings, as well as rhetoric, constitute a theme, religiously and politically, in the life of countless Iraqis. I was told that the killer of Randa's friend Jeff undoubtedly received a bonus when it was revealed that Jeff was Jewish. The Bush Administration has its hands full if it proposes to construct an Iraq that accepts Israel, that can distinguish between Jews and a Jewish state, that can regard a Jew as an individual and not as an embodiment of evil motives. Unlike the other tasks of the occupation, this will not be a reconstruction; it will be an original piece of architecture. The dream of US policy-makers that they can use Iraq as a talisman to bewitch the rest of the Middle East into embracing democracy and Israel may prove as illusory as the Arabs' own quest for regional unity.

Our imperial errand is not so hard to begin, not so easy to complete. We conquistadors currently have a government for whom the dollar is a communion wafer. How much of a surprise is it, then, that we hope to make Iraqis buy everything from education to medical care? If we won't provide these at home, can we really be expected to give them to a vanquished enemy? And then there is the resistance. Each day the bulletin board at US headquarters lists coalition accomplishments--new schools in session, police academy graduations, a clinic reopened. Casualties are also noted--one soldier killed, ten injured, for two days no casualties, then five soldiers killed. With postcombat American deaths surpassing those of the invasion itself, we might ask, What is the acceptable balance among these statistics?

In a sleight of hand faster than the eye can see, combined with an Alphonse-Gaston routine, a US official answers a question about what is going on by telling you to ask the Iraqi governing council, it's their country. Go to the governing council for the answer, and they say the Americans are in charge, ask them. They are both accurate, both insincere. This gives the press the opportunity to cover events staged either by the coalition or the resisters, which allows a pessimist to conclude everything is a mess while the optimist can say it's all going according to plan. The fundamental US public-relations effort is driven not by accurate information but by political doctrine. Eventually, whether we condemn or support the occupation, we look at it through a moral lens, but the lens is ground, and grounded, in America. Iraqis, with their own lens, will never see the same view.

Forget the Bremer operation for a moment: He's doing a good job or a poor job, he has good people with him and they're struggling, or he has self-interested bureaucrats who want to award contracts and then catch on with their clients like Kellogg Brown & Root or Bechtel once the initial phase of the occupation is over. The uglier fact jumping up to be seen and heard is that we are two vitally separate kinds of societies. What the majority of Iraqis I spoke with (of both genders) want to do with women should not happen, in our view, to any human being. Conversely, the society we want to make Iraqis fit into never worked with groups as disparate as Native Americans and Vietnamese, so what makes us think it will work in Iraq?

Japan and Germany are what make us think that. Both of them are, however, homogeneous societies with rich histories of organization, and the main thing we had to do was shift that organization. In both cases it took seven years, but we were able to do it because they were rigorously structured in the first place. Crucially, we had beaten them in long wars that utterly sapped their will to resist, and in the case of one of them we had dropped, in the space of seventy-two hours, two bombs that took the lives of more than 200,000 people, almost all civilians. "Collateral damage" be damned; the civilians were the point. In the case of the other, it was the second time in three decades they had fought, and lost, a major war. No more fight left in those dogs. The army of Iraq mostly did not fight at all, and it assuredly did not surrender.

Iraq today is unarmied, but it is hardly unarmed. Many thousands of former soldiers are out there still, angry young men without jobs or purpose, and you feel this wherever you go in Iraq. They will choose when, where, and whom to attack. In addition, Islamic fundamentalists are coming--a trickle? a stream? who knows?--through the sieve of Iraq's borders from all over Arabia to fight the infidel. In August the insurgency struck down the valiant peacemaker Sergio Vieira de Mello along with at least twenty-two others at UN headquarters in Baghdad. "It just breaks my heart and leaves me so angry," a UN colleague of Vieira de Mello's e-mailed me, "at the arrogance and stupidity of US policy that has created such a muck-up and ruined the lives of so many innocents in the process." Vieira de Mello, who could have been a worthy successor to Kofi Annan, instead became a victim of holy rage stoked by the vanity of a US President who invites violence with his swaggering "bring 'em on" challenge to militants.

One afternoon in US headquarters, at a sparsely attended press conference, an American official from somewhere in the hierarchy's mid-range was announcing the appointment of a number of Iraqi bureaucrats to positions in the police and fire departments of Baghdad, as well as to chairmanships of district and neighborhood councils. Since the event was not considered important enough to warrant the presence of a translator, and since the appointees of course knew what their new jobs were, they simply sat and looked up appreciatively at the speaker they did not understand. "The power," the American official concluded truthfully, "has just now shifted back to the Iraqis."

(C) The Nation

--------------------------------------------------

Columbia Journalism Review may/june 2003

Rebuilding Iraq's Media

By Borzou Daragahi

Hassan Hadi, a Muslim cleric and would-be director of television and radio for the Islamic Information Network, sat in his Baghdad office and fumed. It was late May, and six weeks earlier the U.S. military had freed Iraq of Saddam Hussein’s tyranny, allowing Hadi to freely practice his Shiite faith, speak his mind, and even launch a newspaper called Voice of Friday. But now he railed against the Americans who had taken over the Iraqi capital’s television and radio facilities and begun broadcasting.

A petition signed by former television employees authorized Hadi to speak in their name, and thus the Americans, he said, were defying the will of the Iraqi people. The Hawza, a famed Shiite seminary run by ayatollahs in the holy Iraqi city of Najaf, had granted Hadi authority over Baghdad’s airwaves, and thus the Americans were also defying the will of God. “In America there is freedom of everything,” says the white-turbaned cleric. “Press, food, drink, dancing, and even sex. The Iraqi people are a Muslim people, and such things are not acceptable here. The media is just like food. You have to clean it and make sure there’s no poison before you distribute it.”

Across town, behind razor-wire-shrouded checkpoints manned by peach-faced American soldiers, a group of Iraqi journalists and American advisers assembled news segments for the Iraqi Media Network (IMN), the U.S.-backed reincarnation of the country’s hated — and now dissolved, bombed, looted, and torched — Ministry of Information. They have their own dream for the Iraqi media: a freewheeling cross between the BBC and PBS. “The vision is to provide the Iraqi people with a European broadcasting system model,” says Mike Furlong, a senior adviser to the U.S. media reconstruction effort.

IMN employees — many of whom are former low-level information ministry employees who now wear U.S. Defense Department badges — use the makeshift broadcast equipment in the dilapidated Baghdad Convention Center to put together reports about mass graves, freed prisoners, electricity shortages, and even a few stories critical of the pace and style of the American reconstruction effort.

Their boss in Baghdad, Ahmad al Rikabi, a thirty-three-year-old Iraqi who was raised in Sweden, says he’s keen on teaching his employees the rules of balanced journalism. “Trying to create a free media based on the experience of the journalists in the last thirty years is almost impossible, so you have to change the mentality,” says al Rikabi, a former London bureau chief of Radio Free Iraq. “We don’t serve the government.”

Time will tell whether the U.S. advisers — working with like-minded Iraqis — can create an Iraqi Jim Lehrer without provoking the country’s traditionalists and Islamists. The Islamists, in turn, are joined in their battle for Iraq’s airwaves by Iran’s ubiquitous, anti-American television and radio broadcasts. The Iranian broadcasts — often the only television available to Iraqis — mix poetry, music, and language classes with news reports about the “Zionist entity” and experts urging Iraqis to ignore the U.S. and take control of the government.

What the Americans hope to create is unprecedented in authoritarian Arab countries like Iraq, says Massoud Derhally, an editor of Arabian Business, a Dubai-based monthly magazine. “In Arab countries, you have media that toe the line,” he says. And it may also be unrealistic to expect the Iraqi media to be a carbon copy of the U.S. press. But in between the efforts of the Americans on one end of the scale and the Iranians on the other, a new and unexpected media force has emerged from the rubble of Iraq. By late May, nearly 100 new publications and a handful of broadcast outlets were available in Baghdad, with others launching in major Iraqi cities such as Kirkuk, Mosul, and Basra. They are communist, monarchist, Kurdish, Assyrian, Islamist, nationalist, and secularist. Some are shrill and tawdry, like London tabloids. Others are staid and dry, like a New York broadsheet. But they are Iraqi.

And what their editors and reporters say about their visions for a post-Saddam media challenges the assumptions of both Iraq’s foreign administrators as well as its domestic guardians of virtue.

Iraqis like to say that they gave mankind the written word 5,000 years ago. Iraqi journalists boast that the first Arabic newspaper, Al Zawra, was printed in Baghdad 135 years ago, and that the nation’s first television station was launched in 1956, the same year that TV came to Sweden. Spirited, mostly politically partisan papers flourished until the late 1960s. Iraqis continue to pride themselves on their appetite for the printed word. “What is written in Cairo is published in Beirut but read in Baghdad,” the saying goes.

All this ended in the violent coup d’état of July 17,1968, that ushered in the era of Hussein’s Baath Party. One of the Baathists’ first acts was to jail Abdel Aziz Barakat, then head of the journalists’ union, and shut down his newspaper, al Manar, which at the time was one of the most professional dailies in Iraq. Barakat was charged as an American spy and executed a month later.

Baathists placed a stranglehold on the press, turning it into a tool to glorify Saddam and his family. Underground or independent media were unheard of. Decree number 840, which Saddam signed in 1986, made death the maximum penalty for criticizing the government. Even carrying copies of unofficial newspapers posed a huge risk. In 2001, Kurdish officials say, a man was caught in the city of Khaneqin with a copy of al Ittihad, one of the newspapers published in the Kurdish-run northern section of Iraq. He was sentenced to twenty-one years in jail.

Tales from Saddam’s prisons filled the nightmares of fearful journalists. The names of disappeared journalists went unspoken. Theraqem Hashem, a writer for Horass al Waqtan magazine, was arrested in 1992 and never heard from again. Aziz al Sayed Jassem, who wrote political books, was arrested in 1991 and disappeared after he refused to write a book extolling Saddam’s glories. That same year Durgham Hashemi, a young journalist at al Thawra, disappeared a week after he criticized articles in his own newspaper that claimed Iraq’s Shiite Arabs came from India. As many as 500 Iraqi journalists, artists, writers, and intellectuals have been executed or disappeared and are presumed dead since 1968, according to the International Alliance for Justice, a French human rights group.

But Saddam’s grip on the media wasn’t airtight. Though heavily infiltrated by the intelligence services, for example, the faculty of the University of Baghdad’s College of Mass Media tried to teach their students the fundamentals of good reporting. “When I taught I would give the academic view,” says Mo’ayed al Khafaf, a lecturer at the college. “How to write news, how to write a column, how to conduct an investigation. We taught students that they had to be brave, tell the truth, and be accurate.” The problem, al Khafaf says, wasn’t what students studied, but rather that the Ministry of Information controlled everything they wrote.

Even Iraq’s American administrators are impressed with the skills of Iraq’s journalists. “There are a lot of talented young people who just need some training, some highly technically competent people,” says Mike Furlong.

In 1992, Saddam’s oldest son, Uday — by all accounts, a brutal man who treated his pet lions far better than his many underlings — was “unanimously” elected head of the journalists’ union and launched a number of purportedly independent publications, television stations, and radio operations. These allowed Saddam and Uday to attack their opponents without the formal imprimatur of the state-owned media. They also allowed the government to expand its system of rewards for sycophantic journalists. One broadcaster, for instance, received $2,500 and a Honda for his on-air call for the reelection of Saddam Hussein, says Khalil Ibrahim, a reporter for Fajr Baghdad.

But some of the journalists on Uday’s payroll — many were graduates of the College of Mass Media — took the independent label seriously.

In 1997 Nab al Shabab, the Uday-controlled weekly paper of the Youth Union, began publishing articles that were unprecedented both in terms of their subject matter and as examples of journalists trying hard to retain their integrity in the harshest environment. “We criticized the government’s behavior,” says Mohamed Bedewi al Shamari, a former Nab al Shabab writer who is now an editor for Ashiraa, a new, 5,000-circulation weekly. “We criticized the checkpoints, the limited freedoms of the people, the actions of the Baathist security officers. We called on the government to respect the people’s rights.” Al Shamari and others who worked at these “independent” publications say they were able to get away with such criticism, ironically, because of the twisted reality of life under Saddam. Because they were known as Uday’s publications, others in the regime mostly left them alone. And although Uday was a despot in his own right, he was also a bit of a loose cannon, these journalists say, and he argued with his father over what the papers wrote. Still, journalists did not dare criticize Saddam Hussein directly.

Instead, they pecked around him. One article in 1998 by Hashem Hassan, Nab al Shabab’s editor, accused Deputy Prime Minister Tariq Aziz of wasting his time and the country’s money on foreign trips and speeches. Others chronicled the growing prostitution and crime problems. “We always went out in the streets and reported these stories out,” says Saad al Awsi, a former news director of Nab al Shabab.

But in March 1998 the newspaper pushed too far, publishing a satirical front-page piece about Iraqi opposition groups. The headline, announcement #1, typically heralds a coming change in government. The piece included photos of opposition figures, such as Ahmad Chalabi.

Saddam cracked down. The paper’s staff was pushed out. Al Awsi was banned from writing. Al Shamari managed a job at Musawar al Arabi, another Uday-owned weekly, and began writing an opinion column that touched upon the same themes. In September 1998, two men in an unmarked car came to his office and took al Shamari away. He was jailed for eight days without charges. “They didn’t even take down my name,” al Shamari says. “They were trying to send a message.”

Hashem Hassan was briefly jailed, too, and eventually fled to the autonomous Kurdish north early last year, where freedom from Saddam’s rule since 1991 has ushered in a relatively free press, including several newspapers completely independent of political parties.

Over time, many Iraqi journalists fled Saddam’s rule and found success in other countries. And today’s media bloom springs in part from these long-dormant seeds of press freedom planted years earlier.

The media universe in Iraq these days is populated by everything from Islamists to exiled media tycoons to local politicians to collectives run by idealistic journalists. Regardless of their ultimate goal, though, all are far more likely to look for guidance to the wider Arab world, or to their own traditions, than to America and the West.

The London-based Azzaman, run by an exiled Iraqi journalist, began planning to publish an Iraq edition months before Saddam’s fall. The full-color, twenty-page daily, carrying international and local news as well as celebrity gossip and sports, has wowed Baghdad. Filled with news from around the world and the Middle East, the mildly Arab-nationalist paper often publishes articles skeptical of U.S. aims in Iraq and the region. And it’s the hottest paper in town, with a circulation that Hathem Aziza, Azzaman’s general manager, claims has grown to 30,000. He hopes to reach 50,000 by summer’s end, and 100,000 by the end of the year. Editions of Azzaman are also published in London, Bahrain, and Algeria.

Just days after the regime fell, volunteers in the city of Karbala, southwest of Baghdad, took over an abandoned 100-watt television substation and began broadcasting over a range of about twelve miles. Karbala TV mixes Koranic verses with pirated satellite news broadcasts, cartoons, and local news segments about the city’s electrical and water problems, put together by volunteers using handheld camcorders. Announcers sit in a scruffy “studio:” a desk and chair in front of a black backdrop. A committee of locals runs the station, making programming decisions by consensus. “It’s a free, independent television station,” says Haydar Noori, an electrical engineer who spends his spare time as a technician. “We don’t receive any support from anyone.”

Meanwhile, Najaf TV broadcasts eight hours a day from a tiny one-kilowatt substation once used to strengthen Baghdad broadcasts. “We cover all of Najaf’s problems, the city council elections, the gas shortage,” says Ali Abdul Kareem Kashaf al Qeta, the volunteer station manager who fled Iraq after he launched Radio Najaf during the Shiite uprising against Saddam that was brutally crushed in 1991. “We found out early that the problem of water was connected to the electricity problem,” he says. “We broadcast images of the destroyed power stations and got people to fix the problem. Now the water is back.”

New newspapers include Al Riazy al Jadeed, a sports weekly, and the Baghdad Bulletin, an English-language bimonthly launched by American college students studying in Lebanon. The twice-weekly Al Ahrar was launched with $10,000 by a thirty-six-year-old candy merchant. The twice-weekly Asaa, with a print run of 10,000, is overseen by Adeeb Shabaan, Uday’s longtime personal secretary, who had a falling-out with him and was imprisoned in the last months of the regime.

The new publications mostly crib reports from the wires as well as major international and Arabic newspapers. Some of them, though not all, are little more than mouthpieces for political parties and groups that have sprung up. The free, eight-page Communist party paper was among the first to hit Baghdad’s streets after Saddam’s fall. “It appears the political press is getting in first and gaining advantage,” says Mark Pomar, president of IREX, a Washington-based group that has helped train independent media in Eastern Europe and Asia.

The new press remains obsessed with the Saddam era and haunted by his Baath party’s thirty-five-year rule. Articles about his misdeeds and mass graves fill the pages. The papers pump out salacious stories about Saddam and his family’s troubles and exploits, making them sound like characters in Dynasty rather than fearsome dictators. qusay grabbed $1 billion and 70 billion euros before the war, screamed a headline in Al Adala, a new daily published by the pro-Iranian Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq. uday and his mother killed man who introduced him to saddam’s second wife, said Al Shams, a new weekly. uday offered $1.5 million to fire editor in chief of jordanian newspaper, said Al Sumer, a highbrow daily published by the Iraqi Media Network. after three years of a secret relationship, woman married saddam after he forced her to divorce her husband, reported Al Resalah, a religious weekly.

The new press also hasn’t been shy about publishing negative articles on the motives and methods of the American invasion force, which now numbers nearly 160,000. u.s. and europeans race to win iraq mobile phone contracts, reported Al Ayam. security has become a dream that will never come true, read a headline in al Adala, over an article declaring that Iraq will never have true safety until the Americans leave and a national government takes over. under america’s watch, raping, killing, burning and looting, said Al Ahrar.

Despite all the freedom, criticism of the influence and methods of Iraq’s religious leaders is still off limits. Many journalists say Iraq remains at heart a traditional, religious country. “We don’t have to criticize sacred values, especially in the beginning,” says Hamid Ali Alkifaey, a former Iraqi exile journalist.

If the press has refrained from critiquing the political power of the Islamic hierarchy, it has enthusiastically published photographs of scantily clad women that would offend Islamists’ cultural sensitivities. Back pages are filled with celebrity gossip and chatter from the Arab world as well as Hollywood. who will be miss universe? asked a headline in Alahali, a new weekly, above a picture of a former Panamanian beauty queen, Justine Pasek, wearing a see-through blouse. egyptian actress chosen to portray saddam’s girlfriend in upcoming movie, declared a headline on the back page of Azzaman.

The media explosion will likely abate unless the Iraqi economy — eroded by twelve years of sanctions and then knocked flat by the war — quickly picks up and generates advertising revenue, say experts at nonprofit organizations who’ve rebuilt media in other war-torn countries. “Now we can see a thousands flowers blooming,” said Antti Kuusi of the Baltic Media Centre, a Denmark-based organization. “But it won’t last, because no media here is able to function profitably.”

In addition to money, the newspapers need a legal framework in which to operate. In early June, Iraqi opposition figures and journalist-rights activists gathered in Athens for a forum on an Iraqi media law. “We want to have an independent media,” says Hamid Ali Alkifaey, one of the conference’s organizers. “And you can’t have new media without a new media law that clearly defines the relationship between the press and the government.”

Meanwhile, the U.S. authorities in Baghdad were drafting a media “code of conduct” — including the licensing of broadcast outlets and a possible regulatory board to monitor media. This elicited howls of protest from Iraqi journalists, who called it censorship. At press time, details of the code — as well as its ultimate fate — were not available. But the idea, say U.S. officials, is to prevent hate speech or ideas that hinder the development of a civil society. “There’s no room for hateful messages that will destabilize the emerging Iraqi democracy,” says Mike Furlong.

In addition to the Americans, a handful of international organizations have mobilized to help Iraqi journalists. In late April and early May, representatives from media charities and liberal publications such as The Nation and Salon met in London to coordinate efforts to rebuild Iraq’s media, says Rohan Jayasekera, a veteran of reconstruction efforts in Afghanistan, the Balkans, Sri Lanka, Georgia, and Cyprus. “Of all these countries, Iraq has the resources to rebuild its media in the long run,” says Jayasekera. “You have money, education, political participation. You add all that together and it’s a great growing environment for independent, professional media.”

For now, though, most Iraqi journalists have put aside worries about long-term survival as they dive joyfully into new freedoms and reconnect to their nation’s literary past. After graduating from journalism school, Ashtar Ali Yasseri, twenty-five, wrote for al Zawra, a mouthpiece for Uday’s journalists’ union. After the fall of Saddam, she and her father relaunched Habezbooz, a satirical Baghdad paper last published in 1932. One early issue of the illustrated weekly included a mock interview with Jay Garner, then the Pentagon’s top man in Iraq, in which he describes his love of Mosul’s kabobs. “This is the best time for this kind of newspaper,” says Ali Yasseri. “It’s good to make fun of things. It feels good to laugh.”

Al Manar has also been relaunched after a thirty-five-year absence, and dedicated to its founder, Aziz Abdel Barakat, the journalism union chief whose execution in 1968 marked the beginning of the Iraqi media’s darkest days. The 15,000-circulation daily has ambition, with forty journalists and bureaus in Hilla, Karbala, Najaf, Basra, Kirkuk, and Mosul. Without working phone lines, reporters file stories via courier, says Taha Arif Muhammad, the sprightly sixty-seven-year-old editor for whom Barakat was a mentor. “Some day, we would love to add bureaus in Jordan, Syria, and the United Arab Emirates,” he said.

One day in late May, two American soldiers — most likely from Army civil affairs units — came by to ask Muhammad what his newspaper needed. “I told them, ‘We don’t want financial support or equipment or any other kind of help,’” he recalls. “‘But if you have any news tips, please give them to us.’”

------------------

Borzou Daragahi, a Tehran-based journalist, wrote about the rebirth of Afghanistan’s media for the July/August 2002 cjr. He can be reached at borzou@aol.com.

------------------------------------------------------

Columbia Journalism Review may/june 2003

Books

When Mondes Collide
Has the watchdog of France gone mad?


LA FACE CACHÉE DU MONDE: Du contre-pouvoir aux abus de pouvoir
By Pierre Péan and Philippe Cohen
Editions Mille et Une Nuits
631 pp. 24 Euros



REVIEWED BY MARK HUNTER

After two long decades in which Le Monde led the French assault on corruption in politics and business — a protracted muckraking era à la française — the authors Pierre Péan and Philippe Cohen, respectively France’s leading free-lance investigative reporter and a business editor at the weekly Marianne, charge that it is no longer the watchdog, but the mad dog of France. The authors claim that “the place taken by this daily in the life and operations of the Republic is now decisive,” and that the misuse of that power is directly responsible for a “degradation of democratic life in this country.” They aren’t just saying that Le Monde, with a circulation of over 400,000, sets a biased agenda for the rest of France’s media, but that it increasingly creates the events it covers, for its own profit.

The book makes some telling points: Le Monde destroys not only corrupt politicians, but respectable leaders and citizens, on the basis of distorted evidence. One passage details how a government minister was forced to resign after Le Monde used scissor-cut quotes from his book about his days as the mayor of a rundown suburb to paint him as a racist. The daily also dictates policies at the highest levels of power — for example, by intervening in the government’s attempts to resolve the crisis in Corsica, including publishing detailed information, apparently leaked by an ambitious official, that let a suspected Corsican nationalist assassin escape arrest. Some of these tales are known to anyone who regularly reads the Parisian press, but Péan and Cohen have documented them in startling depth and profusion.

Most startling, perhaps, is the revelation that Le Monde trades its power and pages for cash. In one of the book’s best-documented chapters, we follow negotiations with the Norwegian media conglomerate, Schibsted, in 2000, as it sought to launch a free daily newspaper in France. For Le Monde, the potential rewards included contracts for its printing plant, a piece of the new daily’s capital, and a proportional cut of the profits. In exchange, Le Monde promised to use “all the intellectual means at its disposal” for the project’s success, specifically including lobbying among various “actors, institutions, or companies,” and “public opinion.” The deal fell through, and Le Monde’s editorial page demanded the “intervention” of public authorities to stop free dailies, in the name of journalism: “A question of principle is posed: Does not making information free devalue it?” Maybe — but then, what was Le Monde doing with Schibsted in the first place?

A dreadful irony permeates these passages. Le Monde’s founder, Hubert Beuve-Méry, spent his career trying to set an example of public service and independence for a French press crippled by its collaboration with financiers and politicians before 1940, and with the Nazis immediately thereafter. After founding Le Monde in the newly liberated offices of an Occupation-era newspaper in 1944, Beuve-Méry defined his journal’s credo in an icily proud phrase: “We are poor, and we intend to remain so.” Le Monde’s strength was that it could not be bought. After surviving repeated financial crises, it has turned into a media group that defines its independence differently: Get rich, so no one can mess with you.

The book sold out its first printing of 20,000 copies within hours of publication, another 40,000 the first day, not counting copious extracts in the newsweekly L’Express, and current sales are estimated at over 250,000, according to the publisher — huge figures for France. It has generated a massive online debate, a still rare occurrence in France. Even rarer was an editorial in which Le Monde, which tends to dismiss criticism unless forced to respond by legal threats, conceded that a powerful newspaper may indeed “use its influence ill-advisedly, and it can be tempted to abuse its power.” Nonetheless, the book’s chief targets — Le Monde’s director Jean-Marie Colombani, board director Alain Minc, and editor-in-chief Edwy Plenel — plus eight other plaintiffs, filed separate lawsuits for defamation, collectively asking for over $1 million in damages plus publication of the judgment in numerous journals.

My guess is that Péan and Cohen will find themselves in trouble when they go to court. (A trial date has not been set, and the case may not be heard before the winter.) They claim to perform a public service, “for Le Monde, and against those” — the plaintiffs — “who brought it where it is today.” That surely won’t exempt them from the two basic tests of French libel law, which are to get the story exactly right or to have shown “good faith” in researching and telling it. They repeatedly fail both tests. Multiple passages here are unprovable, badly sourced, or simply outright nasty. A tidbit gives the general flavor: Plenel is accused of using his journalism for a Trotskyist party in his youth as an “alibi” to prove to his father that he was doing something serious in life while his old man paid his bills. This unsourced insult hardly explains how Plenel came to play a historic role as the leading practitioner and theorist of French investigative reporting in the 1980s.

Cheap shots like these undercut one of the book’s key themes — that investigative reporting in France has become a public menace: “This model of a moralizing, policing, even denouncing” — the French term used here, délateur, retains the sinister aura it acquired under the Nazis’ boot — “journalism imposes its law from international news to culture.” The proclaimed purity of the media’s investigators becomes the pretext for a new corruption, of power without limit. One example among many: The authors recount how Le Monde (followed by the rest of France’s media) trumpeted a highly dubious accusation of sexual harassment against a prominent intellectual, brought by a close relation of friends of one of the paper’s directors.

The same charges against the media emerged in the U.S. after Watergate, but the context changes the content. The Hidden Face of Le Monde details (though it is not the first work to do so) how the paper gets nearly all its scoops: by persuading sources inside the judicial administration to feed it secret documents from corruption cases. Beginning in the early 1990s, that technique was used by French reporters and magistrates to prevent political leaders from quietly smothering corruption cases. Péan and Cohen argue that it is now used to blow cases out of proportion: In the fall of 1999, Le Monde forced the Socialist Minister of Finances, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, out of office on the ground that any minister who had been indicted should resign. In fact, though Strauss-Kahn was implicated in a fraud scandal, he hadn’t been indicted. He was later tried for having antedated a consulting bill, but was acquitted.

As the authors point out, Le Monde’s pages have become France’s contemporary Balzac, a feuilleton that readers can follow day by day. But feeding the daily scoop machine means running a growing risk of being manipulated by anyone with damaging information, true or not, about a public figure. Thus rivals of President Jacques Chirac nearly sabotaged his campaign in 1995 by feeding Le Monde the phony “news” that he and his wife cut a sweetheart land deal with a municipal agency of Paris.

The fact remains that before Plenel and a thin platoon of other reporters made it their business to crack the state’s doings, France was a country in which very little could be or was said about the ways of its rulers. Shattering that secrecy was no small or ignoble feat. But the authors argue that the state legitimately requires secrecy to go about its work. It’s an argument that can lead to disaster, as the Pentagon Papers demonstrated in 1971. But that doesn’t mean it’s totally without merit. Unfortunately, the authors’ idea of a demonstration is to accuse Plenel of attacking one of former President François Mitterrand’s close advisers “because he tried to protect the apparatus of the State” from Plenel’s “constant incursions.” In the process, one of Plenel’s historic scoops — that the French secret services bombed a boat belonging to Greenpeace at Auckland in 1985, killing one of the passengers — is portrayed as a mere by-product of a power struggle inside the government, with Plenel in the role of a manipulated and manipulating mouthpiece. I’d say a pointless killing went down, and people in high places let it go down until reporters exposed it. How can you justify keeping murder secret?

Another charge rings more true: The real investigative work in Paris isn’t in Le Monde anymore. (One of its staffers candidly admits, “Our rule is to follow judicial inquiries, we don’t do our own.”) That honor belongs to reporters like Hervé Liffran at the weekly Canard Enchaîné, who broke the story of voting fraud in Paris by computer-assisted analysis of voter lists. The authors are right in suggesting that Plenel’s many imitators, at Le Monde and elsewhere, have inherited his legendary aggressiveness without his talent or his network of highly-placed sources. The result — just as in the U.S. when every cub reporter was a wannabe Woodstein — is a bullying, superficial brand of exposés. Not for nothing do opinion surveys show that public confidence in the veracity of media reports is sinking in France.

Do the authors map a better future for French journalism? Not really, though Péan could have. He practices a method based on the patient gathering and analysis of public information, followed by the cultivation of targeted source relationships leading to material held outside the state. His past exploits include beating Plenel to the documented facts about Mitterrand’s past as an official of the Nazi-collaborating Vichy regime. But he makes an odd match with Cohen, who belongs to the old polemical tradition of French reporting. Cohen’s hand shows in a fourteen-page chapter comparing Le Monde’s published accounts to Enron’s, based largely on an anonymous financier’s brutal opinions, at a moment when Le Monde is considering selling shares on the Paris stock exchange. If this is the future of French investigative reporting, it’s no improvement.

Has this book changed anything? It has for me. In 1995 I withheld suing Le Monde after it ran a review of one of my investigative books. The review, by a staff writer who was criticized in the work, began with an invented quote and was capped by accusations that key passages were either “fictive” or politically motivated. He did not mention my criticism of him to his readers, and Le Monde never published my reply. But how could I prosecute a journal that did so much to make my own investigative work in France possible? Next time, I’ll follow the example of Colombani, Minc, and Plenel. The bad smell in this book isn’t due only to the garbage that should have been dumped before publication. Le Monde is not quite as bad as the authors say, but that isn’t much of a compliment. We who live in France have lost a public good, and God knows when we will get it back.

-----------------
During his twenty-one years in France, Mark Hunter has either written about, competed with, and/or written for Pierre Péan, Edwy Plenel, and Le Monde. This year he won an Investigative Reporters and Editors award for international reporting.

---------------------------------------------------

Foreign Policy / September 2003

Think Again: The United Nations

Bureaucratic. Ineffective. Undemocratic. Anti-United States. And after the bitter debate over the use of force in Iraq, critics might add “useless” to the list of adjectives describing the United Nations. So why was the United Nations the first place the Bush administration went for approval after winning the war? Because for $1.25 billion a year—roughly what the Pentagon spends every 32 hours—the United Nations is still the best investment that the world can make in stopping AIDS and SARS, feeding the poor, helping refugees, and fighting global crime and the spread of nuclear weapons.

By Madeleine K. Albright

"The United Nations Has Become Irrelevant"

No. The second Gulf War battered the U.N. Security Council's already shaky prestige. Hawks condemned the council for failing to bless the war; opponents for failing to block it. Nevertheless, when major combat stopped, the United States and Great Britain rushed to seek council authorization for their joint occupation of Iraq, the lifting of sanctions, and the right to market Iraqi oil.

What lessons will emerge from the wrangle over Iraq? Will France, Russia, and China grudgingly concede U.S. dominance and cooperate sufficiently to keep the United States from routinely bypassing the Security Council? Or might they form an opposition bloc that paralyzes the body? Will the United States and United Kingdom proceed triumphantly? Or will they suffer so many headaches in Iraq that they conclude, in hindsight, that initiating the war without council support was a mistake?

Both sides have reason to move toward cooperation. The French, Russians, and Chinese all derive outsized influence from their status as permanent Security Council members; they see the panel as a means to mitigate U.S. hegemony and do not want the White House to pronounce it dead. And despite their unilateralist tendencies, Bush administration officials will welcome council support when battling terrorists and rogue states in the future. Although the council is not and never has been the preeminent arbiter of war and peace that its supporters wish it were, it remains the most widely accepted source of international legitimacy—and legitimacy still has meaning, even for empires. That is why U.S. President George W. Bush and U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell both made their major prewar, pro-war presentations before a U.N. audience.

Beyond the council itself, the United Nations' ongoing relevance is evident in the work of the more than two dozen organizations comprising the U.N. system. In 2003 alone, the International Atomic Energy Agency reported that Iran had processed nuclear materials in violation of its Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty obligations; the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia tried deposed Yugoslav leader Slobodan Milosevic for genocide; and the World Health Organization successfully coordinated the global response to severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS). Meanwhile, the World Food Programme has fed more than 70 million people annually for the last five years; the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees maintains a lifeline to the international homeless; the U.N. Children's Fund has launched a campaign to end forced childhood marriage; the Joint U.N. Programme on HIV/AIDS remains a focal point for global efforts to defeat HIV/AIDS; and the U.N. Population Fund helps families plan, mothers survive, and children grow up healthy in the most impoverished places on earth. The United Nations may seem useless to the self-satisfied, narrow-minded, and micro-hearted minority, but to most of the world's population, it remains highly relevant indeed.

"Relations Between the United States and the United Nations Are at an All-Time Low"

Not even close. One day before the U.N. General Assembly convened in 1952, Republican Sen. Joseph McCarthy of Wisconsin began hearings in New York on the loyalty of U.S. citizens employed by the United Nations. A federal grand jury then opened a competing inquiry in the same city on the same subject. (Some U.N. employees called to testify even invoked their constitutional right against self-incrimination.) The furor generated massive indignation and mutual U.S.-U.N. distrust. J.B. Mathews, chief investigator for the House Un-American Activities Committee, declared that the United Nations "could not be less of a cruel hoax if it had been organized in Hell for the sole purpose of aiding and abetting the destruction of the United States."

East-West and North-South tensions transformed the General Assembly into hostile territory through much of the 1970s and 1980s. U.S. ambassadors such as Daniel P. Moynihan and Jeane Kirkpatrick earned combat pay rebutting the verbal pyrotechnics of delegates in the throes of anti-Semitic passions and Marxist moonbeams. The low point was the passage in 1975 of a resolution equating Zionism with racism.

In the 1990s, supporters of the Contract With America, led by Republican Rep. Newt Gingrich of Georgia, lambasted U.N. peacekeeping, blocked payment of U.N. dues, and ridiculed U.N. programs. Similarly, Republican Sen. Jesse Helms of North Carolina spoke for many of the far-right-minded but wrong-headed when he termed the United Nations "the nemesis of millions of Americans."

Today, according to the Pew Global Attitudes Project, U.S. citizens consider U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan the fourth most respected world leader (trailing, in order, British Prime Minister Tony Blair, U.S. President George W. Bush, and Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon). The United States has paid back most of its acknowledged U.N. arrears. The United Nations' agenda and core U.S. security interests have gradually converged. For example, the U.N. Charter says nothing about the importance of elected government, yet U.N. missions routinely sponsor democratic transitions, monitor elections, and promote free institutions. The charter explicitly prohibits U.N. intervention in the internal affairs of any government (save for enforcement actions), yet the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, created in 1993 at the United States' urging, exists solely to nudge governments to do the right thing by their own people. The United Nations' founders never mentioned terrorism, yet today the United Nations encourages governments to ratify antiterrorist conventions, freeze terrorist assets, and tighten security on land, in air, and at sea. Polls continue to show that a significant majority of U.S. citizens believe the United States should seek U.N. authorization before using force and should cooperate with other nations through the world body.

"The Bush Administration's Doctrine of Preemption Is Not Authorized by the U.N. Charter"

So? The charter calls upon states to attempt to settle disputes peacefully and, failing that, to refer matters to the Security Council for appropriate action. Article 51 provides that nothing in the charter "shall impair the inherent right of individual or collective self-defense if an armed attack occurs against a Member of the United Nations, until the Security Council has taken measures necessary to maintain international peace and security."

Compare that to this passage from President Bush's 2002 National Security Strategy: "Given the goals of rogue states and terrorists, the United States can no longer solely rely on a reactive posture as we have in the past. The inability to deter a potential attacker, the immediacy of today's threats, and the magnitude of potential harm that could be caused by our adversaries' choice of weapons, do not permit that option. We cannot let our enemies strike first."

The mystery here is not what the administration said, but rather why it chose to arouse global controversy by elevating what has always been a residual option into a highly publicized doctrine. In reality, no U.S. president would allow an international treaty to prevent actions genuinely necessary to deter or preempt imminent attack upon the United States. The notion that the United States has relied solely "on a reactive posture" in the past is not true. In the name of self-defense, U.S. administrations of both parties initiated actions during the Cold War that violated the sovereignty of other nations. In 1994, the Clinton administration considered military strikes against nuclear facilities in North Korea. In 1998, U.S. President Bill Clinton launched cruise missiles into Afghanistan and Sudan in retaliation for the terrorist bombing of two U.S. embassies in Africa and in an effort to prevent al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden from striking again.

Whether tracking the language of Article 51 or not, the Bush administration's preemption doctrine will prove a departure from past practice only if it is implemented in a manner that is aggressive, indifferent to precedent, and careless of the information used to justify military action. Calibrated and effective actions taken against real enemies posing an imminent danger should not overturn the international legal apple cart. Measures wide of that standard would indeed raise troubling questions about whether the United States is setting itself above the law or tacitly acknowledging the right of every nation to act militarily against threats that are merely potential and suspected. The administration approached that line by invading Iraq, but the issue was blurred by the multiple rationales given for the conflict—enforcement of Security Council resolutions (relatively strong legal grounds), self-defense (in this case, shaky), and liberation (shakier still). The issue now is whether the administration intends to strike first against nuclear aspirants North Korea and Iran (and, if so, on what evidence) and whether it will exhaust other options first. Thus far, the administration is traveling the diplomatic route.

"Political Correctness Often Trumps Substance at the United Nations"

Correct. The Cold War and the rapid growth in U.N. membership following decolonization shaped the United Nations' civil service, requiring the distribution of jobs on the basis of geography rather than qualifications. The U.S. Congress did not help over the years by buying in to the notion that the United States was entitled to many jobs and then filling them with defeated politicians.

While at the United Nations, I used to joke that managing the global institution was like trying to run a business with 184 chief executive officers—each with a different language, a distinct set of priorities, and an unemployed brother-in-law seeking a paycheck. Secretary-General Kofi Annan has done about everything possible within the system to reward high achievers and improve recruitment, but the pressure to satisfy members from Afghanistan to Zimbabwe remains a management nightmare.

Another long-standing problem is that decisions on U.N. committee chairs and memberships are most often made on a regional and rotating basis, with equal weight given to, for example, South Africa and Swaziland. By tradition, these decisions are sacrosanct, leading to the recent spectacle of Libya chairing the U.N. Commission on Human Rights. To prevent such an outcome, one must be willing to break some diplomatic china. Former President Clinton did so in blocking the reelection of Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali in 1996 and defeating Sudan's regionally endorsed nomination for Security Council membership in 2000. Both initiatives prompted resentment toward the United States, but both enhanced the standing and credibility of the United Nations.

"U.N. Peacekeeping Has Failed"

Untrue. U.N. peacekeeping has maintained order in such diverse places as Namibia, El Salvador, Cambodia, eastern Slavonia, Mozambique, and Cyprus. The traditional U.N. mission is a confidence-building exercise, conducted in strict neutrality between parties that seek international help in preserving or implementing peace. U.N. peacemaking, however, is quite another matter. During my years as the U.S. permanent representative to the United Nations, the tragic experiences in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Somalia, and Rwanda showed that traditional U.N. peacekeepers lack the mandate, command structure, unity of purpose, and military might to succeed in the more urgent and nasty cases—where the fighting is hot, the innocent are dying, and the combatants oppose an international presence. Such weaknesses, sadly, are inherent in the voluntary and collective nature of the United Nations. When the going gets tough, the tough tend to go wherever they want, notwithstanding the wishes of U.N. commanders.

One possible solution: peace-enforcement missions authorized by the United Nations, in which the Security Council deputizes an appropriate major power to organize a coalition and enforce the world's collective will. The council sets the overall mandate, but the lead nation calls the shots—literally and figuratively—necessary to achieve the mission. The U.S.-led intervention in Haiti (1994), the Australian-led rescue of East Timor (1999), and the British action in Sierra Leone (2000) were largely successful and provide a model for the future.

Peacemaking is a hard, dangerous, and often thankless task. To deter people with guns, other people with more and bigger guns are necessary, and finding such people is not easy. It is one thing to expect a soldier to risk life and limb defending his or her homeland. It is another to expect that same soldier to travel halfway around the world and perhaps to die while trying to quell a struggle over diamonds, oil, or ethnic dominance on someone else's home turf. Most people are simply not that altruistic, especially when they see many intervention forces blamed for what such forces fail to accomplish rather than credited for the burdens they assume. As a result, the world is left with an international system of crisis response that is pragmatic, episodic, and incremental rather than principled, reliable, and decisive.

Without any expectation of perfection or even consistency, the international community can nevertheless make the best of things by doing more to equip and train selected military units willing to volunteer in advance for peace enforcement; by recruiting personnel to fill the gap between lightly armed police and heavily armed conventional military; by prosecuting war criminals; and by attacking the roots of conflicts such as arms peddling and economic desperation.

"The U.N. Security Council Should Be Enlarged"

Indubitably, but don't hold your breath. Probably no U.N. issue has been studied more with less to show for the effort than Security Council enlargement.

To ensure the council's strength as a guardian of international security and peace, the United Nations' founders assigned permanent membership and veto authority to the five leading nations on the winning side of World War II: the United States, Great Britain, France, the Soviet Union, and China. (Other countries compete for election to fill the 10 remaining council seats, with the winners serving a two-year term.) Obviously, the world has changed a bit since 1945: U.N. membership has more than tripled, and three of the eight most populous nations in the world can now be found in South Asia. Despite an apparent consensus to enlarge the council, its members have been tied up in knots trying to decide how. Major debates include fair regional representation (if India deserves a permanent seat, what about Pakistan?) and reluctance to extend veto power to additional countries.

During my years at the United Nations in the mid-1990s, the United States supported expanding the council to no more than 21 members and granting permanent seats to Japan and Germany. This position outraged Italian Ambassador F. Paolo Fulci, whose country opposed the addition of more permanent members. By that logic, he argued, if Japan and Germany joined the Security Council, Italy should be included as a permanent member, too. "After all," he argued, "Italians also lost World War II."

"The United Nations Is a Threat to the Sovereignty of the United States"

Balderdash. The United Nations' authority flows from its members; it is servant, not master. The United Nations has no armed forces of its own, no power of arrest, no authority to tax, no right to confiscate, no ability to regulate, no capacity to override treaties, and—despite the paranoia of some—no black helicopters poised to swoop down upon innocent homes in the middle of the night and steal lawn furniture. The U.N. General Assembly has little power, except to approve the U.N. budget, which it does by consensus. Meanwhile, the Security Council, which does have power, cannot act without the acquiescence of the United States and the other four permanent members. That means that no secretary-general can be elected, no U.N. peacekeeping operation initiated, and no U.N. tribunal established without the approval of the United States. Questions about the efficiency of the United Nations and many of its specific actions are legitimate, but worries about U.S. sovereignty are misplaced and appear to come primarily from people aggrieved to find the United Nations so full of foreigners. That, I am constrained to say, simply cannot be helped.

"The United Nations Is a Huge Bureaucracy"

Nope. A bureaucracy certainly, but not huge. The annual budget for core U.N. functions—based in New York City, Geneva, Nairobi, Vienna, and five regional commissions—is about $1.25 billion, or roughly what the Pentagon spends every 32 hours. The U.N. Secretariat has reduced its staff by just under 25 percent over the last 20 years and has had a zero-growth budget since 1996. The entire U.N. system, composed of the secretariat and 29 other organizations, employs a little more than 50,000 people, or just 2,000 more than work for the city of Stockholm. Total annual expenditures by all U.N. funds, programs, and specialized agencies equal about one fourth the municipal budget of New York City.

Madeleine K. Albright served as U.S. secretary of state from 1997 to 2001 and as U.S. permanent representative to the United Nations from 1993 to 1996. She is the author of Madam Secretary: A Memoir (New York: Miramax Books, 2003).

----------------------------------------------------

Esta es posiblemente una de las más impresionantes historias de los últimos tiempos, que no tiene nada que ver con la guerra en Irak, las elecciones en California o algo por el estilo. Buena lectura para un fin de noche…


The New York Times - August 29, 2003

MUNICH JOURNAL

Lindbergh the Family Man: Tales From Germany

By MARK LANDLER

MUNICH, Aug. 27 — When Astrid Bouteuil recalls her childhood in Germany, her fondest memories are of a tall, graying American who swooped into her life, as if from the heavens, once or twice a year.

He made Texas-size breakfasts, grilling sausages and flipping banana pancakes with aplomb. Later, he told riveting tales of his travels, giving young Astrid a glimpse of a world beyond the confines of Bavaria.

The one thing the dashing stranger never told Mrs. Bouteuil was his real name, though she and her two brothers had been told by their mother that he was their father. After his death in 1974, Mrs. Bouteuil pieced together the mystery: her father, she says, was Charles A. Lindbergh.

Earlier this month, Mrs. Bouteuil staked her claim to the Lindbergh legacy, going public with some 150 letters that she says prove the pilot conducted a 17-year love affair with her mother, Brigitte Hesshaimer.

Mrs. Bouteuil, now 42 and married to a Frenchman, said she was driven to tell this family secret to "liberate" her children. They have the right, she said, to speak openly of their famous grandfather.

"For the world, Lindbergh is the story of a hero," Mrs. Bouteuil said. "For us, this is the story of a family."

The Lindbergh family has said nothing publicly about these claims. But they are taking it seriously. A lawyer for the family, Patton Hyman, said they had contacted the Hesshaimers and plan an investigation. Mrs. Bouteuil and her brothers, Dyrk and David, have volunteered to take DNA tests.

"This is a difficult thing," said A. Scott Berg, Lindbergh's biographer. "It's a titillating story in Germany. But for four people named Lindbergh on this side of the ocean, it's a deeply troubling personal story."

Mrs. Bouteuil's goal may have been liberation. But in the tumultuous month since her claims were published in a Munich newspaper, Süddeutsche Zeitung, she has learned, as Lindbergh did during a life of triumph and tragedy, that enormous celebrity can be a kind of prison.

Television crews have swarmed her secluded family home in Utting, a lakeside village south of here. Elderly residents of the Munich apartment house where Mrs. Hesshaimer lived when she first met Lindbergh have been asked to conjure up decades-old memories of their long-departed neighbor.

"A mother without a husband was fairly unusual in those days," said Angelika Koschel. "But she seemed to be a tough woman."

Inevitably, some suspect the Hess-haimers want to exploit their story for financial gain. Mrs. Bouteuil's brothers have hired a media adviser to manage the torrent of press calls. He staged a photograph of the three siblings in front of a vintage airplane and is shopping a book proposal.

The trouble is, the Hesshaimers' story is going in unpredictable directions. The German news magazine, Focus, reported this week that in the same years Lindbergh was involved with Brigitte Hesshaimer, he had an affair with her older sister, Marietta, that produced two other children.

Marietta Hesshaimer and her children, who live in Switzerland, have declined to comment. Her niece, Astrid, insists she did not want to drag them into the story, though it might be too late: photographers have staked out the chalet that Lindbergh supposedly built for them near the Alpine resort of Crans Montana.

"I can't say whether they are Lindbergh's children because they haven't said it," Mrs. Bouteuil said by telephone from Paris. "I would be happy for them if it were true because I love them."

Mr. Berg, the biographer, professes to be stumped. The letters from Lindbergh presented by Mrs. Bouteuil seem genuine, he said. His restless travels and lengthy absences from his wife, Anne Morrow Lindbergh, also make it possible that he could have had a secret life in Germany and Switzerland. (Mrs. Lindbergh strayed as well, according to Mr. Berg's biography, beginning an affair with her doctor in 1956, a year before her husband is said to have met the Hesshaimer sisters.)

While Mr. Berg said he was persuaded Lindbergh knew the sisters, he questions whether a man known as a stickler for family values would have fathered children with two women out of wedlock.

"It is just not like him, at least as he appeared to me," Mr. Berg said. "But maybe he had entered a new phase of his life. I've long been of a mind that anything is possible with Charles Lindbergh."

Whatever his motives, Lindbergh was careful to cover his tracks. His letters to Brigitte are affectionate but short on telltale facts. The children knew him by the name Careu Kent, and were warned by their mother that if they talked about him outside the family, they risked losing him.

When Mrs. Bouteuil discovered the letters in the late 1990's, while cleaning out a storeroom, her mother demanded that she return them. Mrs. Bouteuil refused, provoking a bitter clash. Brigitte extracted a promise that her daughter would do nothing with them while she was alive. She died in 2001.

Lindbergh, of course, is hardly an unambiguous figure. Historians, including Mr. Berg, have documented his respect for the Nazis in prewar Germany, as well as his Jew-baiting statements.

Mrs. Bouteuil said she felt a sense of betrayal that her father never acknowledged his German children. Over time, however, she said she came to accept his decision and cherish her memories of him.

"It was the way he chose to live," she said. "I don't want to say whether it's good or bad. It's just life."

Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company

Segunda-feira, Agosto 25, 2003

--------------------------------------------

Captives speak of fate in N. Korea

From Rebecca MacKinnon
CNN Tokyo Bureau Chief

TOKYO, Japan (CNN) --It was an emotional homecoming last year for Kaoru and Yukiko Hasuike, the first time they and three other Japanese had seen their families in a quarter of a century.

It has been that long since they were snatched up on Japan's northern coast and put to work in Pyongyang, teaching North Korean spies to speak Japanese.

Ten months have passed since they returned to Japan, and the Hasuikes only now feel they can speak out about how they were abducted.

"A man asked me to light his cigarette. There were three other people with him," the husband, Kaoru, told a local TV.

"Then they beat me up and put me in a sack. I was put in a rubber boat, and then transferred onto a big ship offshore."

Kaoru's younger brother Toru says he won't say exactly who abducted them because he is worried about what could happen to his children, who are still in North Korea.

The Hasuikes have settled into new lives -- and new jobs -- back in their Japanese hometowns. Kaoru now teaches Korean, but both parents say they constantly worry about their son and daughter back in Pyongyang.

To protect their children from political persecution, they never told them they were Japanese, nor do the children know their parents are now in Japan.

They have been kept incommunicado by a diplomatic deadlock between Japan and North Korea.

Japan got nowhere in negotiations last November when it demanded that North Korea allow the children of the five abductees to reunite with their parents in Japan.

Public anger about what happened to these people and dozens of other missing Japanese put pressure on Japan's diplomats who will be part of the six-way North Korea talks in Beijing starting August 27.

In fact, Toru has been lobbying hard in Tokyo and in Washington. He wants both capitals to put more pressure on Pyongyang to resolve the abduction issue.

"It's unbelievable that North Korea is allowed to get away with such crimes by making threats to neighboring countries and playing brinkmanship diplomacy," he said.

North Korea has already sent signals through Chinese diplomats that if Japan or other countries raise the abduction issue at the Beijing talks, that would hinder progress on the nuclear issue -- another North Korean threat which many here in Japan fear will be accommodated.

(C) CNN

--------------------------------------------------------

Film crew to visit to tell story of spy who inspired the James Bond books

by CLARE O'CONNOR

NEXT month, a Canadian film crew will arrive on the island to shoot scenes for a highly anticipated upcoming documentary on the life and career of Sir William Stephenson, millionaire industrialist, brilliant inventor, celebrated World War II spymaster – and resident of Bermuda from 1968 until his death in 1989.

According to Bill MacDonald, Canadian author of The True Intrepid (the recent bestseller chronicling Stephenson's life), the documentary will highlight both Bermuda's involvement in wartime espionage activities and Stephenson's post-war life here.
"Bermuda was a communications station, and was involved in the interception and examination of mail that was going to and from North America," Mr. MacDonald explained.

"Bermuda was also an important military base after the war, in the Cold War. It was regarded as the first line of defence if there was going to be any type of submarine attack on the North American coast. It's very strategically located."

American mail-carrying Clipper flying boats and ships routinely stopped in Bermuda on their voyages to and from Europe during World War II. The examined transit mail provided valuable information on enemy activities throughout the Americas.

"The Bermuda Censorship station was run by the British out of the Princess Hotel. But Sir William Stephenson's British Security Co-ordination – which he ran out of New York specifically to liase with the US intelligence community – had a lot of people involved in it as well," Mr. MacDonald noted. "They had hired a bunch of people who could open and close mail without detection; they had certain code words that they would look for."

Thanks to Stephenson's relations with the British Imperial Censorship authorities, an experienced FBI agent was dispatched to Bermuda and instructed in the techniques of mail examination, intercepting diplomatic and privileged mail but resealing it so that recipients were not aware that their letters had been opened.

Stephenson had been supervising Allied espionage since 1940, when Winston Churchill ascended to the Prime Ministry and sent the Canadian-born industrialist to New York City to direct the US-based British Security Coordination.

He was to coordinate all British overseas espionage activities in the Western Hemisphere, recruit agents, establish a secret base in Canada to train agents for missions behind enemy lines, and function as a liaison between the BSC and the US, operating under his codename, Intrepid.

While overseeing mail examinations in Bermuda, Stephenson succumbed to the island's charms, as Mr. MacDonald explained.
"He visited Bermuda several times during the war, at least once with General William Donovan, head of the Office of Strategic Services (World War Two predecessor to the Central Intelligence Agency). Apparently that's when he fell in love with Bermuda and thought it would be a good place to retire."

When the crew from Mid Canada Productions arrives in September, they will shoot scenes at the Princess Hotel, which Mr. MacDonald described as "a big spy centre, where all the mail was examined".

In addition, Stephenson's grave and his former home in Paget will be featured for Canadian viewers of the Global network, which will air the documentary.

Mr. MacDonald hopes this documentary will dispel previous, inaccurate portrayals of Stephenson's life, in particular author William Stevenson's 1976 Man Called Intrepid, a highly romanticised biography of Sir William that caused public controversy.
"It's an important story, and deserves to be told correctly," Mr. MacDonald said. "Stephenson's connection to the winning of the war was incredible.

"He was involved in locating German U-boats during the war. His second in command created an unbreakable cipher machine, on which top-secret messages between Britain and the US were sent."

In addition to his wartime contributions, Sir William Stephenson left an indelible mark on pop culture, providing inspiration for the world's most famous fictitious spy: Bond, James Bond.

"He was certainly an inspiration for Ian Fleming's Bond stories," Mr. MacDonald contended. "They had houses near each other in Jamaica, where Fleming's 'Goldeneye' compound was located, and where Stephenson went after the war. Fleming knew Stephenson in the war, when he was with Naval Intelligence."

Fleming himself is quoted as saying, "James Bond is the highly romanticised version of a true spy. The real thing was Sir William Stephenson."

Bond parallels Stephenson not only in his spying prowess but also in his fondness for luxury. "Stephenson was famous for huge martinis and a love of fancy gadgetry," Mr. MacDonald laughed.

"One of his agents showed me a pen that could explode in your face. He had miniature cameras and stuff like that. That's where Fleming got a lot of his ideas."

Stephenson can also be credited for one of the entertainment industry's most enduring feminine institutions: the Bond girl.
"Since most men were in the Armed Services, most of Stephenson's employees were women," Mr. MacDonald explained. "Some of them were very attractive; I'm sure that's where Bond girls came from!"

Grace Gurner, Stephenson's secretary in his New York office, was the inspiration for the long-suffering Miss Moneypenny, perhaps the most famous Bond girl of all.

The documentary crew, led by Director Terry McEvoy, is currently looking to locate any Bermudians who knew Sir William Stephenson socially, but the task is proving rather challenging: if alive, Stephenson would be 103 today.

(C) The Royal Gazette 2003

--------------------------------------------------------

'US recruiting members of Saddam's spy services'

WASHINGTON (AFP) — US authorities in Iraq have quietly begun recruiting members of Saddam Hussein's dreaded intelligence services to help track down perpetrators of attacks on US forces and other targets in the country, the Washington Post reported Sunday. US officials would not say how many of Saddam's spies are being tapped but Iraqi officials said the numbers could be in the hundreds.

"We're reaching out very widely," one US official told the Post, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The new tactic reflects growing awareness that US military forces alone cannot prevent increasingly sophisticated attacks such as the suicide bombing at UN headquarters that killed at least 23 people last week.

"The only way you can combat terrorism is through intelligence," another US official was quoted as saying. "Without Iraqi input, that's not going to work."

The move comes as US military commanders in Iraq ease back on large-scale sweeps of neighbourhoods aimed at flushing out members of the Iraqi resistance. Those sweeps have caused resentment and could increase support for the rebels.

The majority of the spies are being recruited from the Mukhabarat, Saddam's foreign intelligence service and the most sophisticated of the four branches of security forces, the report said.

Particularly sought after are agents once assigned to Syria or Iran, reflecting US conviction that fighters from those countries are now infiltrating Iraq.

Saddam's intelligence forces were feared in Iraq and elsewhere for their use of torture, intimidation, and rape.

The top US administrator in Iraq Paul Bremer dissolved them a few months ago, but now "they are trying to rebuild it very quietly," according to Wafiq Samarrai, a former military intelligence chief.

Monday, August 25, 2003

-------------------------------------

The New York Times - August 24, 2003

Former Top Russian Spy Pledges New Allegiance

By DAVID STOUT

WASHINGTON, Aug. 23 — As a fervent Communist at home in the Soviet intelligence service, Oleg Kalugin never dreamed that he might one day embrace America.

"After all," Mr. Kalugin said, "I was one of the cold warriors."

Oleg Danilovich Kalugin was not just a warrior. He was one of the generals of the cold war, a K.G.B. leader who did his best to undermine Western capitalism by recruiting Americans to work for Moscow. His greatest recruiting coup was probably John A. Walker Jr., a Navy warrant officer who offered his services while Mr. Kalugin was stationed in Washington in 1966. Mr. Kalugin said in a 1991 interview that Mr. Walker was paid more than $1 million before the F.B.I. caught him in 1985.

On Aug. 4, Mr. Kalugin, the son of a member of Stalin's secret police, was sworn in as a United States citizen.

As a senior member of the K.G.B., Mr. Kalugin spied on Americans for years before losing faith in Communism. He was ultimately convicted of treason in Russia. That verdict makes him liable to a 15-year prison sentence if he returns to Russia.

His new citizenship confirmed his place in his adopted country, where he has been at home in the Washington suburb of Silver Spring, Md., for nearly a decade. It also completed a personal journey.

Mr. Kalugin, 68, has made a comfortable living in the land he once plotted against. He is a professor at the Center for Counterintelligence and Security Studies, a consulting service in Alexandria, Va., that was founded in 1997. The center provides expertise and advice in counterintelligence, counterterrorism and security for the government and companies. Mr. Kalugin has lectured widely on intelligence issues and is a frequent television commentator.

In a recent interview, Mr. Kalugin wore a tiny American flag — "pinned on me by one of my C.I.A. friends," he said proudly — on the lapel of his blazer as he talked about Russian politics and reminisced about what was and what might have been.

He wondered aloud what might have become of him if his superiors in Moscow had sent him to Cairo in the late 1950's, as was considered, instead of the United States. Once in America, he spied.

As he told it, he also grew to like the nation he was spying on. "I watched this country's progress," he said, recalling the tragedies and triumphs of the civil rights era. Even at the height of the cold war, he said, he found Americans "exceptionally friendly, wherever I went."

Even his F.B.I. tailers were friendly. One night in 1968, while he was vacationing with his family in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., his car broke down. "An agent came along and gave us a lift to a Howard Johnson's," he said.

Mr. Kalugin's relationship with America began in the late 1950's, when Communist officials noticed his skill with languages. He was a K.G.B. trainee when he was sent to Columbia University as an exchange student.

He spied at the United Nations from 1960 to 1964, under his cover role as a correspondent for Soviet radio and television. After a stint in Moscow, he returned to the United States under the cover of press secretary at the Soviet Embassy.

The columnist Jack Anderson exposed Mr. Kalugin as a spy in 1970, and Mr. Kalugin went back to Moscow. From 1973 to 1980, he headed the Soviet Union's counterintelligence operations. After falling out with the K.G.B.'s top leaders, he was demoted and exiled to Leningrad from 1980 to 1987.

Although he lost stature in the K.G.B., he retained the wary respect of the American intelligence community. "Smooth as silk, the smoothest guy I've seen in years," William E. Colby, the former director of central intelligence, once said. "With his own agenda, of course."

Mr. Kalugin has said he was a handler and friend of Kim Philby, the British double agent who defected to Moscow. John le Carré wrote in 1995 that Mr. Kalugin coolly described helping plan the assassination of a Bulgarian in London with a poison-tipped umbrella.

In recruiting John Walker, Mr. Kalugin had a chance to tip the cold war balance. At Mr. Walker's sentencing in 1986, the government said his spy ring had allowed the Soviet Union to read secret communications from the time of the Vietnam War to the early 1980's, revealing Navy tactics, covert operations and procedures for deploying nuclear weapons.

Mr. Kalugin said his devotion to Communism and its ideals waned as he saw that the Soviet system had been "built on the corpses of millions of people."

He retired from the K.G.B. in 1990. That year, he was accused of leaking secrets, and President Mikhail S. Gorbachev stripped him of his rank, decorations and pension. Mr. Kalugin was elected to the Soviet Parliament that year, giving him a measure of immunity from prosecution.

After the collapse of the Soviet Union, he continued to criticize the government and the successor to the K.G.B., the F.S.B. In 1994, his book "The First Chief Directorate: My 32 Years in Intelligence and Espionage Against the West" was published by St. Martin's Press, to the annoyance of Moscow. The next year, Mr. Kalugin settled in the United States.

In 2001 in Tampa, Fla., he testified in the espionage trial of George Trofimoff, a retired Army Reserve colonel, saying that Mr. Trofimoff had been considered one of the K.G.B.'s top American agents. But Mr. Kalugin denied that he had exposed him or any other agents. (Mr. Trofimoff was convicted of spying.)

Last year in Moscow, Mr. Kalugin was convicted of treason, in absentia, and sentenced to 15 years in prison.

"I feel proud to be a Russian," he said. "I was born there."

But, he added, "I will not go back under the present circumstances." He said he meant not only the treason verdict but also the presence of Vladimir Putin in the Kremlin.

Mr. Putin has called Mr. Kalugin a traitor, accusing him of disclosing secrets about sources and methods used by Russia's special overseas intelligence unit, an accusation that Mr. Kalugin has denied.

Mr. Kalugin describes Mr. Putin as a colorless, unimaginative man.

Mr. Kalugin's wife, Lyudmila, died of cancer in 2001 after 47 years of marriage. Mr. Kalugin has two daughters; one lives in Moscow and the other in New York City.

If he ever revisits Russia, he may get a welcome from Mikhail Gorbachev. The two have reconciled, Mr. Kalugin said.

Mr. Kalugin sent the former Russian leader a copy of his book inscribed "To the man who liberated Russia from serfdom and made me a free man."

Mr. Gorbachev sent a note back: "To Oleg, with my heart full of friendly thoughts."

Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company

Quinta-feira, Agosto 21, 2003

-----------------------------------------------------------

CIA GRADUATES LARGEST CLASS OF OFFICERS

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON -- The CIA, looking to double its ranks of clandestine operatives, recently graduated the largest class of new officers in the agency's history, officials said.

They are, on average, 29 years old. One-third are women. About 12 percent are ethnic minorities. Three-quarters speak a foreign language with considerable fluency and 70 percent had never worked for the government or military, according to agency recruiting officials.

These rookie spies number in the scores, but the CIA says providing a more specific total would give other countries and groups too much information.

Some recruits gave up more lucrative jobs in the private sector, and one took a pay cut of close to $100,000, agency officials said. Their starting salaries are between $45,000 and $60,000 a year.

They are members of the first class enrolled after the Sept. 11 attacks. These men and women have completed background checks and training at the ``Farm'' -- the officially unacknowledged site outside Williamsburg, Va., where recruits are taught the craft of intelligence work.

They graduated in June; many are assuming fake identities and heading overseas. Their job will be to steal secrets.

It is difficult work, says Steven Aftergood, a longtime observer of the CIA with the Federation of American Scientists.

``Basically, what you're trying to do ... is to persuade the other fellow to betray his country, to commit a crime, and to run the risk of severe penalty,'' Aftergood said.

With the fight against terrorism and new interest in tracking weapons proliferation, the CIA is flush with new money and jobs to fill. But it takes a certain kind of mind to be a spy, agency officials say.

``Intelligence problems don't tend to have sharp edges. They're fuzzy, and they're gray. That's where we work,'' said Bob Rebelo, the CIA's chief of human resources.

Beyond the basics, the CIA always is in need of people proficient in foreign languages. The congressional inquiry into the Sept. 11 attacks concluded the U.S. intelligence community had a critical shortfall of linguists.

``If you walked into this room with 100 native Arabic speakers, I'd give them all offers this afternoon, if they had the other qualifications we need,'' Rebelo said. ``Same with Chinese. Same with Persian. Same with Urdu. Same with Pashto.''

The CIA this year began ad campaigns aimed at recruiting Chinese-Americans and Arab-Americans.

About 3,000 people claiming the ability to speak Chinese have applied this year, Rebelo said, and one-third say they are native speakers. Many are still being tested to verify this. An additional 2,400 people said they spoke Arabic, including 900 native speakers.

It is such native-speakers who are prized by recruiters. Most grew up familiar with their native culture and may know regional dialects. Also, a U.S. citizen -- which all CIA operatives must be -- with Arab parents can blend in better in Cairo, Iraq or Saudi Arabia than a junior spy who is white and grew up in Ohio.

All told, one in four of all new agency hires are from ethnic minorities. But only 12 percent of the new spies are.

That is not enough, CIA officials acknowledge.

``We're not focusing very, very hard on diversity to be politically correct,'' Rebelo said. ``We're doing it because it's an imperative in this business.''

Harold Tate, chief of the CIA's recruitment center, said many of the minority candidates seeking positions at the CIA have degrees in the hard sciences, making them better suited for positions in the agency's scientific or analytical corps.

Interest in working for the CIA rose after the Sept. 11 attacks. Between October 2001 and October 2002, the agency received 170,000 resumes, Rebelo said. An additional 100,000 have arrived since.

Criticism has increased, as well. Rebelo recalled some pointed questions from the audience at a recent career fair he attended.

``The first question I got: `9-11 happened. You can't find the weapons of mass destruction. You can't find Osama bin Laden. You're a secretive organization. You can't tell us sources and methods. You can't talk about much ... How should I, as an American, feel about investing in such an organization?``'

Rebelo said he answered: ``What you don't know, and what we can't talk about for obvious reasons, is everything that's gone right.'' Terrorist attacks have been stopped; weapons smuggling has been disrupted. But those successes remain secret, in part to prevent the other side from learning how it was caught.

``Are we ahead of the game? We think we're more ahead of the game than we were,'' Rebelo said. ``Are we winning? Hell, no. Get over it. It's a difficult, complex world out there.''

Other potential recruits ask about the life of a spy:

--Can they get married and have a family? Yes, say the recruiters.

--Can they quit without repercussion? Yes, but their writings on intelligence matters will forever be subject to CIA review.

--Will they be able to tell their family, and friends, where they are and what they are doing? It depends on the assignment.

One exception: ``You have to tell your spouse,'' said the chief of recruiting for the operations directorate, a woman who is still undercover. ``We say it, and we say it and we say it, and inevitably somebody doesn't tell them. You have to share this with your spouse.''

AP Filed at 3:28 p.m. ET

Sábado, Agosto 16, 2003

--------------------------------------

Ellos lo dijeron...

“... lo que [intentó, Osvaldo] Payá fue hacer cumplir el párrafo de la Constitución cubana, 88G, el cual dice que si una persona entrega 10.000 firmas, se puede hacer una [nueva] legislación. Algunos lo han criticado diciendo que eso hace parecer como válida la Constitución cubana. Pero realmente lo que hace es [demostrar] que no [lo es]”.

Madeleine Albright, ex secretaria de Estado en el gobierno de Bill Clinton
in revista PODER/julio 2003, al comentar que las 11.020 firmas de ciudanos cubanos no fueron aceptadas por el gobierno.

Quinta-feira, Agosto 14, 2003

--------------------------------------

El Nuevo Herald - Agosto 14, 2003

Castro cumple años en medio del aislamiento

RUI FERREIRA
El Nuevo Herald

En medio de su peor crisis económica, pero con un control férreo del poder, el gobernante cubano Fidel Castro pasó su 77 cumpleaños aislado de quienes solían ser aliados y amigos, pero lidiando con sombras del pasado.

''En términos económicos está en su peor momento. De eso no hay duda: está en un callejón sin salida. Por otro lado, parece que tiene el control total del poder, que es lo que le interesa que se sepa'', dijo Jaime Suchliki, director del Centro de Estudios Cubanos y Cubanoamericanos, en Miami.

A mediados del pasado marzo, Castro sorprendió a los observadores con el arresto de unos 70 disidentes y periodistas independientes, semanas después que en un discurso sostuvo que la oposición interna era insignificante.

Pero sorprendió aún más cuando los opositores fueron condenados a largas penas de cárcel en juicios sumarios que, según Amnistía Internacional, carecieron de garantías.

El ambiente se enrareció con la ejecución de tres hombres que intentaban traer a Estados Unidos una lancha que atraviesa la bahía de La Habana. Tras ser interceptados en alta mar por el Servicio Guardacostas, los cubanos fueron remolcados hasta la isla después que Washington se desentendió del asunto.

A raíz de ese suceso, la Unión Europea cortó la ayuda económica.

El gobierno de la isla acusó al presidente del gobierno español, José María Aznar, y al primer ministro italiano, Silvio Berlusconi, de estar detrás de las críticas. Así, clausuró el centro cultural de España en la isla, y organizó sendas manifestaciones populares frente a las embajadas de los dos países.

En una serie de discursos, donde mostró una vitalidad que muchos no le atribuían, Castro mantuvo una actitud desafiante e independiente. Rechazó la ayuda y cortó cualquier posibilidad de diálogo.

''Cuba no necesita ayuda de la Unión Europea para sobrevivir. Que no se hagan ilusiones cuando dicen que el diálogo político debe seguir, porque la soberanía y la dignidad de un pueblo no se discuten con nadie'', dijo el gobernante. De hecho, la ayuda europea no es tan relevante. Unos $16 millones, en comparación con los casi $1,000 millones que los exiliados envían anualmente a sus familiares.

Castro también dio a entender que los diplomáticos europeos pudieran ser expulsados si seguían prestando atención y recibiendo en sus casas a los opositores.

Aunque dio muestras de querer mantener el diálogo con La Habana, a la Unión Europea no le quedó más remedio que aceptar la decisión y adoptar un perfil discreto, entre otras razones porque sus inversiones en la isla hacen del Viejo Continente el primer socio comercial de la isla.

Tampoco tenía otra opción, dijo el analista político Ernesto Betancourt. Entre otras razones, porque Castro pudiera tener la intención de no querer mejorar las relaciones. ''¿Por qué no? ¿Acaso no ha hecho lo mismo con Estados Unidos?'', subrayó Betancourt.

''El deliberadamente tomó la decisión de romper con los europeos porque no acepta que le desafíen su gobierno monolítico y autoritario. Así que, a menos que los europeos capitulen, habría una salida. Pero yo lo veo yendo hasta el final'', añadió Betancourt.

El alejamiento de Castro de sus aliados también se profundizó en el campo de las ideas. Viejos amigos, como los escritores José Saramago y Eduardo Galeano no ocultaron su disgusto ante los fusilamientos.

''Yo me quedo, Cuba sigue su camino'', dijo el Premio Nobel de Literatura de 1998. ''¿Deben adquirir los malos hábitos del enemigo al que están combatiendo?'', añadió Galeano, en referencia a los fusilamientos.

Tanto a la Unión Europea como a los viejos amigos ideológicos, Cuba respondió de todos modos. Pero si en el caso de Europa fue el mismo Castro quien salió al primer plano para dar batalla, en cuanto a las críticas de los intelectuales extranjeros, fueron sus homólogos de la isla quienes sostuvieron la pelea.

Esa controversia adquirió un dramatismo particular porque por décadas muchos gobiernos e intelectuales europeos resistieron las embestidas de Estados Unidos para que aceptaran el embargo económico.

''Sería bueno no olvidar que es por Europa que aún hoy el republicano George W. Bush sigue firmando el capítulo III de la Ley Helms-Burton'', dijo hace unos días un diplomático europeo.

El cumpleaños de Castro hubiera sido uno más, en medio del jolgorio oficial y propagandístico, si una sombra del pasado no hubiera retornado. La semana pasada, regresó a la isla otro viejo guerrillero, el líder de Cambio Cubano, Eloy Gutiérrez-Menoyo, con la idea de ''reinventar la revolución'' y crear un espacio de debate .

Aunque sostuvo que no tiene intención de retar a Castro, su presencia es un reto.

''A Castro le importa seguir controlando el poder, no si la gente come más o menos frijoles'', añadió Suchliki.

(C) The Miami Herald 2003

Quarta-feira, Agosto 13, 2003

-----------------------------------------

in El Nuevo Herald, agosto 13, 2003


CAMBIAR EL DIAL

Alejandro Armengol

Al fin muchos oyentes se han decidido a mover el dial y, cansados de oír año tras año la misma perorata, prefieren otros programas que los informan o que los hacen reír. No ha ocurrido de un día para otro. Desde hace años se viene gestando este cambio en que la decisión fue simple: renovarse o morir.

No ha sido una transformación para alterar el valor justo de las cosas, sino todo lo contrario. Lo que viene experimentando desde hace más de un lustro la radio local en español es un proceso de ajuste que ha terminado colocándola en su dimensión adecuada. Por demasiado tiempo ese medio de difusión llevó a cabo una función hipertrofiada, debido a las condiciones especiales en que surgió: al servicio de una audiencia exiliada, con un marcada militancia política y en un país con una cultura y un idioma diferentes.

Mal o bien, o mal y bien, la radio cubana de Miami ya cumplió su papel como factor aglutinador de un exilio monolítico que ha dejado de serlo y como propagandista de una lucha armada desaparecida. Antes de cambiar, sufrió una crisis de identidad: dejó de ser el portavoz ideal y mayoritario del llamado ''exilio de línea dura'' y vio su esencia más retrógrada reducida a unos pocos programas. Tuvo que cambiar para reflejar la diversidad que caracteriza al exilio actual y para acoger también las múltiples nacionalidades que conforman el nuevo Miami.

Una serie de factores --el éxito en un momento dado, lo que atrajo a los grandes inversionistas, la diversificación étnica del área, la disminución por envejecimiento y muerte de su principal audiencia-- contribuyeron a su transformación. Quienes se negaron y se niegan al cambio se arriesgan a quedar al margen. La razón principal para su empecinamiento es su incapacidad de renovación. El aferrarse a su imagen tradicional se ha convertido en su talón de Aquiles y el hecho es simple: el anticastrismo ha dejado de ser rentable, o al menos no es tan rentable como en un pasado cercano.

Desde hace años, los suficientes para que ya pueda apreciarse una consolidación de los cambios, hay una transformación en marcha de lo que en una época fue la radio del exilio tradicional. No sólo en su base de anunciantes (como los enfermos, ésta cada vez depende más de los servicios médicos, y en última instancia del Medicare y Medicaid), sino también en su audiencia: en su mayoría, tanto los nuevos inmigrantes como los hijos y nietos de los que llegaron primero no ven reflejados sus puntos de vista en los programas. Quienes se niegan al cambio han sido víctimas de su propia soberbia, al pretender imponer una visión idealizada de la Cuba de los años 50 en la amplia gama de refugiados que viven aquí en la actualidad.

Hasta hace poco menos de diez años, varias emisoras del exilio vivían en un mundo irreal: podían permitirse el lujo de enviar corresponsales cuando surgía un conflicto internacional, al igual que las grandes cadenas periodísticas; nunca se detenían mucho en la diferencia imprescindible que existe entre una información y una opinión; fabricaban rumores y manipulaban a su antojo a los oyentes; eran capaces de organizar en breves horas actos de rechazo a los artistas que no consideraran favorables a su línea de pensamiento e imponían candidatos políticos. Es un signo de madurez de la ciudad que este panorama haya desaparecido casi por completo del dial.

La radio fue, y todavía será por un tiempo difícil de precisar, la gran fuente de catarsis, donde se descargan odios, envidias, frustraciones y todo tipo de ansiedades en un exilio demasiado largo. También ha desempeñado y desempeña una importante labor de activismo comunitario. Pero por muchos años esta radio del exilio trató de acomodar las noticias de Cuba a su conveniencia y atacar al mensajero cuando el mensaje no era de su agrado.

Era fascinante oírla: el fin de nuestras vicisitudes estaba cerca y aquello se hundía irremediablemente. En parte acertaban algunos comentarista, pero al final la victoria ha resultado sorpresiva e imprecisa: el triunfo final sobre el castrismo es una larga agonía. El cambio radial no significa una conspiración en contra del exilio ni una pérdida de poder de los cubanos. Es más bien otro reflejo de lo logrado por una comunidad que, tanto en aquéllos que desean asimilarse como en quienes quieren conservar su identidad, se independiza del control de unos pocos que pretendieron --y aún pretenden-- obligarla a tomar notas: que un exiliado puede ser un escolar sencillo, pero no un apuntador de terminales.

© 2003 El Nuevo Herald

Terça-feira, Agosto 12, 2003

---------------------------------------------

Dice mi sobrino Kim Suárez, hijo de mi hermano Armando Suárez – a quién tengo en permanente recuerdo desde su fallecimiento el 17 de diciembre de 1997 y al cuál dedicaré unas reflexiones próximamente – que este artículo "ha sido sin lugar a dudas el más interesante de la guerra en Iraq" y que "sirve para corroborar que los cubanos nos hemos convertido en los judios del siglo XXI omnipresentes en los aspectos más inverosimiles, desde el CEO en Amazon hasta en la reconstrucción de Bagdad. Lo más triste es ver tanto talento fuera de la isla y tanto desastre en ella".

No puedo estar más de acuerdo. No con el elogio, sino la aseveración.


El Nuevo Herald - Agosto 10, 2003

UN CUBANO DISENA EL NUEVO GOBIERNO DE BAGDAD

RUI FERREIRA
El Nuevo Herald

Finalizados los combates en Irak, las tropas estadounidenses se volcaron hacia la reconstrucción civil, pero lo que nunca pensó un cubano afincado en Colorado, es que le iba a tocar diseñar el plan de organización del nuevo gobierno local de Bagdad.

''Fue una sorpresa cuando recibí ese correo electrónico pidiéndome ayuda'', recuerda Guillermo Vidal, quien arribó a Estados Unidos en 1960 --procedente de su ciudad natal, Camagüey-- a través de la Operación Peter Pan.

Cuando terminó la guerra en Irak, su amigo, el mayor Joe Rice, entonces alcalde de la ciudad de Glendale, en el área metropolitana de Denver, fue enviado a Bagdad como oficial de enlace civil del 5to. Cuerpo de Ejército.

Al llegar, le dieron una tarea bien compleja: establecer contacto con las autoridades locales iraquíes y organizarles la estructura de su gobierno municipal.

''Joe no sabía qué hacer y se volvió a mí. Me mandó un correo pidiendo ayuda y me puse a trabajar. Fue realmente una misión de amistad, porque no estaba muy seguro de si iba a resultar'', dice Vidal, de 52 años.

Es más, ''no sabía cómo hacerlo. Después de todo, estamos hablando del renacimiento de un país en su totalidad'', agrega.

Pero lo cierto es que está funcionado, y en Bagdad ya hay un consejo municipal --diseñado a imagen y semejanza del de Denver-- que se ha reunido tres veces.

Todo eso fue posible, afirma Vidal en una conversación telefónica desde su oficina en Denver, gracias a un trabajo colectivo de su equipo en el Consejo Regional de Gobiernos de Denver, del cual él es su director ejecutivo.

El consejo agrupa más de 50 municipios del área metropolitana de Denver y lidia con problemas comunes como la organización de la red de transportes, el aprovechamiento de la tierra, y el control de calidad del agua.

Ahora, Vidal, casado con una chilena y con 5 hijos, se siente satisfecho de lo que ha logrado en sus 25 años de carrera profesional después que se graduó de ingeniero.

No siempre fue así. Cuando llegó de Cuba fue enviado a un pueblito de Colorado, curiosamente llamado Pueblo y allí vivió en un orfelinato junto a sus dos hermanos gemelos.

''Cualquiera que haya inmigrado a este país sabe lo difícil que es. Un nuevo país, un nuevo idioma. Para mis hermanos y para mí fue particularmente difícil no estar con nuestros padres, sino en un orfalinato. Era mejor que nada, pero la vida no era fácil'', rememora. Sus padres se les unieron años más tarde, y todos terminaron asentándose en Denver, donde Vidal sigue manteniéndose fiel a sus raíces cubanas.

''Ese es un valor muy fuerte. Hablamos español en la casa, leo en español, y somos una familia muy hispana. Aunque he pasado la mayor parte de mi vida aquí, no puedo decir que me siento más cubano que americano. Mis raíces... nuestras raíces", rectifica, ``son muy sólidas'', afirma.

Volviendo a Irak, uno de los aspectos más interesantes del plan de gobierno local es su organización. ''Una cosa que le dije a Rice es que no dejara a la gente actuar como los miembros del partido Bath, sino que se habituaran a decir lo que piensan'', manifiesta.

''Se debe tener a todo el mundo reconocido y rotar el liderazgo. El que es jefe del consejo hoy lo será por sólo tres meses, y después vendrá otro'', añade.

Esta fue su primera experiencia en el renacimiento de un gobierno local democrático, ¿será Cuba la segunda?

Vidal se ríe. ``Eso sería algo interesante, ¿verdad?''.

© 2003 El Nuevo Herald

Segunda-feira, Agosto 11, 2003

----------------------------------------------

Fragmento de un cable de AFP:

"Hija de Fidel Castro 'vaticina' la caída del régimen en Cuba

SAN SALVADOR, Ago 11 (AFP) La cubana Alina Fernández, hija del presidente Fidel Castro, vaticinó este lunes la "próxima'' caída del régimen de su padre, debido a la ejecución de disidentes, entre otros aspectos que le restan credibilidad a nivel internacional.

"No parece ser éste el momento todavía (del fin del régimen), pero puede ser dentro de dos semanas, creo que Fidel todavía está a cargo del poder'', aseguró Alina en una entrevista que concedió en Miami al matutino salvadoreño La Prensa Gráfica".


¡Alina no aclaró en que año!


----------------------------------

There they are, finally, the Nazi roots!

SCHWARZENEGGER OPPOSED ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT SERVICES

By SANDRA MARQUEZ
The Associated Press
Monday, August 11, 2003; 10:11 AM


LOS ANGELES - Actor Arnold Schwarzenegger voted for a 1994 ballot measure to deny social services to illegal immigrants, his campaign said Sunday - offering the first glimpse of the actor's stand on a major policy issue.

The Republican has promoted himself as the candidate in California's gubernatorial recall who can best appeal to the state's politically and ethnically diverse electorate.

But Democrats were quick to jump on the disclosure as a chink in the action hero's armor.

The GOP-backed Proposition 187 to deny health care and public education to illegal immigrants was passed by a wide margin, although it was eventually ruled unconstitutional. It remains a contentious issue and a litmus test for some voters, particularly Hispanics, to gauge whether a candidate is immigrant-friendly.

Schwarzenegger campaign manager George Gorton said the Austrian-born actor's vote for the measure would not prevent him from reaching out to all voters.

"He has a lot of empathy for people who have come here for a better way of living, whether they have gotten here legally or illegally," Gorton said. "But he definitely feels that people should get here legally."

Gorton said Hispanics were among the strongest supporters of Proposition 49, a ballot measure Schwarzenegger successfully campaigned for last year aimed at dedicating as much as $550 million annually to before- and after-school programs.

Speaking on ABC's "This Week," Art Torres, chairman of the California Democratic Party, slammed Schwarzenegger for his decision to appoint former Gov. Pete Wilson, the architect of Proposition 187, as chairman of his new campaign.

"There's a famous phrase in our community, and that is, judge a person by the friends that he keeps," Torres said. "And unfortunately, his new chairman, Governor Wilson, supported 187 furiously against immigrants and Latinos."

The issue was one of the first Schwarzenegger's campaign has publicly addressed, discussing the vote in response to a reporter's inquiry.

Democratic Gov. Gray Davis, who is trying to survive the recall, and Schwarzenegger's Republican rivals have criticized him for speaking mostly in generalities since announcing his candidacy Wednesday.

Davis opposed Proposition 187.

© 2003 The Associated Press

-----------------------------------

El Nuevo Herald - Agosto 09, 2003

EL HIELO ARDIENTE

ANDRES REYNALDO

Cuando José Basulto, toda una autoridad moral del exilio, renunció públicamente a su afiliación al Partido Republicano, marcó un punto de inflexión en la tradicional alianza entre ese partido y nuestra comunidad. El iceberg de nuestra amargura asomó su escandalosa cumbre.

Fue así que nuestros representantes republicanos en Washington despertaron ante una ominosa, insondable y veloz masa de hielo. Desde entonces, nadie ha vuelto a saber de ellos. No es para menos. En esta crisis se aprecian varias vertientes. Primero, la creciente insatisfacción de los exiliados por la política de la Casa Blanca hacia Cuba. Luego, el desmoronamiento de una vieja maquinaria electoral. Y por último, el paternalismo con que el establishment nos contempla desde los dos principales partidos que (en lo que a nosotros respecta) con frecuencia son el mismo.

Nunca antes el exilio ha estado tan a tono con la situación interna de la isla. Desde la izquierda a la derecha la mayoría coincidimos en sostener a la disidencia y fomentar las presiones internacionales a favor de los derechos humanos y la democratización. Asimismo, los exiliados tenemos la obligación ética de exigir la acogida de quienes escapan del castrismo; tanto más después de la injusta implementación de la política de pies secos, pies mojados. En correspondencia a nuestro apoyo, tenemos derecho a esperar del Presidente directivas coherentes con estos fines. Toma chocolate, paga lo que debes.

La actitud de George W. Bush despierta unas dudas que paralizan gran parte de nuestros esfuerzos. ¿El incremento del comercio con La Habana significa que vamos hacia el levantamiento del embargo? (Del 2001 al presente Fidel Castro ha comprado más de $233.260,422, con el mayor auge de ventas en los meses recientes.) ¿La reducción de los contactos internos con la oposición quiere decir que ésta ya ha perdido el interés de Washington? ¿La devolución de los camionautas apunta a un acuerdo para negociar en alta mar la suerte de los repatriados por la fuerza? Cualquiera que sea la visión presidencial es hora de que nos hablen claro. Y los primeros en salir a la palestra deben ser aquéllos que año tras año nos han pedido un voto de confianza que, en definitiva, ha sido una patente de corso.

A partir de 1980, los republicanos se acostumbraron a conseguir un voto cubano pasteurizado por la radio y enlatado por un grupete de sargentos políticos locales. Pues bien, se acabó lo que se daba. Uno de los capítulos infames del exilio ha sido la grosera manipulación de un sector de los votantes (los más pobres, los más viejos, los más sedientos de un retorno a Cuba) por parte de esos virreyecitos de micrófono y marcha, en contubernio con una camada de funcionarios municipales y vividores con ínfulas de capo di mafia. Casi todos tienen por insólita credencial haber servido bien a nuestras dos últimas dictaduras. Sólo que el tiempo muele más que el molino. Algunos han ido a parar a las cortes por estafa. A otros, la audiencia se les ha corrido en el dial.

Por eso ya es hora de que Ileana Ros-Lehtinen y los hermanos Lincoln y Mario Díaz-Balart hagan un recuento de conciencia, descubran su ubicación generacional y territorial, y comprendan que no pueden seguir haciendo política para el municipio de Banes. Ni siquiera para el Municipio de Banes en el Exilio. Han llegado al jardín de los senderos que se bifurcan. Si ya se les hace imposible influir en los asuntos cubanos de la Casa Blanca, lo cual, a mi juicio, puede tener tremendas ventajas, aún pueden dedicarse a luchar por programas para los ancianos, nuevas fuentes de empleo y proyectos de obras públicas, que bastante falta que hacen. Eso sí, no más tomaduras de pelo. No más promesas falsas. Y si, como quieren hacernos creer algunos republicanos, todo esto es una burda conspiración demócrata, admitamos que ha partido de la mismísima Casa Blanca.

Por lo demás, sería mutuamente beneficioso (principalmente para una futura Cuba libre) que el Partido Republicano advierta que quizás los cubanos seamos un pueblo sin memoria, pero no sin historia. A nadie podemos dar lecciones de democracia. Pero vale aclarar que la perdimos en el tumulto de una luminosa ilusión emancipadora, inspirados por ideales de solidaridad, justicia social, dignidad y participación civil que no abundan en estos lares. No somos borregos extraviados en el sueño americano. Y sabemos dónde comprar la ropa que nos conviene. Que pongan el oído en la tierra, con humildad, de buena fe. Sobre todo, con respeto. No es la primera vez que un iceberg se vuelve un volcán.

© 2003 El Nuevo Herald

Domingo, Agosto 10, 2003

------------------------------------------------------

TIME Magazine - Sunday, Aug. 10, 2003

ALL THAT'S MISSION IS THE POPCORN

Come one, come all, to the greatest political show of the fall as Arnold Schwarzenegger vies for a chance to run California. Inside his stunning decision—and why it would be a mistake to write off his chances.

By KAREN TUMULTY AND TERRY MCCARTHY

It's too bad there's not an Academy Award for head fakes. As Arnold Schwarzenegger prepared to step onto the Tonight Show stage last week, Jay Leno asked him how he was going to make the expected announcement that he was not going to run for Governor of California. Schwarzenegger murmured, "I am bowing out." And that's what everyone was expecting to hear. In fact, top adviser George Gorton stood at the edge of the set, holding the official statement that began, "I am not running for Governor ..." When Gorton offered one last word of regret over the campaign that wasn't to be, the former Mr. Universe threw a muscular arm around his shoulder and said, "Let's go do it." He did it, all right. A few moments into the show's afternoon taping, Schwarzenegger declared to a squealing studio audience, "I am going to run for Governor of the state of California." It took Gorton until after the commercial break to figure out that Schwarzenegger wasn't joking; the crumpled statement was still in Gorton's hand as stagehands ejected him from the studio for using his cell phone to begin alerting Schwarzenegger's other clueless advisers.

As a political debut, it was dazzling stagecraft. But even before Schwarzenegger was introduced into the equation with his rallying cry to "clean house in Sacramento," California's Oct. 7 vote on whether to kick Gray Davis out of the Governor's office was shaping up to be the most surreal spectacle since the 2000 Florida recount. Now it's must-see politics, a reality show for the cable news channels, in which the prize is a budget mess to clean up and 34 million ungovernable Californians to lead. As the final deadline for entering the race passed Saturday evening, Conan the Candidate was one of several dozen vying for that responsibility. Among the others on the ballot: socialite turned populist cable pundit Arianna Huffington, ex-baseball commissioner Peter Ueberroth, pornographer Larry Flynt and porn star Mary Carey. Representing the et tu, Brute wing of Davis' party is his Lieutenant Governor, Cruz Bustamante.

The only prediction that seems safe to make at this point is that the recall election will get weirder. In the latest TIME/CNN poll, only 35% of registered voters say they would vote to keep Davis, which will be the first question on the ballot. At the same time, Californians will be asked who should replace him. In a field this jammed with candidates, the next Governor could conceivably be a candidate who is the choice of 5% or even less. It's entirely possible that 49% could vote to keep Davis as Governor—he needs more than 50% to defeat the recall—only to see him give up his office to someone who gets a far lower share in the subsequent balloting.

Schwarzenegger will not be the only candidate who has the resources, powerful backers and name identification to push out Davis. Or even the only one who speaks with an accent: Huffington, running as an Independent and a populist outsider, has hired advisers who helped wrestler Jesse Ventura win the Minnesota governorship in 1998. Businessman Bill Simon, the Republican nominee defeated by Davis last year, has claim to the conservative base that provides the Republicans with what little life they have in California. Ueberroth, though officially a Republican, will sell himself as a serious candidate with crossover appeal in a state where many voters still remember how he rescued the 1984 Olympics. And on the off chance that the entire exercise hasn't already made voters cynical enough, they can look forward to Democrats on the ballot making the case that Californians should vote no on throwing Davis out but yes on one of them replacing him.

President Bush is doing his best to stay out of the cross fire, and who can blame him? California, with its 55 electoral votes, has foiled him and his Administration's ambitions there before. In 2000 Bush made a dozen campaign swings there, only to get walloped by Al Gore, who hardly ever visited. Political strategist Karl Rove's perceived effort to sway last year's g.o.p. gubernatorial primary for the moderate former Los Angeles Mayor Richard Riordan annoyed conservatives and left relations between the state party and the White House prickly after Simon won. So officials say not to expect much more involvement than Bush's comments last week that Schwarzenegger would make "a good Governor." Besides, given the choice between a wounded Democratic incumbent in the Governor's mansion in 2004 and a Republican who inherits a state hemorrhaging red ink, Bush strategists consider it a pretty close call.

Davis' chances of surviving weren't looking so great even before Schwarzenegger entered the race. With Californians blaming him for the epic budget problems that have brought a tripling of vehicle-license fees, a 30% hike in state college fees and cutbacks in health services, polls in recent weeks had shown that more than 50% of Californians would support his recall. Weeks ago, California's Democratic House members had privately decided among themselves that, as one put it, "Davis was gone, and this was getting dangerous for us." While Davis had been on the phone constantly consulting with House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi of San Francisco, hoping to keep her in his camp, she had quietly been talking to fellow members of the California House delegation and state officials about finding a backup candidate. Their first choice: Senator Dianne Feinstein, the most popular politician in the state. "If Dianne got in," a Democratic insider said, "he was dead."

Feinstein took a pass. But then, just hours later on Wednesday, Schwarzenegger didn't, and the fragile shell of solidarity that the Democrats had built around the embattled Governor collapsed. By the next day, two Democrats with proven statewide appeal—Lieutenant Governor Bustamante and insurance commissioner John Garamendi—added their names to the list of candidates on the second ballot who were offering themselves up to replace Davis. And so Davis was left facing members of his establishment and a simple yea or nay verdict on his future: the state supreme court last Thursday rejected the Governor's lawsuit to delay the election and allow his name to appear among the replacement candidates should he lose the recall.

All this left the democratic field fractured, with no heavyweight to take on Schwarzenegger. Sensing a disaster, such influential figures as former Governor Jerry Brown and San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown took to the cable news shows to suggest that Davis should step aside and beg Feinstein to run in his place. Meanwhile, panic-stricken union officials, who had pledged to stand with Davis, started putting out the word privately that he should not count on the $10 million in assistance he has asked from them.

But giving up now, says Davis' friend Mickey Kantor, who was Commerce Secretary during the Clinton Administration, "is not his personality. His personality would be to fight with his back against the wall." In which case, Davis' best hope is to refocus Californians on the first question on the ballot: whether it's right to spend more than $60 million to remove a Governor they elected less than a year ago who has not committed any malfeasance and whose major sin was hiding from them the seriousness of the problems ahead when he was running for re-election. On Monday, when Davis found himself in Chicago at an afl-cio convention with Bill Clinton, he privately sought the counsel of the master political survivor. As they talked for more than an hour at the Drake Hotel, Clinton (who has also been advising Feinstein) compared Davis' situation with his own during impeachment. The key, he told Davis, is to stay engaged and make sure voters see him every day on the job. Saturday's filing deadline found Davis signing environmental legislation at a health-care center in Santa Monica.

But with Schwarzenegger's entry into the race and the defection of fellow Democrats (although one of them, Garamendi, suddenly took himself out last Saturday), it will be more difficult for Davis to frame the debate on his terms. Attention for now has shifted to the second ballot question: if the Governor is thrown out, who should replace him? In some ways, this plays into one of Davis' few known political talents. He has always run best when he has an opponent to savage—and up until now, his only one in the recall election seemed to be Gray Davis.

Davis was sharpening his knives again for conservative Republican Congressman Darrell Issa, who had spent $2.96 million to get the recall (and himself) on the ballot. But soon after Schwarzenegger got in the race, Issa bowed out, leaving Davis with an opponent who not only has star power but also will be far more difficult to paint as a tool of the right wing. In fact, it could be difficult to attach any labels at all to Schwarzenegger. What do you call an advocate of fiscal discipline who sponsored a successful 2002 ballot measure that requires spending more than $400 million on after-school programs?

The comparisons between Schwarzenegger and the last actor to be elected Governor of California are hard to resist. But by the time Ronald Reagan ran for office, he had spent a decade cultivating powerful backers and honing his ideas on the political-dinner circuit as a spokesman for smaller government and unfettered business. When then Governor Pat Brown dismissed Reagan as capable of doing nothing more than reading the scripts that had been written for him by hired speechwriters, the future President shrewdly changed the format of his appearances to question-and-answer sessions with his audiences. "Well, it worked like a charm," Reagan later recalled.

Assuming the media and the voters can get past making corny puns out of Schwarzenegger's film titles, he too will have to change his act to prove that he is a serious man with serious ideas for a serious time in California's history. "This isn't the movies," says Democratic political consultant David Axelrod. "No one is going to throw him a ray gun so he can blow up the deficit." But will a two-month campaign give anyone enough time to pin Schwarzenegger down on the issues that bedevil the state, from air quality to immigration, water rights to education? Schwarzenegger is promising detailed plans for how he will solve the state's myriad problems, but thus far his positions have been as vaporous as his witty one-liners

Schwarzenegger's political organization is still very much a work in progress, built largely from the team that surrounded former Governor Pete Wilson. Some might question that choice, given that the Republican Party in California has yet to get itself back on the rails after Wilson's disastrous anti-immigration effort. But who Schwarzenegger surrounds himself with may not matter. The way in which the actor made his announcement suggests he's not a candidate who will heed his advisers—or even tell them what he plans to do.

It might be easier to know what to expect from Schwarzenegger if anyone knew just how he ended up where he is. If the rest of the world was surprised by his announcement on Leno's show, imagine how Richard Riordan felt. He and Schwarzenegger are friends and close political allies. Not two weeks before, sources close to Riordan say, Schwarzenegger had faxed to Riordan's Malibu beach house a four- or five-page speech that the actor was planning to make two days later.

It said Schwarzenegger had decided not to run for family reasons and that he was endorsing Riordan. At that point, Riordan had asked him to hold off for a while, to give Riordan time to put together a political organization. As late as the Sunday before the date with Leno, Schwarzenegger, his wife Maria Shriver and their children spent five hours with the Riordans in Malibu without Schwarzenegger once letting on that he might be reconsidering the race. And the day Schwarzenegger announced, Riordan had spent three hours at lunch with California Congressman David Dreier, mapping out his own race. Riordan backed out as gracefully as possible under the circumstances, but not everyone believed it when he said he was "relieved" that his friend Schwarzenegger had decided to run after all.

What no one knew in the days leading up to Schwarzenegger's announcement was precisely how the pieces were falling into place for the actor. He had started to doubt whether Riordan really had his heart in the race. And Feinstein's decision not to run removed from the field his most formidable opponent. (In the TIME/CNN poll, she edges out Schwarzenegger by 2 percentage points.) George Butler, a co-director of the Schwarzenegger film Pumping Iron, said that if Feinstein dropped out because she believed Schwarzenegger wasn't running, then she fell for the same tactic the bodybuilder used when he wanted to make his opponents believe he would stay out of the competition. "It looked to me like an old-time Arnold maneuver," Butler says. "What you're dealing with is one of the canniest operators who ever walked across the road in America."

But most important, advisers say, is the fact that Shriver's reluctance had softened. No one could understand better than a Kennedy the costs that politics could exact, so it made sense that she would come around slowly. The couple hasn't confided just how or when it happened. "What was widely publicized as her opposition to do this was wrong. She wasn't against it," says an adviser. "And she got to a place where she supported it."

Schwarzenegger shouldn't expect to see many of the other Kennedys stumping for him. "I like and respect Arnold," said Shriver's uncle Teddy Kennedy. But the Massachusetts Senator added, "I'm a Democrat, and I don't support the recall effort." But Schwarzenegger has never tied his fortunes, political or otherwise, to those of his famous in-laws. When Shriver threw an outdoor party at their house for Teddy and her cousin Caroline Kennedy during the 2000 Democratic convention in Los Angeles, Schwarzenegger mingled for half an hour or so and then retreated inside. "That was not his crowd or his comfort zone," recalls one guest. "He views himself as much larger than the Kennedys in many ways."

He has done things his own way on his own time. "One of his charms is that he sets everything he wants out on the table," says his friend Butler. But politics has a way of setting its own table. As Schwarzenegger was agonizing over whether to join the circus now or run a few years later as he had always planned, former Governor Wilson privately offered him a piece of advice he had got from Richard Nixon back in 1966, when Wilson was wrestling with a decision on entering a race. "Jesus, Pete," Nixon told him. "If you think you can win, you got to go now." For once, Schwarzenegger knew, the question wasn't whether to seize the moment—it was whether to let the moment seize him.

With reporting by Sean Scully/ Los Angeles, Matthew Cooper, John F. Dickerson, Michael Duffy, Douglas Waller and Michael Weisskopf/ Washington

From the Aug. 18, 2003 issue of TIME magazine

Sábado, Agosto 09, 2003

----------------------------------------

AMERICA'S GLOSSY ENVOY

State Funds Pop Magazine for Young Arabs

By Peter Carlson
The Washington Post
August 9, 2003

The U.S. government has a message for young Arabs:

Hi.

Hi is a new magazine funded by the State Department, published in Arabic, targeted at Arabs ages 18 to 35 and sold on newsstands in more than a dozen countries. It costs consumers about $2 a copy. It will cost American taxpayers about $4 million a year -- minus whatever advertising revenues it can generate.

"This is a long-term way to build a relationship with people who will be the future leaders of the Arab world," says Christopher W.S. Ross, special coordinator for public diplomacy at the State Department. "It's good to get them in a dialogue while their opinions are not fully formed on matters large and small."

The premiere issue of the glossy, full-color 72-page monthly appeared in July with a cover story on the experiences of Arab students in American colleges and shorter articles on yoga, sandboarding, singer Norah Jones, Arab American actor Tony Shalhoub and marriage counseling -- the latter story illustrated with a photo of Dr. Phil McGraw, the Oprah-spawned TV tough-love guru.

It doesn't contain a word about the American invasion of Iraq, the Arab-Israeli conflict, Afghanistan or al Qaeda. Nor will future issues. The magazine's editors and its State Department funders plan a resolutely apolitical magazine.

"This is a lifestyle magazine," says Fadel Lamen, Hi's Libyan American managing editor. "It's a new phenomenon in the Arab world to do a lifestyle magazine that doesn't touch on the political."

"Arab Music Invades the West," proclaims the cover of the second issue, now arriving on Middle Eastern newsstands. That headline touts an article on Sting, Lenny Kravitz and other Western pop stars who have collaborated with Arab musicians. The issue also features stories on Internet matchmaking, digital art and Hispanic life in the United States, plus a short item on Adam Sandler's revelation of what a lousy student he was in high school.

"There are plenty of political magazines," says Ross. "This is, in a very subtle way, a vehicle for American values. There have been people in Congress who have said, 'Why can't we explain our American values?' Well, here is one way to do that."

"It's like a Reader's Digest of America -- a Cliffs Notes of what's going on in America from the American point of view," says Samir Husni, a Lebanese American professor of journalism at the University of Mississippi, who was hired as a consulting editor for Hi. "It's not going to have in-depth investigative pieces on the problems of America. We're emphasizing the positive things."

The magazine is part of a series of initiatives by the Bush administration to create a more positive view of the United States in the Arab world, particularly among young people. For instance, the administration created Radio Sawa, which broadcasts a mix of Western and Arab pop music along with news reports aimed at 18-to-35-year olds. And earlier this week national security adviser Condoleezza Rice outlined a broad commitment to encourage democracy and free markets throughout the region.

Hi is funded by the State Department but produced by the Magazine Group, a Washington-based company that publishes magazines for scores of companies and associations -- including Concrete Masonry, the magazine of the National Concrete Masonry Association, and Jewish Woman, the magazine of a group called Jewish Women International.

The magazine is edited in Washington, printed in a State Department publishing plant in the Philippines and flown to the Middle East. Thus far, it is distributed in Egypt, Lebanon, Jordan, Tunisia, Sudan, Israel, Kuwait, Yemen, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates, among others. Hi's publishers are still seeking permission to sell the magazine in Syria and Saudi Arabia. Now, circulation is only 50,000 but the State Department hopes to expand that to 250,000.

Hi's advertising agency is the Beirut-based Saatchi&Saatchi/Adline. The first two issues have each contained about a half-dozen pages of advertising -- most for hotels, airlines and snack foods.

The State Department conceived of the magazine after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, Ross says, "as part of a broad effort to create a dialogue with the Arab world." The State Department has created many publications before, but all of them were given away. This time, State decided to sell the magazine in an attempt to boost its credibility.

"If it's going to survive as a magazine, it should sell on the newsstand with other magazines," Ross says. "And it's useful to have the barometer that sales provide."

Hi does not hide its connection to the U.S. government. Each issue contains the statement that it is published "on behalf of the foreign media office of the United States State Department."

The magazine's debut inspired a fair amount of comment in the Arab press, says Ross, a former ambassador to Syria and Algeria who is fluent in Arabic.

"Some people have said it's just another tool of American propaganda, brainwashing Arab youth," he says. "But there was also a lot of serious analysis of the content, and that's heartening, because we usually just get blasted."

Arabic-speaking Middle East experts who have read Hi express mixed reactions.

"I think it's a great magazine. I would like to subscribe to it myself," says Mohammed Nawawy, an Egyptian-born journalism professor at Stonehill College in Massachusetts and co-author of a book on the al-Jazeera TV network.

But, Nawawy suggests, the magazine is addressing the wrong problem. "The problem with young Arabs is not how they perceive U.S. culture or the American way of life," he says. "They're watching American movies and wearing American jeans and lining up to get visas to come to the United States. The problem is how they perceive United States foreign policy, and that can only be changed by actions on the ground in Iraq and Israel."

Samer Shehata, who teaches at Georgetown University's Center for Contemporary Arab Studies, agrees. Hi is "clearly well done" and "visually beautiful," Shehata wrote in an e-mail while traveling to Egypt. But, like Nawawy, he believes that Arabs do not hate America or American culture, but loathe its foreign policy toward the Middle East.

"A magazine directed at Arab youth, regardless of how well done," he wrote, "will not convince people otherwise."

Ross disagrees. "We are reaching out to the mainstream," he says. "Osama bin Laden would not be convinced by reading that magazine. But a lot of mainstream people have questions about the United States that we can answer."

© 2003 The Washington Post Company

-----------------------------------------

The New York Times - August 9, 2003

Editorial

MAYOR BLOOMBERG AND THE HISPANIC PULSE

In recent days, Mayor Michael Bloomberg marched in parades with Puerto Ricans in the Bronx and with Ecuadoreans in Queens. He went to the Dominican Republic and danced the merengue. The mayor typically begins remarks before Hispanic audiences with a smattering of Spanish, which he has studied for years. The fact is, Mr. Bloomberg has a personal history of engaging Hispanics, dating back to his establishment of a Spanish-language arm of the media empire he ruled before becoming mayor. But little of this seems to have impressed those voters.

Hispanics stand out among the New Yorkers most disenchanted with Mr. Bloomberg. A New York Times/CBS News Poll found that 74 percent disapproved of the job he was doing. The ranks of the disenchanted were even higher among the city's largest Hispanic faction, Puerto Ricans.

A lot has happened since 2001, when Mr. Bloomberg won about half of the city's Hispanic votes. Working-class Hispanics have been hit hard economically. While the rate of unemployment citywide is 8.8 percent, it runs in double digits in some Hispanic neighborhoods. Off-the-books, low-level jobs that many immigrants depend on, like housekeeping and construction, have become harder to get. College tuition is up, as are sales and property taxes. Those immediate problems weigh more heavily on people than the long-term efforts the mayor has undertaken that address Hispanics' concerns, like planning for more affordable housing and struggling to improve city schools.

A lot more can happen before the next election — last time, Mr. Bloomberg may have benefited from anger against his opponent, Mark Green, who had beaten the only Hispanic mayoral candidate, Fernando Ferrer, the former Bronx borough president, in a contentious Democratic primary. Mr. Ferrer has not yet indicated whether he wants to run in 2005, and no one knows who will wind up as Mr. Bloomberg's Democratic opponent. In the meantime, though, the mayor will need to address the fact that nearly half of the New York Hispanics polled said he did not care at all about their needs. To do that, he will need to show that beyond dancing, he is not out of step with them.

Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company

-------------------------------------------------

EL VIRREY

"Todo esto puede parecer algo anárquico. Pero lo que está en marcha es una verdadera fuerza sísmica, la experiencia directa y cotidiana de la libertad, de la participación cívica, a todos los niveles de la vida social", afirma el embajador Paul Bremer, designado por George W. Bush para dirigir la democratización y la reconstrucción de Irak.

MARIO VARGAS LLOSA
EL PAÍS | 09-08-2003

Con las primeras luces del alba, entre las cinco y las seis de la mañana, el embajador Paul Bremer abandona la caravana sin aire acondicionado donde pernocta, y corre sus cinco kilómetros diarios por los jardines del antiguo palacio -en verdad, una ciudadela- de Sadam Husein. Luego, se ducha y se zambulle quince horas en su despacho, en el corazón de la gigantesca construcción llena de arañas de cristal, baldosas de mármol y cúpulas doradas que construyó, como un monumento a su megalomanía, el dictador iraquí. Y, para que no cupiera duda sobre sus intenciones, coronó el enorme complejo con cuatro gigantescas cabezas de cobre hueco en que Sadam Husein aparece como Nabucodonosor.

Bremer tiene 62 años pero parece mucho menor. Graduado en Yale y en Harvard, fue embajador en los Países Bajos y en Noruega, embajador volante del Presidente Reagan, es experto en crisis y en contra terrorismo y llevaba diez años retirado, en un próspero trabajo privado, cuando el Presidente Bush lo llamó para ofrecerle el oficio más difícil del mundo: dirigir la democratización y reconstrucción de Irak. Lo aceptó porque siempre ha creído en el servicio público y porque su padre le enseñó que si uno tiene la suerte "de nacer en el mejor país del mundo" ("bueno, nosotros creemos que es el mejor país del mundo", matiza) está obligado moralmente a hacer todo lo que el Presidente le pida. Además, lo ha aceptado porque está convencido de que es posible hacer del Irak post-Sadam Husein una democracia funcional que contagiará su entorno y permitirá una transformación esencial de todo el Medio Oriente.

Habla con claridad y coherencia, y, a ratos, se aparta de las banalidades congénitas a cualquier detentador de un cargo público, para decir cosas inteligentes. Pero, por su entusiasmo para describirme el futuro promisor de Irak, olvida las leyes de la hospitalidad y no nos ofrece ni un vaso de agua ni a mí ni a mi hija Morgana, que boqueamos de sed y de insolación, pues hemos protagonizado una odisea para llegar a este despacho (con una hora de atraso).

La cita era a las 11 y 15 de la mañana y estuvimos a las diez y media en la entrada, junto al gran arco, entre las alambradas y barreras de la guardia. Allí debían esperarnos dos oficiales de la Misión Militar Española del CPA (Coalition Provisional Authority). Pero el teniente coronel Juan Delgado y el coronel Javier Sierra habían aparcado su coche delante del arco, en tanto que nosotros los esperábamos detrás. Este desencuentro nos echó a mi hija y a mí en manos de unos soldados que nos registraron, nos pidieron unos pases incomprensibles, y nos advirtieron que jamás nos dejarían cruzar las rejas hacia el lejano despacho de Bremer. Durante una hora pivotamos entre distintas puertas del palacio, separadas por centenares de metros que debíamos cruzar a pie, bajo un sol ígneo. Cuando por fin un oficial aceptó llamar a la oficina de informaciones del embajador Bremer, no pudo hablar con nadie porque todos los empleados se habían trasladado al aeropuerto a dar la bienvenida al actor Arnold Schwarzenegger que venía a pasar el 4 de julio con las tropas norteamericanas de Bagdad.

En la más ardiente mañana de mi vida, y cuando ya se había pasado media hora de la hora de la cita, Morgana, temeraria e inoportuna, decidió dar una lección de buena crianza al Ejército de los Estados Unidos y se puso a rugirle al sargento jefe del plantón que ella no aguantaba groserías ni que le levantaran la voz, ni la falta de cooperación de tanto patán uniformado, con lo que yo deduje que, además de no ver a Bremer, no era imposible que diera con mis huesos en uno de los calabozos del Palacio del déspota iraquí. En ese momento, providencialmente, apareció un teniente en zapatillas dotado de racionalidad. Entendió todo y pidió que lo siguiéramos. Así llegamos a la antesala del embajador. Quince minutos después compareció un amable coronel, adjunto militar del procónsul, que nos preguntó si veníamos a cubrir la entrevista que el embajador Bremer tendría con el Premio Nobel. ¿Se había inventado el espléndido Miguel Moro Aguilar, Encargado de la Embajada de España, que me gestionó esta cita, semejante credencial para que Bremer no pudiera decir no? Cuando expliqué al decepcionado coronel que no había ningún Premio Nobel a la vista y que la cita era, apenas, con un novelista del Perú, aquél murmuró, con desmayado humor: "Si usted le cuenta toda esta confusión al embajador, me despide".

Una hora después de lo debido, aquí estamos, con el hombre al que los terroristas que han asesinado ya 27 soldados norteamericanos y herido a 177 desde el 9 de abril, intentaron matar ayer, en el Museo Nacional, un atentado que, por cierto, la seguridad detectó y atajó a tiempo. Me cuenta que pasó su luna de miel en el Perú, en 1965, y que, gracias a una huelga del ferrocarril, él y su esposa tuvieran la suerte de visitar Machu Picchu, solos, sin los enjambres de turistas habituales.

¿Qué va a ocurrir ahora en Irak? Por lo pronto, la designación de un Consejo de Gobierno iraquí, de 25 personas, representativas de todas las tendencias políticas, religiosas y étnicas, que tendrá poderes ejecutivos, nombrará ministros y comisiones de técnicos y expertos para poner en marcha las instituciones públicas. El Consejo intervendrá en la elaboración del Presupuesto, en la puesta en marcha de una economía de mercado y en la privatización del sector público. El embajador Bremer dice que la economía de mercado y la democracia política convertirán a este país, que Sadam Husein con su frenético derroche armamentista y su socialismo estatista arruinó, en una nación pujante. "Si Lee Kwan Yoo consiguió hacerlo en Singapur, un país que no tenía otro recurso que su gente, imagine lo que puede lograr Irak con sus ingentes recursos. Y no pienso sólo en el petróleo, también en la tierra, que, en la región central, es aún más fértil que la del mediodía francés".

Un par de semanas después de mi visita, en efecto, fue instalado el Consejo de Gobierno, de 25 miembros, con un reparto proporcionado a la composición político social iraquí: 13 chiíes, cinco kurdos, cinco suníes, un turcomano y un cristiano. Entre ellos, tres mujeres y un comunista. Según las primeras declaraciones de Bremer este organismo iba a ser sólo "asesor", es decir decorativo, pero, al parecer por consejo insistente de Sergio Vieira de Mello, el enviado especial de la ONU, el embajador consintió en otorgarle poderes ejecutivos. Cuando se lo pregunto, me responde: "Mi colaboración con Vieira de Mello es excelente".

Según su plan, este Consejo de Gobierno plural abrirá un período de acciones múltiples, con participación creciente de la ciudadanía en todos los órdenes, que irá, de una manera práctica, impulsando la democratización. Mientras, una asamblea o comisión constituyente, conformada por gentes respetables y capaces, pondrá a punto una Constitución democrática, "garantizando la libertad, la legalidad y los derechos de la mujer", que el pueblo iraquí deberá legitimar mediante un plebiscito. Entonces, Irak celebrará las primeras elecciones libres de su historia y él, sus 600 subordinados en este palacio y los 140 mil soldados estadounidenses, se marcharán.

Bremer asegura de manera enfática que esto va a ocurrir y que los terroristas que cada día emboscan y abaten en las calles a soldados norteamericanos no frenarán el empeño de Estados Unidos en llevar a cabo este proceso democratizador hasta sus últimas consecuencias. ¿Seguirá apoyándolo la opinión pública de Estados Unidos, pese al altísimo coste económico y en vidas humanas que tendrá? Sin la menor duda. Él recibe aquí, a diario, delegaciones bi-partidarias, y, pese a las rencillas públicas acrecentadas por el proceso electoral de Estados Unidos, demócratas y republicanos coinciden en que esta empresa debe llegar a buen puerto, cueste lo que cueste.

¿Quiénes son los terroristas? Varios grupos, que actúan de manera dispersa, sin una dirección central. Los criminales comunes que Sadam Husein soltó de las cárceles. Residuos militares de la dictadura, oficiales de la Guardia Republicana, de los fedayines de Sadam, torturadores y agentes con prontuario de la policía política (la Mukhabarat) a quienes les interesa que cunda el caos por razones obvias. Comandos internacionalistas de Al Qaeda venidos del exterior, así como comandos enviados por los sectores más fanáticos del gobierno de Irán, que temen, y con justa razón, en sus fronteras, un Irak libre y democrático. Estas fuerzas irán siendo aniquiladas, con determinación y método, gracias a la colaboración de los propios iraquíes, a medida que empiece a funcionar la policía y las milicias locales, entrenadas por las fuerzas de la coalición, operación que está ya en marcha. Y la captura o muerte de Sadam Husein (por el que ofrece 25 millones de dólares) liberará a muchos iraquíes del terror que todavía sienten ante la idea de que el tirano pueda volver al poder a tomarles cuentas por haber decapitado sus estatuas.

He oído decir mucho, en estos días, a iraquíes y extranjeros, que Paul Bremer no está aquí en su elemento, que Irak, el mundo árabe, el Medio Oriente, son para él temas exóticos. No es mi impresión. Por el contrario, parece moverse como pez en el agua en las turbias aguas de las diferencias, enemistades y afinidades entre las innumerables fracciones, comunidades, etnias y religiones iraquíes -chiíes y suníes, árabes, kurdos, turcomanos, armenios, cristianos, etcétera- con observaciones sutiles sobre las dificultades de hacer coexistir a ese mosaico tan disímil. "Será difícil, pero ocurrirá, ocurrirá", repite muchas veces. Para él, lo definitivo, más que las instituciones que se creen y las consultas electorales, será la acción cotidiana, el descubrimiento que ya están haciendo los iraquíes de lo que significa ejercer la libertad, en este país en el que, pese a la inseguridad, a la falta de agua y de luz y a las basuras, desde el 9 de abril se han abierto medio centenar de periódicos y fundado setenta partidos políticos. "Todo esto puede parecer algo anárquico. Pero lo que está en marcha es una verdadera fuerza sísmica, la experiencia directa y cotidiana de la libertad, de la participación cívica, a todos los niveles de la vida social. Una vez que hayan comprendido lo que ello significa, los iraquíes no dejarán que se la arrebaten nunca más". En muchos pueblos y barrios ya funcionan municipalidades genuinas, surgidas de manera consensuada, en las que los vecinos participan y a las que fiscalizan, con una libertad de iniciativa y de acción que este país no había conocido.

Cuando le digo que no he oído a un solo iraquí lamentar la caída de Sadam Husein ni siquiera los bombardeos que acabaron con su régimen, pero que, en cambio, todos con quienes he hablado están indignados, humillados, ofendidos, por la pasividad de las fuerzas norteamericanas ante los saqueos, robos e incendios que han destruido Bagdad y arruinado a cientos de miles de vecinos, me recuerda que aquello ocurrió "cuando yo no estaba aquí, cuando llevaba una vida tranquila en la esfera privada". Pero, es verdad: "No haber parado los saqueos fue el peor error que cometimos y nos va a costar billones de dólares reparar esos daños". Estados Unidos no va a escatimar recursos en reconstruir los servicios, restaurar la infraestructura, para que este país despegue y se coloque a la vanguardia de la modernización política y económica en el Medio Oriente. Habla con la convicción de un misionero y creo que cree lo que me dice.

¿Puede materializarse ese sueño? Creo que sólo a condición de que Estados Unidos, o las Naciones Unidas, asuman el altísimo costo, en pérdidas humanas y en recursos que pueden ser cuantiosos, de una larga ocupación. Es una ilusión suponer que las acciones de sabotaje, atentados y emboscadas de los distintos grupos de la resistencia, en este país donde el embajador Bremer calcula que hay unos 5 millones de armas diseminadas entre la población civil, van a ser rápidamente aplastadas, aún luego de la muerte o captura de Sadam Husein. Lo probable es que, por un período que podría ser largo, aumenten y las víctimas se multipliquen, y los daños y sabotajes en la infraestructura sean grandes, de manera que la recuperación de la economía y la creación del empleo, una urgencia dramática para el 70% de la población que está en paro, vayan en cámara lenta o se vean frenadas. De otro lado, la adaptación a la democracia no será rápida ni sin sobresaltos en un país donde el factor religioso presenta obstáculos dificilísimos para el establecimiento de una verdadera libertad e igualdad entre los sexos. No hablo sólo de los extremistas fanáticos que, sin duda, son una minoría. Incluso entre los musulmanes medios y avanzados, y también entre los cristianos de Irak, he encontrado, a menudo, en temas que conciernen a la mujer, a la libertad de expresión o al Estado laico, prejuicios y anticuerpos tan recios que costará tiempo y paciencia superar. Las animosidades y rechazos entre las distintas comunidades religiosas, políticas y étnicas están muy a flor de piel, y acaso inflamadas, ahora que pueden salir a la luz sin cortapisas y ya no se hallan sofocadas por una autoridad represora, de modo que establecer esos consensos básicos sobre los que se edifica una democracia en el mosaico iraquí será, también, difícil.

Pero nada de eso es imposible, desde luego. Sobre todo si, como afirma Bremer, el pueblo iraquí comienza a ejercitar esa libertad que no ha conocido y se acostumbra a ella, en un medio en el que el orden básico esté asegurado. Hoy ese orden sólo puede provenir de las fuerzas de la coalición, o -y esto sería lo mejor que podría ocurrir- de una fuerza de paz internacional avalada por las Naciones Unidas.

Al salir del despacho del embajador Bremer, aparecen el teniente coronel Juan Delgado y el coronel Javier Sierra. Respiran, aliviados. Nos han estado buscando toda la mañana por el dédalo de casamatas, barreras, puestos de control y patrullas de los antiguos dominios de Sadam Husein.

"Estamos vivos", los tranquilizamos. "Pero, muertos de sed. Cualquier líquido frío, por caridad, aunque sea una dulcete Cola-cola".

A la mañana siguiente, en las largas horas de carretera a través del desierto que me lleva de Bagdad a Ammán, donde tomaré el avión de vuelta a Europa, me pregunto una vez más -lo he hecho todos los días en Irak- si fue un acierto o un error oponerme a la guerra que Estados Unidos decidió unilateralmente, sin el apoyo de la ONU, para derrocar a Sadam Husein. La verdad es que las dos razones esgrimidas por Bush y Blair para justificar la intervención armada -la existencia de armas de destrucción masiva y el vínculo orgánico entre el Gobierno iraquí y los terroristas de Al Qaeda- no han podido ser probadas, y, a estas alturas, cada vez parecen más improbables. Formalmente, pues, las razones para oponerme fueron válidas.

Pero ¿y si el argumento para intervenir hubiera sido, claro y explícito, acabar con una tiranía execrable y genocida, que ha causado innumerables víctimas y mantiene a todo un pueblo en el oscurantismo y la barbarie y devolverle a éste la soberanía? Hace tres meses no lo sé, pero, ahora, con lo que he visto y oído en esta breve estancia, hubiera apoyado la intervención, sin vacilar. Sin ésta, Sadam Husein hubiera caído, tal vez, pero gracias a un golpe gestado dentro de su propia camarilla, que hubiera prolongado de manera indefinida la satrapía con otros déspotas y otras consignas. Y la suerte de la inmensa mayoría de los iraquíes seguiría siendo, como siempre, por tiempo indefinido, la del oprobio y el atraso. Esto no es pesimismo, es -basta echar una mirada alrededor en todo el Oriente Medio- estricto realismo. Todo el sufrimiento que la acción armada ha infligido al pueblo iraquí es pequeño comparado al horror que vivió bajo Sadam Husein. Ahora, por primera vez en su larga historia, tiene la posibilidad de romper el círculo vicioso de dictadura tras dictadura en que ha vivido y -como Alemania y Japón al terminar la segunda guerra mundial- inaugurar una nueva etapa, asumiendo la cultura de la libertad, la única que puede inmunizarlo contra la resurrección de ese pasado. Que esto sea realidad depende no sólo de los iraquíes, aunque, claro está, principalmente de ellos. Depende, sobre todo, ahora, de la coalición y del apoyo material y político que le preste la comunidad de países democráticos del mundo entero, empezando por la Unión Europea.

© Mario Vargas Llosa, 2003.
© Derechos mundiales de prensa en todas las lenguas reservados a Diario El País, SL, 2003

El Nuevo Herald - Agosto 08, 2003

HOY EN DIA

Eloy Gutiérrez-Menoyo, dirigente del grupo opositor moderado Cambio Cubano, anunció ayer en La Habana su decisión de permanecer en Cuba para hacer campaña en favor de la pluralidad política y la libertad.

Esta decisión debe ser respetada. Con independencia de sus ideas políticas, todo ciudadano tiene el derecho inalineable de vivir en el país del cual ostenta la ciudadanía.

De origen español, Menoyo recibió la ciudadanía cubana en 1959 y tiene residencia permanente en Estados Unidos.

En igual sentido, se le debe respetar a Menoyo su derecho a luchar, como él dice, ``por hacer de Cuba una Nación libre, soberana y próspera''.

Le corresponde ahora al gobierno cubano el respetar la integridad física de Menoyo, el cual quiere hacer valer un derecho civil, ya que se encuentra en su país y ha manifestado su intención de luchar por cambios pacíficos y legales.

El acto de quedarse en Cuba de Menoyo debe seguir analizándose según lo que ocurra los próximos días, pero el respeto a su persona está más allá de toda duda.

(C) El Nuevo Herald 2003

------------------------------------------------------------

LOS FRACASOS DE MARCOS

José Gil Olmos/apro

México - Este viernes se espera la reaparición de Marcos en la escena pública tras una ausencia de dos años y, como es su costumbre, ha enviado sendos comunicados para calentar el escenario. El regreso del vocero y jefe militar del Ejército Zapatista de Liberación Nacional (EZLN) está marcado por una nueva apuesta tras los fracasos que ha tenido desde 1994 de aliarse con la llamada sociedad civil.

Marcos, como los simpatizantes del EZLN, no aceptan las críticas y es sabido que a quienes se atreven a hacer observaciones que no les gustan, de manera inmediata los consideran non gratos, e incluso enemigos y son expulsados de su territorio o marginados de la información que generan. Sin embargo, habría que ver de manera crítica el retorno del subcomandante y analizar con detenimiento sus propuestas de formar las “juntas de buen gobierno” en los municipios rebeldes.

Curiosamente, Marcos reaparece cuando el expresidente Carlos Salinas de Gortari también recobra presencia en el medio político del país. Pero más allá de esta coincidencia, el jefe militar del EZLN se espera que aparezca este fin de semana luego de una serie de errores que le costaron el retiro de simpatizantes importantes a nivel mundial como el Nobel de Literatura, José Saramago.

Recientemente Marcos ofreció el apoyo incondicional al grupo terrorista vasco ETA, lo cual fue duramente criticado en la opinión pública y entre algunos de sus seguidores. Una cosa era apoyar las causas justas y otra a terroristas que asesinan bajo la bandera del derecho a la independencia. Aun así el subcomandante del EZLN no retiró lo dicho y fue más allá: en otro comunicado retó al juez español Baltasar Garzón por calificar al brazo político del ETA, como un grupo ilegal.

Las reacciones en Europa a las posiciones de Marcos no se hicieron esperar y hasta algunos de sus más fieles seguidores reprobaron la actitud intransigente del líder insurgente con el argumento de que había traspasado sus propias líneas discursivas y que no era válida su crítica al juez Garzón, el cual es mundialmente reconocido por la persecución que hizo del dictador chileno Augusto Pinochet.

El saldo negativo para el vocero zapatista fue muy alto y a este se sumó el resultado de las críticas que no sólo hizo al Partido Revolucionario Institucional (PRI) y al Partido Acción Nacional (PAN), sino también al Partido de la Revolución Democrática (PRD), uno de sus aliados naturales desde que apareció en 1994.

Al parecer Marcos está decidido a romper las alianzas políticas que ha tenido como representante del EZLN en estos nueve años, porque no sólo se apartó de las simpatías de los perredistas, sino que decidió ya no contar más con el apoyo de algunas organizaciones sociales que desde el principio le ofrecieron recursos materiales y financieros para aliviar la difícil situación por la que atraviesan las comunidades de apoyo zapatista.

En uno de sus últimos comunicados, Marcos dijo que ya no querían los zapatos viejos que mandaban las organizaciones sociales y tampoco estaban dispuestos a la imposición de proyectos en las comunidades por parte de la sociedad civil.

Es aquí que Marcos anuncia la desaparición de los “Aguascalientes” que fueron creados a partir de 1995 luego de que el Ejército destruyó el original construido en julio de 1994 en el ejido de Guadalupe Tepeyac, y adelanta la creación de los “Caracoles” en los mismos terrenos donde estaban aquellos.

Con esta decisión Marcos rompió las relaciones íntimas que tenía con la sociedad civil a la que apostó en estos nueve años de vida con varios intentos que fracasaron de una manera rotunda.

El primero de los fracasos fue la llamada Convención Nacional Democrática que fue convocada en agosto de 1994 en el primer “Aguascalientes” y a la cual asistieron cerca de seis mil personas. De ahí salió un programa de trabajo que nunca se cumplió y el cual consistía en hacer un llamado a la Asamblea Nacional Democrática que trabajaría en las bases de un nuevo constituyente y en una nueva Constitución Política Mexicana.

La Asamblea Nacional Democrática fue el segundo gran fracaso entre el EZLN y la sociedad civil. El 5 de febrero de 1995 en Querétaro los afanes protagonistas de los grupos sociales y algunos intelectuales de la vieja izquierda se encargaron de echar a perder esta apuesta de reorganización política. En esa fecha histórica se rompió la asamblea y nunca más se volvió a convocar.

El tercer fracaso fue la formación del Frente Zapatista de Liberación Nacional, una agrupación civil que se suponía sería el puente directo entre el EZLN y la sociedad, el cual nunca se construyó por la falta de pericia del encargado Javier Elorriaga que fue duramente criticado por su arrogancia y despotismo. Hoy dicho frente sólo es una cafetería ubicada en la colonia Doctores del Distrito Federal.

El cuarto fracaso serían los “Aguascalientes” que se construyeron en los ejidos chiapanecos de Morelia, Oventic, La Realidad y Roberto Barrios durante 1995 y 96. Dichos espacios pretendían ser nuevamente el punto de encuentro entre las comunidades del EZLN y las agrupaciones sociales del país y el extranjero. Sin embargo, nunca funcionaron. Muchos fueron los problemas internos que surgieron, entre ellos la lucha por el uso de los recursos para proyectos productivos. Este fin de semana los “Aguascalientes” desaparecerán y Marcos aprovechará la oportunidad para buscar su relanzamiento en el escenario político buscando un nuevo espacio.

El futuro para el vocero zapatista se prevé muy difícil porque las “juntas de buen gobierno” para los territorios zapatistas se apartan de la Constitución y pronto veremos el choque entre los grupos de indígenas que no van a aceptar una autoridad que no está reconocida por la ley.

Así que, salvo en el manejo en los medios de información, Marcos enfrentará una situación totalmente adversa para sus fines porque ya no contará con el apoyo incondicional de grandes grupos sociales, ni de partidos políticos y menos de algunos personajes del mundo intelectual. Además, estará marcado por los grandes fracasos de su apuestas que hizo de aliarse con la sociedad civil.

Comentarios: jgolmos@proceso.com.mx

Quinta-feira, Agosto 07, 2003

---------------------------------------------------------------

PORTUGAL

IAN GIBSON
EL PAIS | 08-07-2003

España vive de espaldas a Portugal, casi como si el país vecino no existiera. Es un fenómeno que nos llama la atención a todos los que, llegados desde fuera, pasamos la vida tratando de entender qué es lo que pasa aquí. Se prodigan los síntomas de tal desentendimiento, pero acaso el más flagrante lo proporcionan los espacios meteorológicos de RTV1, donde Portugal sólo figura como un hueco situado al oeste de España, a orillas del Atlántico, sin indicación de lugar alguno (empezando con la capital), sin ninguna información acerca del tiempo que allí hace, va a hacer o pudiera hacer. Para los que preparan estos espacios, no hay Portugal. En las secciones correspondientes de la televisión estatal británica, en contraste, nunca se comete la tontería, o descortesía, de borrar del mapa a la República de Irlanda y de atenerse sólo al Norte de la isla hermana, por el hecho de pertenecer éste al Reino Unido. Es una cuestión de elegancia. ¿No se dan cuenta los que mandan en Prado del Rey de que eliminar así a Portugal viene a ser un insulto -la metáfora de un rechazo, de una superioridad- para los muchos portugueses que ven la televisión española? ¿Tampoco se han parado a considerar que los españoles que van a pasar unos días o unas horas en Portugal quisieran saber qué tiempo se prevé allí?

¿De dónde procede este no querer saber nada de Portugal? ¿Del hecho de que para los españoles el portugués hablado es sin duda más difícil de entender que el español para los lusitanos, lo cual crea ya de por sí una barrera inicial? ¿Del de existir cierta hostilidad latente en muchos portugueses hacia este país, originada siglos atrás con la anexión española de su territorio entre 1580 y 1640 y la siguiente guerra de independencia, y luego arraigada ante el temor de nuevas tentaciones expansionistas? Desde luego tales tentaciones han existido, concretándose en los afanes imperiales del fascismo español. Ramiro Ledesma Ramos soñaba con que la Península entera tuviera "un solo destino" -destino por supuesto corporativista-, y José Antonio Primo de Rivera abogaba en privado (no había que ofender al régimen de Salazar) por que la capital del "Imperio español de la Falange" fuera Lisboa, con el castellano como idioma oficial y la bandera catalana convertida en nacional.

¿Y una Iberia federal? Nada más producirse el cambio trascendental de 1931, el fervoroso republicano que fue Antonio Machado, que años atrás había recordado que "el Duero cruza el corazón de roble de Iberia y de Castilla", aludió con complacencia a la posibilidad, que reconocía lejana, de una unión con el pueblo portugués.

¿Un día se levantará el sol sobre una República Federal Ibérica? Me atrevo a esperar que sí. Y, también, si no me equivoco, el gran José Saramago, el primer escritor portugués de todos los tiempos que se ha hecho popular en España. Leer a Saramago es sentir el apremiante deseo de conocer los escenarios suyos, en primer lugar Lisboa. Y es difícil no ver en su enlace con la combativa Pilar del Río un emblema de entendimientos futuros entre dos países que tanto provecho mutuo podrían sacar de una relación estrecha.

(C) EL PAIS

--------------------------------------------------

AMID ARAB SHOCK, SOME STIRRINGS OF CHANGE

Thomas L. Friedman
NYT
Thursday, August 7, 2003

AMMAN, Jordan - Shortly after the 25-member Governing Council was appointed in Iraq, the head of the Arab League, Amr Moussa, questioned the U.S.-appointed council's legitimacy. "If this council was elected," complained Moussa, "it would have gained much power and credibility."

I love that quote. I love it, first of all, for its bold, gutsy, shameless, world-class hypocrisy. Moussa presides over an Arab League in which not one of the 22 member states has a leader elected in a free and fair election. On top of it, before the war, Moussa did all he could to shield Saddam Hussein from attack, although Saddam had never held a real election in his life. Yet, there was Moussa questioning the new U.S.-appointed Iraqi council, which, even in its infant form, is already the most representative government Iraq has ever had.

But I also love Moussa's comment for its unintended revolutionary message: "Power and credibility" come from governments that are freely "elected." If only that were the motto of the Arab League. Alas, it is not, but it might be one day, and that brings me to the core question of this column: What has been the Arab reaction to Iraq?

The short answer is: Shock, denial, fear and some stirrings of change. The shock comes from how easily the U.S.-British force smashed Saddam's regime. The denial is manifest in the absence of virtually any public discussion among Arab elites as to why Baghdad fell so easily and why such a terrible regime was indulged by the Arab world for so long.

"The most striking thing," one Arab diplomat remarked to me, is that in the Arab world "there are no debates going on. There is no weapons of mass destruction debate. There is no debate about the atrocities and the mass graves. Even inside Iraq there doesn't seem to be much soul-searching, like there was in Germany after World War II. That is worrisome to me. People have to learn from the mistakes that were made, and there is no attempt at doing that."

The denial is closely related to the fears. Many Arab leaders and intellectuals seem to be torn between two fears about Iraq: fear that the United States will succeed in transforming Iraq into a constitutional, democratizing society, which would put pressure on every other Arab regime to change, and fear that the United States will fail and Iraq will collapse into ethnic violence that will suck in all the neighbors and look like Lebanon's civil war on steroids.

For now, though, a few governments are getting ahead of the curve, while most are still hiding behind it. King Abdullah of Jordan has been the most proactive, pushing his conservative population down the path of economic reform, and is likely to begin experimenting soon with political reform as well.

In Saudi Arabia, Crown Prince Abdullah recently convened an unusual dialogue between the country's Sunni and Shiite clerics to head off tensions that could flow from Iraq's being governed by its Shiite majority for the first time in its history. Fears that a democratically elected Shiite-led government in Iraq could stir downtrodden Shiite minorities around the Arab world to demand more power are rife among the dominant Sunni Muslims. Many Sunni Muslims look down on the Shiites as inferior. Think how Southern whites would feel if a black had been elected governor of Mississippi in 1920, and you'll have a taste of how uneasy the Sunnis are about a Shiite-led government in Iraq.

While Saudi Arabia is introducing more reforms at home than generally thought, too often it is one step forward, one step back. Just the other day another moderate Saudi columnist, Hussein Shobokshi, was sacked under government pressure. According to The Associated Press, Shobokshi had recently written a column imagining a Saudi Arabia where his daughter could drive and he could vote. Egypt remains totally gridlocked on reform, while the Syrian regime is going totally the wrong way, tightening its grip at home and pushing out all the freethinkers in Lebanon's cabinet.

As long as it is not clear how Iraq is going to come out, Arab regimes can practice denial. But if there is a decent government elected in Baghdad in two years, it will be as easy to ignore as a 10.0 earthquake. I think Abdul Rahman al-Rashid, editor of the London-based newspaper Asharq al-Awsat, got it right when he remarked to me of the U.S. invasion of Iraq: "It is a mix between Napoleon's invasion of Egypt and the 1967 war. There is the shock of defeat like '67 and the introduction of new thinking in the region like Napoleon. I can't predict how it will all come out, but for some reason I think it will be positive."

Copyright © 2002 The International Herald Tribune

------------------------------------------------------------

CUBA-MENOYO

Gutiérrez Menoyo regresa a Cuba para luchar por la pluralidad

Por Mar Marín

La Habana, 7 ago (EFE) Eloy Gutiérrez Menoyo, ex comandante revolucionario y líder del exilio moderado en Miami, anunció hoy su decisión de afincarse de nuevo en Cuba para continuar, desde dentro, con su lucha en favor de la "pluralidad'' en la isla.

Héroe revolucionario para algunos y traidor a la causa para otros, Gutiérrez Menoyo, que nació en Madrid en 1934 pero llegó a Cuba en la niñez y se nacionalizó cubano tras la revolución, no ha logrado concitar grandes apoyos ni entre la disidencia interna ni entre el exilio radical de Miami.

Comandante revolucionario, pronto se distanció de Fidel Castro, fue detenido a principios de los 60 por conspirar contra el líder cubano y condenado a muerte, pero la pena fue conmutada por 50 años de los que sólo cumplió 22 por intercesión del ex presidente español Felipe González.

En 1993, creó en Miami Cambio Cubano, una organización del exilio moderado, desde la que pidió una transformación pacífica en Cuba, siempre con el deseo de regresar a la isla en algún momento.

En los últimos años había visitado varias veces el país, la última, acompañado de su familia, hace unas semanas, supuestamente para disfrutar de unas vacaciones.

Sin embargo, hoy anunció por sorpresa a un grupo de periodistas extranjeros su intención de abandonar el exilio y fijar su residencia en su antigua casa del barrio del Vedado.

"Me asiste el derecho, como cubano, de poder radicarme y vivir en este país'', afirmó, porque "voy a ser más útil aquí que en el extranjero'' y "no tengo que pedir permiso a nadie para poder vivir en mi propio país''.

Jurídicamente "no violo la ley como activista pacífico, mi actitud no deberá ser vista como un desafío. Vengo a trabajar por una agenda transparente en favor de la paz y la reconciliación'', con un ideario "socialdemócrata vinculado a las corrientes progresistas del mundo''.

"Vengo a reclamar un espacio legal para la oposición y sé que la tarea no es fácil'', agregó Gutiérrez Menoyo, dispuesto a rechazar toda "tarea desestabilizadora en la que puedan intervenir intereses de potencias o gobiernos extranjeros''.

"Una oposición independiente no es una oposición manipulada por la Sección de Intereses (de EEUU) ni nada por el estilo'', afirmó, mientras insistía en que tiene los "brazos abiertos'' para trabajar con disidentes "independientes''.

A su juicio, es necesario "que prime la inteligencia'' frente la îîingenuidad de creer que un sistema se pueda hacer eternamente permanente''.

"Hay que buscar soluciones pacíficas, hay que dialogar y entender que por ambiciones o intereses personales por encima de todo eso está el país'', opinó.

"Hay que retomar las riendas de una revolución. Hay que reinventar una revolución y no se pueden cruzar los brazos para decir bueno vamos a esperar que esto cambio'', dijo el líder de "Cambio Cubano'', que reconoció que llega a la isla en un momento "de más represión''.

Su prioridad es "encontrar oídos receptivos, que nos puedan conducir a realizar cambios en este país'' y buscar "todas las puertas que se puedan abrir, hasta con los funcionarios del gobierno cubano, si es que no les prohíben hablar conmigo''.

Admitió que durante los últimos años mantuvo contactos con autoridades cubanas, "hasta con el propio Fidel Castro'', pero "no hemos tenido una respuesta positiva''.

"Siempre encontrarán en mi una posición de espera, paciente, pacífica y laborando en favor de la paz. Desde mi punto de vista, no puede haber paz en un país si no hay libertad, tampoco libertad sin justicia social''.

"Podemos decir que aquí se acabó ese aburrimiento de partido único'', afirmó Gutiérrez Menoyo, que no descartó la posibilidad de convertir su organización en un partido en el futuro.

"Todo el mundo dice que Fidel no va a permitir absolutamente nada, y nosotros creemos que al final, igual que este país aceptó la dolarización, que no la quería, la inversión extranjera, que no la quería, igual que no quiere la democratización (...) es posible que quepa la posibilidad de que la tenga que aceptar en un momento dado'', afirmó.

Gutiérrez Menoyo despidió hoy en el aeropuerto a su esposa Gladys y a sus tres hijos que, por el momento, han regresado a Miami. EFE
08/07/2003

-----------------------------------------------------------------

Morre Roberto Marinho, aos 98 anos

O jornalista Roberto Marinho, presidente das Organizações Globo, morreu ontem à noite no Rio, aos 98 anos, após sofrer um edema pulmonar provocado por trombose. O presidente Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva decretou luto oficial de três dias e o Congresso parou para homenagear um dos mais importantes jornalistas brasileiros. “O Brasil perde um homem que passou a vida acreditando no Brasil. Como dizia o nosso amigo Carlito Maia, tem gente que vem ao mundo a passeio e gente que vem ao mundo a serviço. Roberto Marinho foi um homem que veio ao mundo a serviço. Quase um século de vida de serviços prestados à comunicação, à educação e ao futuro do Brasil. À família, aos amigos e aos funcionários das Organizações Globo, rendo as minhas homenagens póstumas”, disse Lula em comunicado oficial.

Roberto Marinho construiu uma organização de comunicação de massa de vulto internacional a partir de um pequeno jornal herdado do pai. Com o vespertino batizado num concurso entre leitores, ele aos poucos construiu um conglomerado de informação, cultura e serviço público nunca visto na área de telecomunicações e entretenimento no país.

O Rio em que ele nasceu, em 3 de dezembro de 1904, ainda estava longe de ser uma cidade de grandes empresas e grandes empresários. Rodrigues Alves presidente, Pereira Passos prefeito, a capital da República proclamada 15 anos antes só então começava a modernizar-se. Nesta cidade ainda emergente, o futuro de um homem vitorioso não parecia destinado ao menino nascido no modesto bairro do Estácio.

Os pais de Roberto — Irineu Marinho Coelho de Barros e Francisca Pisani Marinho — tinham eles próprios origem modesta. Tiveram cinco filhos — Roberto, Heloísa, Ricardo, Hilda e Rogério — e foi para educá-los que Irineu trabalhou mais de 15 horas por dia até se tornar chefe de redação de “A Noite”, vespertino que ajudara a fundar em 1911.

A figura paterna marca o destino

Nesse quadro, o destino de Roberto Marinho parecia, mesmo, o de um moço simples. Como ele disse em sua famosa carta aberta a Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, pouco após as eleições presidenciais de 1989: “Durante a minha atribulada formação, em plena adolescência, matriculei-me no Instituto Profissional Sousa Aguiar. Todo dia, às quinze para as sete, eu entrava na sala onde estavam os armários com o número de cada um, e era pelo número que me conheciam: eu era o Treze, conforme estava estampado no uniforme, um macacão de zuarte. Fiz meu aprendizado nas profissões de entalhador, porque gostava de transformar pedaços de madeira em objetos úteis e bonitos, e de mecânico, por me fascinar a mágica dos processos industriais. (...) Não tivesse a vida de meu pai florescido com extraordinário êxito, produto de um talento e de uma coragem que se refletiriam na criação do vitorioso vespertino ‘A Noite’ (...) e eu poderia ter tido por destino ser, com muita honra, um colega do operário Lula.”

A figura paterna foi por duas vezes fundamental na mudança de seu destino. Na primeira, influenciando-o e aos irmãos na escolha da profissão. Na segunda, com a morte de Irineu, aos 49 anos, em 21 de agosto de 1925, logo passaria para as mãos do primogênito, mais que um sonho, o dever de torná-lo realidade.

A fundação do GLOBO foi um episódio que Roberto Marinho viveu muito de perto e com certa perplexidade. Admirava a ousadia do pai, homem que voltara de uma viagem à Europa decidido a fundar um jornal que fosse livre, politicamente descompromissado e porta-voz de todas as aspirações do povo carioca.

“Nenhum homem de imprensa foi mais homem de imprensa que meu pai”, afirmaria Roberto Marinho num texto de 1957.

O jornal começou a circular sem máquinas próprias, num andar de um edifício na esquina da Rua Bittencourt da Silva com o Largo da Carioca (hoje, o prédio da Caixa Econômica). Mas desde seu primeiro dia na redação, após a morte do pai, Roberto esteve empenhado em fazer do GLOBO mais que uma empresa modesta.

Em 5 de maio de 1931, morreu Euricles de Mattos, secretário de redação. Três dias depois, Roberto Marinho, com 26 anos, substituía-o na direção do GLOBO. O jornalista e escritor Franklin de Oliveira contaria mais tarde:

— Quando faleceu Euricles de Mattos, Roberto Marinho já tinha o domínio completo do fazer jornalístico. Chegava à redação às 4h e só a deixava à noite. Conhecia profundamente todos os segredos da profissão, além de dominar, com seu senso estético, a produção gráfica do jornal, da diagramação à tipologia. Exigia objetividade no noticiário, mas sem sacrifício de seu lado humano: objetividade não significa frieza diante dos fatos, e um jornal é a própria vida escrita. Nos editoriais, repudiava os transbordos de linguagem.

O GLOBO funcionou no mesmo lugar até 1954, quandooficina e redação transferiram-se da Bittencourt da Silva para um prédio recém-construído na Rua Irineu Marinho. Nele, o jornal está até hoje em instalações que foram sendo ampliadas e modernizadas a cada ano. Situando-se entre os jornais mais modernos do mundo, O GLOBO é o sonho de Irineu Marinho materializado pelo seu filho.

Em abril de 1998, nascia o EXTRA, hoje o mais bem sucedido jornal popular do Rio de Janeiro. E, em 200, somou-se à organização o DIÁRIO DE S. PAULO, uma vitoriosa investida no mercado jornalístico paulista.

Aquilo de que ele mais se orgulhava era, simplesmente, de sua condição de jornalista. Numa entrevista de 1967, às perguntas que tratavam de seus êxitos como empresário respondia sucintamente, atribuindo-os a muito trabalho, certa ousadia e alguma sorte. Já quando o assunto era sua carreira como jornalista, o tom era diferente:

— Em 1924, minha família embarcou para a Europa. Viajamos no velho Giulio Cesare. Epitácio Pessoa, que deixara a Presidência da República algum tempo antes, também estava a bordo. Escrevi a um amigo uma carta descrevendo a viagem. Nela, fazia grandes elogios à dignidade do ex-presidente, a quem meu pai fizera, em “A Noite”, tenaz oposição. Pedi que juntassem a carta ao malote de correspondência da família. A minha carta foi lida por meu pai, que consertou alguns solecismos e mandou publicá-la, na íntegra, na primeira página de “A Noite”.

Este foi o primeiro dos muitos exemplos do homem que sempre esteve no lugar certo na hora certa. No caso, testemunhando a postura digna de um ex-presidente em meio a uma viagem com a família.

Na TV, a busca da perfeição

O crescimento do patrimônio empresarial de Roberto Marinho deve-se, como ele dizia, a muito trabalho e alguma sorte — mas sobretudo à ousadia de um homem que mesmo ao passar dos 90 anos jamais deixara de pensar no futuro, investindo sempre.

O padrão de qualidade da Rede Globo, por exemplo, não se fez apenas graças às conquistas tecnológicas. O que se via na telinha era resultado principalmente do seu estilo, da sua linguagem, da forma de combinar o instinto do jornalista com a vocação do empresário. A começar pelo “Jornal Nacional”, que com pouco tempo superou o aparentemente insuplantável “Repórter Esso”, da TV Tupi, a Globo faria de cada um seus programas uma permanente busca da perfeição.

O telejornalismo foi realmente o ponto de partida para o fenômeno em que se transformou a TV Globo. Como o próprio Roberto Marinho os definiria, seus programas noticiosos passaram a ser, para os telespectadores brasileiros, “uma nova maneira de ver o mundo”. Era, sim, uma nova maneira de ver o mundo, mas com olhos de um brasileiro. Cujo projeto de vida incluía profunda dedicação à cultura e à educação, espelhada em iniciativas como a Fundação Roberto Marinho e a TV Futura. Em tudo, a cabeça do empresário servia ao coração do brasileiro:

— Sou um otimista nato — proclamava.

Em 19 de outubro de 1993, a Academia Brasileira de Letras transformou-o em imortal.

(C) O GLOBO

----------------------------------------------------------

Para que se diviertan un poco, claro está, aqui va una crónica de la revista argentina Noticias sobre la escapada a Europa del ex presidente. No tiene desperdício. ¡A divertirse, se ha dicho!


Adolfo Rodríguez Saá

UN TURISTA NACIONAL Y POPULAR

* El ex presidente que festejó el default en el Congreso se fue de tour por las islas griegas junto a la sobrina de su enemigo político.

Está bronceado y con algunos kilos de más. Camina por la arena blanca y entre gente que no lo conoce, que no lo festeja ni lo insulta. En una mano lleva las antiparras, imprescindibles para hacer snorkel. La otra mano se desliza por la cintura de una joven mujer que no es su esposa. Adolfo Rodríguez Saá (56), el mismo que aparece en malla en las fotos que ilustran esta nota, se definía como "100 x 100 argentino" en los afiches de su campaña presidencial. Eran los tiempos en que recorría cada rincón del país profundo con su "marcha de los sueños" y seducía a las masas con su discurso de abanderado de los humildes. Ahora, aunque muy pocos de sus seguidores lo sepan, esa "marcha de los sueños" acaba de reeditarse. Sólo que esta vez fue en dólares y en el máximo de los secretos, de Marbella a Roma y de Atenas a la isla Mikonos, una de los parajes más exclusivos del mundo. ¿Qué hace el líder del llamado Movimiento Nacional y Popular en una playa reservada para el jet set europeo? O dicho de otro modo: ¿por qué el mismo hombre que declaró con pitos y matracas el default argentino ahora gasta su dinero en los paraísos dolarizados del Primer Mundo? Pasen y vean.

Vivir con lo nuestro.

Fueron tres semanas inolvidables. A sus amigos, que lo veían "muy deprimido" después de salir cuarto en las elecciones, Adolfo les dijo: "Me voy a descansar". A su esposa, la marcial Marita Mazzarino (55), le habría contado otra cosa: "Me voy a un congreso de capacitación para presidentes, en España". Nadie pudo confirmar que ese estrafalario congreso haya existido. Lo que sí hubo es una secretísima "luna de miel" con otra mujer, la agraciada Verónica Bertomeu (33). "Verito", como la llama Rodríguez Saá, quería viajar con él hace rato. En los primeros días de julio, y después de varias postergaciones, los novios armaron la valija. Primer destino: Madrid. Y de allí derecho a Marbella, donde se cobijaron en una casa que no está a nombre del ex gobernador de San Luis. Fueron pocos días, mucha playa y la hermosa sensación de sentirse "al fin solos", como dicen los recién casados. O no tan solos: Rodríguez Saá tiene una hija veinteañera, Agustina, que está estudiando Derecho en España. Y que se habría enterado, nadie sabe cómo, de que el padre andaba paseándose por allí con "la otra". Asegura una prima suya que la propia Agustina le relató esta escena dantesca: dice que llamó a mamá Marita para alertarla de la "escapada" de Adolfo y que la esposa legal se subió al primer avión que pudo. Y que luego ambas, madre e hija, "desalojaron" a los novios de la casa de Marbella. Cualquier parecido con Carlos Menem y "las Zulemas" es pura coincidencia. Aunque Agustina, como Zulemita, también estaría convencida de que "la otra" está con su padre sólo por dinero. Marita, por su parte, ya está separada de Adolfo hace rato, aunque no divorciada. Como en toda pareja, o ex pareja, los celos aún perduran.

¿Qué hicieron "Verito" y el galán puntano luego de abandonar el edén de Marbella? Pusieron proa hacia Grecia, lejos de los aguafiestas que intentaban entorpecer el idilio. En Atenas, cuna de la civilización occidental, quedaron mudos ante el imponente Partenón y el Museo de la Acrópolis. Sólo recuperaron el habla cuando fueron de shopping. Dicen que Adolfo se abocó a los rubros de la ropa y los perfumes, mientras que Verónica quedó encandilada con los anillos, los brazaletes y los collares. Después de todo, las joyas de oro son algo más baratas en Grecia que en otras plazas turísticas de Europa. Eso sí, a la hora de elegir hotel la austeridad quedó de lado. Un confidente que se dice amigo de la pareja asegura que de entrada pagaron por una suite de 220 dólares la noche, pero que al día siguiente se mudaron a otra de 400 porque la primera les quedaba chica. Entre las sábanas de seda, el ex presidente del default recordaba sus lecturas juveniles de los diálogos de Platón y comentaba las peripecias del viaje con "Verito". Aún les faltaba lo mejor: la isla Mikonos, bañada por las espumas del Egeo y también llamada "la Venecia de Grecia" por sus balcones colgantes sobre el mar.

Para llegar a ese paraíso –destino de famosos, jet setters, parejas de luna de miel y artistas, además de uno de los principales centros turísticos de la comunidad gay europea– hubo que tomarse otro avión desde Atenas. Los novios no querían perder tiempo: se registraron en un hotel cuatro estrellas, alquilaron una camioneta 4 x 4 para recorrer la isla y se desparramaron al sol en la playa que más les gustó: Kalafatis. Recién era el 7 de julio y todavía les quedaban dos semanas a todo trapo. Verónica hasta se animó al topless, una costumbre que las argentinas se reservan para el exterior. Y le prodigó caricias a su latin lover mientras él contemplaba la mar azul y salpicada de peces. Cuando ella se volvía muy insistente, Adolfo abandonaba su postura de macho recio y por fin respondía a los mimos, en un juego calcado de seducción que se repetía cada quince minutos. Luego iban por otro chapuzón, volvían a la reposera, buceaban con snorkel, se vestían para jugar al tenis, retornaban a la playa, probaban las delicias de la cocina griega en la Taverna Thalassa, paseaban siempre tomados de la mano, eran felices lejos de todos y de todo. Parecía un cuento de hadas puntano, pero en un escenario marcadamente primermundista: Mikonos es una aldea de pescadores, un paraje vip donde los gastos de una pareja con dinero suelen promediar los 1.000 dólares diarios. La isla la descubrieron los hippies en los años setenta y luego se la apropió el jet set, con Rodríguez Saá incluido.

Pero todavía faltaba el postre: Roma y Venecia. Después de la rutina de relax y shopping de las playas griegas, Italia venía como anillo al dedo para afianzar el romance. "Verito" y Adolfo siguieron llenándose los ojos hasta el amargo jueves 24 en que aterrizaron en Ezeiza. Es que él tenía cosas que hacer: el viernes 25 era su cumpleaños y debía festejarlo en San Luis, junto a sus hijos.

Nacional y popular.

Si hay algo que reprocharle al ex presidente de los siete días no son sus enredos sentimentales –al fin y al cabo, una marca registrada del puntano– sino la vieja manía de contradecir con su conducta privada lo que predica en sus discursos públicos. ¿Es coherente que el mismo hombre que decretó la quiebra de la Argentina con bombos y platillos –una imagen que recorrió los medios internacionales– ahora se pasee por el mundo sin complejos? Rodríguez Saá no sólo festejó el default y aceleró la crisis con su rauda huida, sino que condenó al país a "vivir con lo nuestro" mientras él exhibe lo suyo –que no es poco– en Europa. El economista Juan Alemann, que no quiere saber de los destinos turísticos del puntano, opina: "El daño que provocó con el default y con la manera en que lo celebró es incalculable. Nos descolgó del mundo. Interrumpió la cadena de financiamiento, generó una seguidilla de defaults privados, espantó a los inversores, paralizó por completo la economía y nos hizo caer en un profundo aislamiento internacional. Fue un acto irresponsable". Un amigo de Rodríguez Saá que hoy milita en el kirchnerismo asegura: "A mí me dijo que estaba deprimido y que se iba a descansar a Europa, pero es obvio que se trataba de un secreto. Imagínese, no va a anunciar que se va de joda cuando acá nos morimos todos de hambre".

Por: Franco Lindner

(c) Noticias

Quarta-feira, Agosto 06, 2003

---------------------------------------

OJO, pinta!

El profesor Mark Falcoff, del American Enterprise Institute, se apresta a publicar un nuevo libro sobre Cuba. Ver un adelanto aqui.

------------------------------------------------------

The End of Reform in Mexico

By Mark Falcoff
LATIN AMERICAN OUTLOOK
AEI Online (Washington)
Publication Date: August 1, 2003


Mexico's midterm elections on Sunday, July 6, produced results sufficiently ambiguous to fuel debate over their significance. On one hand, President Vicente Fox's party, PAN, lost a quarter of its seats in the 500-member Chamber of Deputies, while both opposition parties--the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) and the Democratic Revolutionary Party (PRD)--both gained ground (the latter actually doubling its representation). On the other hand, two qualifiers need to be borne in mind. One is that a record 60 percent of voters did not participate, which suggests that Mexicans were turning their backs not just on Fox or his party but on politics and politicians in general. The other is that when the actual percentages are broken down, all three parties are roughly where they were, not merely during the presidential race in 2000, but even in the last midterm congressional elections in 1997.

Concretely, PAN's 31 percent this time was less than two percentage points different from its vote in 2000; it bears recalling here that what pushed Fox over the top three years ago were alliances with other parties and a strong dose of support from independents determined to end the seventy-year monopoly of the PRI. Both of these forces have since migrated elsewhere or out of political activity altogether. As for the PRI, its 34.4 percent this year was actually less than its 36.9 percent in 2000--a year when it suffered its first defeat ever in a presidential election. Likewise, while the PRD may celebrate its boost in representation, the ninety-nine seats it won this year still put it well below the 125 it secured in 1997. (Its 17 percent of this year's vote was only a percentage point less than what it received in 2000.)

At the very least, however, President Fox must accept the outcome as something of a vote of no confidence in his leadership. To some degree this was to be expected; he came to power three years ago on a wave of expectations that probably no president could begin to satisfy--including pledges to create a million new jobs and to conclude a migration agreement with the United States, which, if enacted, would presumably have mopped up much of Mexico's unemployment. Instead, heightened security concerns in the United States since September 11, 2001, have postponed any serious discussion of a migration agreement, and a three-year dip on Wall Street has had a pronounced impact on Mexico, where economic performance is strongly tied to the U.S. economy. Specifically, Mexico's economy actually contracted by 0.3 percent in 2001 and grew at a mediocre 0.9 percent last year; for 2003, it will probably reach no higher than 2 percent. According to some estimates, slightly more than one out of two Mexicans are poor and, unless robust economic growth resumes, have little prospect of improving their lot.

Granted that no Mexican president can control the economic performance of the United States, it is still true that Fox has wasted much of his first three years. His original plans included broadening the country's tax base, privatizing its electric utilities, and overhauling rigid labor laws. All of these reforms--and many more--have been stalled in Congress. In many ways this is not surprising. Fox is the first Mexican president in more than seventy years to lack a working legislative majority, but more important still, the opposition, though divided by party identification, shares a common statist ideology. Indeed, the PRD is nothing more than the left-wing of the pre-1989 PRI, which split and formed a new party when its idol, Michoacán governor Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas, failed to get the PRI's presidential nomination. Whatever their other disagreements, the PRI and the PRD share a common resistance to economic reform and neither has much interest, to say the least, in demonstrating the dynamic potential of market-based innovations.

It is also possible that Fox himself is suffering a mild crisis of ideological identity. Because of his former career as a businessman and because he headed the Mexican division of Coca-Cola before entering politics, he has always had to fight off the suggestion that he is excessively "right-wing" and "pro-Yanqui." (This in spite of the fact that in the run-up to his presidential race he even became associated with the Sao Paulo Forum, a left-of-center policy organization, and received support in 2000 from many left-wing groups.) As Mexican partisan politics have become increasingly nasty these last three years, he has been tempted more than once to recur to the gringo-baiting, populist rhetoric that was (and to some degree remains) the trademark of the PRI. If that, however, is what Mexicans are to be offered, they do not need a defective imitation--they can go directly to the masters of the art.

Real Party Competition

Though the actual percentages resulting from this election are not very different from those of three or even six years ago, one thing is new: Mexico is now developing a increasingly competitive party system--one in which the PRI, long regarded as a dinosaur headed for extinction, has demonstrated remarkable potential for recuperation. It remains the first minority in the Chamber of Deputies and is the leading political force in twenty of Mexico's thirty-one states (excluding the Federal District, of which more below). In this particular election it even won the most votes in several states that had PAN governors (Jalisco, Nuevo León, Yucatán) and one (Tlaxcala) ruled by the PRD. On the other hand--here again, emphasizing the growing competitive nature of the system-it failed to win the largest number of votes in three of seventeen states where it presently governs--Colima, San Luis Potosí, and Sonora. Meanwhile, the PAN increased its vote to a majority in eight states. The PRD-which has stagnated in the high teens for many years--gained only in areas already under its control--Michoacán, Zacatecas, Baja California Sur, and above all, the Federal District (Mexico City).

What is remarkable is the degree to which the PRI--discredited by decades of corruption and a catastrophic financial crisis in 1994 and 1995, one from which most Mexicans have not yet recovered--continues to be the party of choice for a significant plurality. Mexican political sociology explains why. As Luis Hernández Navarro observed in the Mexico City daily La Jornada (July 7), "the[se] elections show that the PRI is not only a party but also a part of a political culture deeply rooted in the population and in our social institutions. Clientelism and the exchange of favors for votes remain the dominant political tools in dealing with vast sectors of our poorer population."

Although an astounding 90 percent of Mexico's exports to the United States are manufactured goods, it is also true that a good quarter of the country's population still lives in rural areas. It is here that the PRI continues to play a crucial role--providing money and equipment for small business enterprises, mortgages to members of teacher's unions, land to peasant associations, even free health care for workers. In exchange it demands complete loyalty, "either coopting its opponents or violently wiping them out in a system of intimidation intended to produce a nation of followers rather than leaders." (New York Times, July 9). The PAN neither possesses nor even aspires to possess such a network, and indeed in many ways Fox's vision of a modern Mexico would preclude it. For that vision to be realized, however, requires vast changes in the way that the country is governed and the way it expends it resources. Without a working majority, Fox is likely to drift along these next three years without much to show for his efforts.

Jockeying for 2006

Indeed, many Mexican commentators have virtually written off the rest of Fox's presidency and focused instead on the 2006 presidential race, which they believe began the morning after these by-elections. To be sure, the PRI has not even decided how it will choose its nominee, and many predict a bruising fight involving party chairman Roberto Madrazo (former governor of Tabasco), who makes no secret of his own ambitions, and several state governors, including José Natividad González Paras of Nuevo León, just elected in what was hitherto a PAN stronghold.

The PAN's choice for Fox's successor is an even murkier question, partly due to the party's extremely diverse ideological currents and partly due to the failure so far of any governor to rise to national prominence or suggest the possibility of waging a nationally competitive campaign.

Meanwhile, many in the PRD are pinning their hopes on a new, dynamic face--Andrés Manuel López Obrador, the mayor of Mexico City. Though barely fifty years old, he has spent virtually his entire adult life in politics. He began by organizing Indian communities on Mexico's Pacific coast for the PRI, defecting to the newly formed PRD in 1989. He won the mayorship of the capital in 2000, which until a couple years before had been an appointive rather than elected office.

At present he enjoys an unheard-of 80 percent approval rating among his constituents, due to his energetic personal style and the fact that he is seen as the Mexican politician most unlike Vicente Fox. He arrives to work at 6:00 every morning, dressed modestly and usually driving his own ordinary sedan. Whereas Fox keeps a tight rein on public spending, López Obrador has built new roads and parks, installed new street lights, renovated the city's rickety bus fleet, and restored the city's historic downtown center. He has even found a way to convince rich entrepreneurs to help finance high visibility projects, like a highway extension that will make it easier for middle- and upper-class Mexicans to get to work in the morning. As if that were not enough, he also provides a $60 monthly payment to every resident over the age of seventy. The president has become known for his expansive but unfulfilled promises; López Obrador is seen as a man who can "get things done."

Critics say that the PRD mayor is threatening to push the country into bankruptcy, and some also point with concern to his curious alliance with Carlos Slim Jr., listed by Forbes magazine as one of the wealthiest men in Latin America. Even his allies wonder if he can be nationally competitive as the candidate of a party wedded to an ideology that, in practice, at least, he does not seem to fully share. (As it is, the PRD is strong only in the capital and in a handful of southern states, polling no higher than 20 percent even in the best of those cases.) Moreover, former governor (and mayor) Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas, who has run unsuccessfully for the presidency on the PRD ticket three times, is making noises about wanting to run again. If this happens, he might well split the party or force López Obrador to run as an independent.

Fox in a Box

It may be too early to count President Fox out, but to make a difference he will have to summon political skills he has not displayed up to now. The business community is urging him to return to his original reform program, but he seems disinclined to do so, and for good reasons. Fox's problem can be stated quite simply: To change Mexico, he needs a decisive mandate at the ballot box. This he has never received. His victory three years ago was probably largely due to his identification as the "not-PRI" candidate. He would have needed good luck (continuation of an economic boom in the United States, a generous migration agreement with the Bush administration) to advance beyond the victory he cobbled together in 2000. In many ways he is a victim of a vicious circle--Mexico cannot progress without making drastic changes in the way it is organized as a society, but without a decisive turn in the electorate this is not likely to happen; the persistence of the PRI as the country's strongest political force all but guarantees that this turn will not occur, or at least not any time soon.

Mark Falcoff is a resident scholar at AEI.

-------------------------------------------------------------

Washington Post - August 3, 2003

"THE FENCE IS NOT A POLITICAL BORDER"

Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon came to Washington last week for his eighth White House visit with the Bush administration. The president is eager to promote the so-called "road map" to peace in the Middle East, which so far has produced a temporary cease-fire on the part of militant Palestinian groups. At their meeting, Bush urged Israel to make some concessions in order to advance the peace process. In an interview with Washington Post-Newsweek's Lally Weymouth, Sharon, 75, talked about his goals. Excerpts:

Weymouth: How did your meeting with President Bush go?

Sharon: I think the meeting went well. As for our relations with the administration, I would say there are close relations, close strategic cooperation and a lot of friendship. That does not mean that we always agree about everything. We look with very deep appreciation at the steps taken by President Bush.

Are you speaking about Iraq?

It started in Afghanistan and . . . we saw it in Iraq. . . . He understood the importance of taking steps against tyrannical regimes. I believe there are some problems at the present time, but I think history will look at [the war in Iraq] as one of the most important steps taken since World War II.

Are you satisfied with what Palestinian Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas is doing to dismantle the terrorist infrastructure?

There is still terror, but it is quieter and there is less incitement than before. They have to dismantle terrorist organizations and punish them and collect [illegal] weapons, which should be handed to a third party -- only the U.S. can take them out of the Palestinian Authority areas and destroy them. As for the most important thing -- steps against the terrorist organizations -- we don't see any.

The Palestinian prime minister said last week that he's not going to act against Hamas and Islamic Jihad. That is worrying. They have to act as soon as possible. It will be harder later. The impression is that they will try to reach agreements but not do what President Bush believes they must do: dismantle terrorist organizations.

It is said that the Palestinians have shifted the topic of conversation to [Palestinian] prisoners and to the security fence [that Israel is building]. What is your response?

I believe they have to implement the reforms and remove [Palestinian President] Yasser Arafat from a position of influence in the security and financial fields. As for prisoners, we released several hundred already and are going to release more. But we cannot release all the prisoners: We cannot release those that have blood on their hands, [who] were involved in terror and were sending suicide bombers to commit acts of terror. And we can't release those that were released previously who returned to terror.

As for the fence, the only two places where we have a wall is to protect the Israeli civilian population on the main Israeli highway that connects the southern part with the north. [There] Palestinians shoot at the traffic. But we speak about a fence. I understand the sensitivity of President Bush -- he is very sensitive where civilians are hurt or suffering is caused. But this fence is important for several reasons. I told President Bush that the fence is not a political border. It is important to prevent terrorists or suicide bombers from entering central Israel and committing their crimes there.

Didn't you formerly oppose this fence?

I am not very fond of this fence and would not have built it if I had not seen this nonstop effort to enter the center of the country and act there. The other reason is that the strategy of Arafat for many years is [to make] terror part of the political process: Once you negotiate and do not get what you want, then immediately you use terror. That is what he has done many times in the past.

The resistance of the Palestinians to the fence is that it causes some difficulties to Palestinian farmers and, as a farmer [with a working farm in the Negev], I understand that. . . . But we have taken all the necessary steps to open gates and have never tried to take this land from them.

What did you agree on with the president about the fence?

We will build the fence but try to make it as easy as possible . . . . for the farmers. . . . My first responsibility is the security of Israel's citizens.

What is your assessment of Abu Mazen [as Prime Minister Abbas is widely known]?

I believe Abu Mazen understood a long time ago that one cannot enforce political solutions on Israel by terror. And he understands as well that most of the suffering of the Palestinians was caused by Arafat's stategy. And he really wanted to reach an agreement by negotiations. I believe that he is sincere in this. But [he] should take the needed steps against terrorist organizations. In the future, it will be harder.

Is it hard for Abu Mazen to act because he doesn't control all the security organizations?

There are two reasons. One is that Arafat is undermining him. The other is that reform has not been implemented. No one thought that reform meant Arafat would control most of the armed forces and parts of the intelligence services. . . . They have to [act] as early as possible. It will be harder later. Now Hamas and the other organizations are weak. They suffered casualties. We arrested many of them.

We do not see the cease-fire [by militant groups] as a solution to the problem. . . . To have a cease-fire is important but it gives the terrorist organizations time to manufacture hundreds of Kassam rockets with longer ranges, to equip themselves, to smuggle weapons and to reorganize. That cannot be accepted as a solution to the problem. Because then we are hostages in the hands of terrorist organizations that can break the agreement every day. The agreement is between the Palestinian Authority and the terrorist organizations -- not with us. . . .

Why do you need a fence in the east when the United States has removed Iraq as a threat?

Terrorists we once managed to block at the northern entrances now use this to penetrate.

Did you see Saddam as a danger to Israel?

Iraq was a danger. This murderous regime killed tens of thousands of their own citizens in the most brutal way. The greater danger is the fact they used and, according to our understanding, had weapons of mass destruction and the know-how for nuclear weapons production.

So you agree with President Bush that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction though none have been found?

We believe that the war served as a warning to all those murderous regimes that support terrorist organizations.

You believe there were weapons of mass destruction there?

They used them in the past -- there are no secrets here. As for nuclear weapons, we know that they had the nuclear know-how.

What about the settlements and the outposts? Israel is suppose to freeze settlements during the first phase of the road map and remove outposts.

We are removing unauthorized outposts. We have removed 22 and I know another 12 will be removed in the near future.

U.S. officials say that every time you dismantle some, others go up. Is that true?

Later we dismantle them. Israel is a state of law and the unauthorized [outposts] will be removed. It is not easy. Sometimes, we need one thousand soldiers.

You spoke of Israel ending "the occupation"? Why? Did that indicate some change in your thinking?

No, there are no changes and that is not what I really meant to say. I said that I don't believe that ruling the Palestinian people is the right thing for us to do. The result of the peace process should be full security. When it comes to security, Israel will not be able make any compromises.

We have to remember that I am speaking as a Jew. For me, to be a Jew is the most important thing. The Jews have a tiny country with many talents. This is the only place in the world where the Jews have the right and the capability to defend themselves by themselves. That is my historic responsibility to the Jewish people -- to keep it, to preserve it. That is what I am going to do.

Israel as a result of the war and the bloodshed doesn't manage to show its tremendous achievements in every field. We have held the sword in one hand all these years. But I believe the day will come when there will be peace and security. That's what we need. Then Israel will be known for its achievements, its industry, its music and farming, which may be one of the most advanced that exists. Then people will be able to look at Israel as a country that contributes to its own people and to the world. That's what I hope I will be able to accomplish.

What is needed to bring about peace?

First, it needs Arab recognition that it is the birthright of the Jewish people to have a Jewish state in the homeland of the Jewish people. That we have not achieved yet. That might be regarded as the end of the conflict. . . . [And] it needs strong and serious [Israeli] leadership that can make painful compromises on areas which are the cradle of the Jewish people. That's what I will try to do.

© 2003 The Washington Post Company

-------------------------------------------------------

The Washington Post - August 6, 2003

COLOMBIA'S NEW HOPE

By Michael Shifter

Effective political leadership is in short supply these days, so when it emerges, it tends to exert a gravitational pull. That is what is happening with Alvaro Uribe, Colombia's enormously popular president, who this week completes his first year in office.

His favorable rating at 70 percent, Uribe not only enjoys the approval of most Colombians but is also highly regarded and considered a true friend in Washington. (Uribe was the only leader of a major Latin American country who joined with the United States on Iraq, defying Colombian, and regional, public opinion.) While Venezuelans, Peruvians, Ecuadorans and Bolivians speculate whether their politically beleaguered presidents can survive, conjecture in Colombia now revolves around whether the Congress will consider a constitutional amendment to permit Uribe's reelection. Most Colombians believe that with him in charge the country has a unique opportunity to reverse many years of deterioration and neglect.

Uribe is Latin America's only "war president." His success in mobilizing broad support rests on his commitment to building "democratic security," regaining government control and overcoming lawlessness born of drug-fueled violence and weak state institutions. His mandate is to provide protection to Colombians and to end corruption and the old ways of doing politics. If actual conditions in Colombia have not been transformed in just a year the mood certainly has. The Colombian weekly Semana captured the national sentiment recently in its lead story: "The year that hope was restored."

Uribe's political success can be attributed to a rare and welcome presidential style. Tireless and austere, he has kept the few promises he has made. He is, although popular, the quintessential anti-populist.

As with FDR and his "fireside chats," Uribe has employed some techniques to great effect, reassuring an anxious nation. Last month, he moved the government from the capital, Bogota, to the most violent corner of the country. He later convened a remarkable marathon session with his cabinet and directed an online call-in show, needling his ministers to be more precise and forthcoming in their answers.

Uribe is allergic to complacency and triumphalism. He has continually sought to temper expectations, stressing that Colombia's formidable agenda will take many years to tackle. Still, over the past year kidnappings, homicides and coca production have dropped significantly. The macroeconomic picture has brightened. And there is at least some prospect that factions of Colombia's paramilitary forces will demobilize.

Questions remain: Have the country's armed groups really been weakened, or are they merely in a tactical retreat? Has there been any discernible alleviation of the drug problem? Could Uribe's efforts to mobilize the civilian population aggravate an already critical human rights situation? Why hasn't Uribe been able to make headway in assuaging Colombia's humanitarian crisis, reflected in some 2 million internally displaced? How will he pursue the Herculean tasks on the social agenda? Will Uribe be able to reduce the fiscal deficit? Is he a one-man show that could thwart institutional progress?

These tough questions should be raised but should not detract from Uribe's record to date, and his determination to deal effectively -- and democratically -- with Colombia's profound problems.

Washington is helping in important ways. The largest recipient of U.S. security aid outside the Middle East, Colombia has received some $2.5 billion since 2000. But however impressive Uribe's performance, Washington needs to recognize that assisting Colombia in its wide-ranging reform agenda is a long-term proposition. No one should be surprised by setbacks in Colombia in coming years. Serious security problems will persist, even under the most optimistic scenarios.

Leadership makes a big difference. Uribe's poll numbers have increased even when things have gone tragically wrong (a major terrorist attack at a Bogota social club, a botched hostage rescue attempt). He explained what happened and took full responsibility. Colombians approved.

Uribe's record has wider implications for Latin America.

Instead of talking about shifts to the "right" or "left," it makes more sense to emphasize the imperative of delivering honest and effective government. Other Latin American leaders, searching for a winning formula, would be wise to take note.

The writer is vice president for policy at the Inter-American Dialogue and adjunct professor of Latin American studies at Georgetown University.

© 2003 The Washington Post Company

************************************************

Recuerden que todas las descargas pueden ser enviadas a:

bajando_orientaciones@hotmail.com

************************************************

------------------------------------------------------------

The New York Times August 6, 2003

North Korea, Rescue Its Economy

By MICHAEL O'HANLON and MIKE MOCHIZUKI

WASHINGTON—Now that the United States and North Korea have finally agreed to talk, the issue is what to talk about. A priority of the Bush administration, as well as its predecessors, has long been the dismantling of the North's nuclear-weapons program. This goal is realistic, but only if the United States is prepared to engage North Korea on a wide range of issues — especially its failed economy.

The structure of the talks — scheduled for next month, they will include China, Russia, South Korea and Japan — ensures that the major regional players will be able to emphasize to Pyongyang that its nuclear weapons program must first be frozen and then dismantled entirely. Unfortunately, North Korea probably won't listen to a proposal that requires it to make all the initial concessions. It already had something close to the deal Mr. Bush is now proposing under President Bill Clinton — but then Pyongyang willfully ignored it and began a secret nuclear program in the late 1990's.

If anything, North Korea now thinks it needs nuclear weapons even more than before to ensure its own security, given President Bush's overthrow of Saddam Hussein, his doctrine of military pre-emption and his statement that North Korea is part of an "axis of evil." And Washington's vague promises to eventually discuss better diplomatic and economic ties are unlikely to sway North Korean leaders.

Mr. Bush is right that appeasement doesn't pay, and that the United States should not bribe North Korea to return to a nuclear deal they already violated. Unfortunately, that probably leaves the situation at a standoff, since North Korea won't accept the administration's terms.

What to do under these circumstances? As Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld says, if you have an unsolvable problem, enlarge it. The United States should demand much more of North Korea — and offer more as well.

The key is to recognize that a core cause of the crisis is the North's economy, which has shrunk by half in the past 15 years. Only a plan that begins to repair that economy can resolve this nuclear crisis and prevent future ones.

This approach would not mean giving in to blackmail. The United States, South Korea, Japan, China and Russia would force North Korea to reshape its economy and modify its oppressive form of governance as a condition for assistance. It would amount to regime change — but regime change without war.

The cornerstone of this plan would be deep cuts in North Korean conventional military forces together with major economic reforms. Conventional forces don't get the headlines, but they gobble up most of North Korea's military budget and perhaps 20 percent of its total gross domestic product. A treaty mandating 50 percent cuts in heavy weaponry for both Koreas would be relatively straightforward to negotiate and verify. It would also be perfectly consistent with American and South Korean security interests.

Just as in Vietnam and China, the economic reforms would begin in certain special economic zones. In these areas, entrepreneurial activity would be encouraged, foreign investment facilitated, infrastructure improved and most existing Communist laws lifted. North Korea has tried to establish such zones, but the tensions on the peninsula have discouraged any serious outside investment.

Each country involved in the talks would play an important role. China would provide advice on how to promote entrepreneurial activity within a command economy. The United States would relax trade sanctions, promising to lift them formally if North Korea kept to its commitments over several years. Japan, South Korea, China, America and any other interested parties would help to build the needed infrastructure; aid totaling about $2 billion a year could be needed, above and beyond assistance provided in the form of food and energy. To avoid misuse, most of the aid would not be in the form of cash, and it would be provided year by year only to the extent that North Korea verifiably upheld its end of the bargain.

The plan would then expand geographically and broaden its scope to include agricultural, public health and education programs. A decade or more could be needed to make this work. But if pursued seriously, it could reap major rewards — possibly doubling G.D.P., according to the Institute for International Economics.

Other demands would be placed on North Korea as well. It would have to eliminate chemical and biological weapons, stop producing and selling missiles, let all Japanese kidnapping victims and their families leave North Korea for good, stop counterfeiting and drug-running, and begin a human rights dialogue with the outside world akin to what China has accepted in recent years. The United States would also promise not to attack North Korea and to establish diplomatic ties.

All these elements would not need to be in an initial agreement with North Korea. But they should all be on the table immediately. By offering the North's leaders a vision for an alternative future, the United States and its allies may be able to dissuade them from their self-destructive path. And a broader agenda for diplomacy has the best chance of getting North Korea to consider what it has so far refused to do: giving up its nuclear weapons capacity.

North Korea may very well say no to this kind of proposal. But in that event, having given diplomacy a serious try, the United States will be in a better position to argue to South Korea, Japan, China and Russia that much sterner measures are needed — including economic sanctions and perhaps even military force. And if North Korea confronts a unified coalition making firm demands while also offering concrete inducements to reform, it will probably recognize it has no real choice but to say yes.

Michael O'Hanlon and Mike Mochizuki are authors of "Crisis on the Korean Peninsula: How to Deal With a Nuclear North Korea."

Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company

-------------------------------------------------------

The New York Times August 6, 2003

Neocon Coup at the Department d'État

By MAUREEN DOWD
WASHINGTON

Let others fight over whether the war in Iraq was a neocon vigilante action disrupting diplomacy. The neocons have moved on to a vigilante action to occupy diplomacy.

The audacious ones have saddled up their pre-emptive steeds and headed off to force a regime change at Foggy Bottom.

President Bush staged a Texan tableau vivant last night, playing host at his ranch to the secretary of state, his wife, Alma, and his deputy, Richard Armitage. Mr. Bush wanted to show solidarity after a Washington Post story on Monday that said that Colin Powell, under pressure from his wife, said he would not be part of a second Bush term, nor would Mr. Armitage.

Mr. Bush might be trying to signal his respect for Mr. Powell, but the president is not always privy to the start of a grandiose neocon scheme.

The scene was reminiscent of last August in Crawford, when Mr. Bush dismissed press "churning" that the administration was on the verge of striking Iraq, saying, "When I say I'm a patient man, I mean I'm a patient man and that we will look at all options and we will consider all technologies available to us, and diplomacy and intelligence."

We all know how that turned out.

When the neocons want something done, they'll get it done, no matter what Mr. Bush thinks. And they think Mr. Powell has downgraded the top cabinet post into a human resources job, making nicey-nice with the U.N. and assorted bad guys instead of pursuing the neocon blueprint for world domination through what James Woolsey calls World War IV (World War III being the cold war.)

Countering the Post story, Mr. Powell's posse claimed that neither the secretary of state nor his deputy had ever said they intended to step down, and charged that the neocons were leaking a canard to turn the two men they consider lame doves into lame ducks.

"This is the revenge of the neocons for two months of bad news, looking like they're falling all over themselves in Iraq," said a Powell confidant, noting that Alma Powell was furious she had been dragged in.

In The Post, nearly all of the names of those who could move up if Mr. Powell moves out are Iraq hawks: Condi Rice, Paul Wolfowitz and Newt Gingrich were mentioned as candidates for secretary of state; Wolfie, Cheney Chief of Staff Scooter Libby and Condi deputy Steve Hadley, who may be radioactive after the uranium mistake, were mentioned for national security chief.

Mr. Wolfowitz has been tacitly campaigning for the jobs. He told Charlie Rose about his vice-regal trip to Iraq, where he said at last grateful Iraqis were thronging. "As we would drive by, little kids would run up to the road and give us a thumbs up sign," he said. (At least he thought it was the thumb.)

The move against the popular Powell had all the earmarks of the neocons' pre-emptive strike on Iraq.

1.) Demonize. Reiterating his speech trashing Foggy Bottom last April for propping up dictators and coddling the corrupt, Mr. Gingrich — a Rummy ally who serves on the Defense Policy Board — called for "top-to-bottom reform and culture shock" at State in an article in the July Foreign Policy magazine.

2.) Sex-up the intelligence. The leakers spread word that Mr. Armitage told Condi that he and Mr. Powell would leave on Jan. 21, 2005, the day after the next presidential inauguration. "Nonsense," said Mr. Powell. "Nonsense," said Mr. Armitage.

3.) Create a false rationale. Everyone knew the pair might not stay for a second term. But the neocons were impatient to give them a push, blaming poor Alma Powell for henpecking her husband when they were.

4.) Bring about regime change.

5.) Fail to prepare for the aftermath. "Newt as secretary of state?" sneered one Powell pal. "Hel-lo?"

6.) Make sure it's good for Ariel Sharon. Just as the neocons made their move on Mr. Powell, pro-Israel hawks scorned the secretary for not being on their team in the peace process. Israel's supporters scoffed at the new threat to cut loan guarantees as a State Department policy, not a White House policy.

7.) Ignore the real threat. While the neocons are preoccupying the country with Iraq and a coup at the department d'état, Al Qaeda may have blown up a Marriott in Indonesia and are plotting attacks here.

8.) Change the subject. Next stop, North Korea.

Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company

---------------------------------------------------------------

LOS RELATOS DEL HORROR EN LA ERA SADDAM

*Organizaciones reciben denuncias sobre las atrocidades contra opositores
* Desapariciones, torturas y ejecuciones masivas eran una rutina
* La represión alcanzó a todas las etnias, clases sociales y religiones


Por MARIO VARGAS LLOSA

BAGDAD.- Kais Olewi es un iraquí de 37 años, apuesto y fortachón, con una cicatriz como una culebrita en la frente, que sufre una indisposición cada vez que ve sobre una mesa un plato de porotos. Se debe a algo que le ocurrió hace dieciocho años, pero que permanecerá en su memoria hasta que se muera y, acaso, después.

Tenía entonces 19 años y un buen día cayó preso en una de esas redadas de estudiantes que llevaba a cabo, ritualmente, la policía política de Saddam Hussein. Lo llevaron a la Dirección Central de la Seguridad (la Mukhabarat), en Bagdad, y a la mañana siguiente, antes incluso de haber empezado a interrogarlo, comenzaron a torturarlo. Era, también, una rutina.

Lo colgaron de los brazos, como a un cordero para que se desangre, y, al poco rato, mientras comenzaban a hacerle preguntas, le soltaban descargas de electricidad con unos electrodos que activaba, apretando un botón, el jefe de los tres policías que compartían con Kais el estrecho sótano en penumbras. Recibía las pequeñas descargas, de manera acompasada, primero en las piernas. Luego, los alambres fueron subiendo por su cuerpo hasta alcanzar los puntos más sensibles: el ano, el pene y los testículos.

Lo que Kais Olewi recuerda de aquella mañana -la primera de muchas parecidas- no son sus presumibles aullidos de dolor ni aquel olorcillo de carne chamuscada que emanaba de su propio cuerpo, sino que, a menudo, sus torturadores se olvidaban de él, enfrascándose en conversaciones personales, sobre sus familias o asuntos banales, mientras Kais, suspendido en el aire, medio descoyuntado y convertido en una llaga viva, quería perder el sentido de una vez, pero no lo conseguía. Al mediodía les trajeron a los tres policías su almuerzo: una fuente de porotos humeantes.

Kais tiene muy presente todavía aquel tufillo sabroso que se le metía por las narices, mientras oía a los tres hombres discutir sobre cuál de los cocineros de la dirección central de la Mukhabarat preparaba mejor ese potaje. De tanto en tanto, y sin dejar de masticar, el esbirro jefe salía de su distracción y se acordaba del colgado. Entonces, como para lavar de remordimientos su conciencia profesional, apretaba aquel botón y Kais Olewi recibía el relámpago en el cerebro. Desde entonces, no puede ver ni oler el guiso de porotos sin que se apodere de él un vértigo.

Kais Olewi fue condenado a prisión perpetua, pero tuvo suerte, pues sólo pasó ocho años en la cárcel de Abu Ghraib, del 87 al 95, cuando, gracias a una amnistía, salió libre. Desde la caída de Saddam, es uno de los ex presos políticos iraquíes que trabajan como voluntarios en esta organización que visito, la Asociación de Prisioneros Libres. Ocupa una ruinosa y enorme mansión en la Cornisa de El-Kadimía, un malecón a orillas del río Tigris donde los bagdadíes, en épocas más sosegadas, acostumbraban venir a pasear en las tardes, cuando el sol, antes de acostarse, enrojecía el cielo.

Lo que ahora enrojece este lugar son los carteles con las fotos de los millares de desaparecidos en los años de la dictadura. Algunas imágenes -las de los prisioneros de caras destrozadas por los ácidos- son apenas resistibles. Todas ellas se encontraron en los expedientes que la Mukhabarat guardaba de sus víctimas, buena parte de los cuales desapareció por desgracia en los incendios provocados. Pero la Asociación de Prisioneros Libres, que empezó a funcionar inmediatamente después de la caída de la dictadura, ha recogido en todas las dependencias policiales y de los demás organismos represivos todos los documentos relativos a la represión que no fueron destruidos.

Una espesa muchedumbre atesta pasillos, habitaciones, escaleras, donde los voluntarios, en escritorios improvisados o en sus rodillas, sobre tableros de fortuna, llenan formularios, establecen listas de nombres, cotejan fichas y tratan de atender a los innumerables vecinos -muchas mujeres entre ellos- que acuden aquí pidiendo ayuda para localizar a los padres, hijos, sobrinos y hermanos que un día aciago, hace equis tiempo, se eclipsaron de la vida como si una magia poderosa los hubiera hecho desaparecer.

Hay otras organizaciones de derechos humanos que hacen un trabajo similar en Irak, pero esta asociación es la más grande. Tiene filiales en las 18 provincias del país, con excepción de Ramadi, y, aunque escaso, recibe apoyo internacional y del CPA ( Coalition Provisional Authority ), que dirige Paul Bremer. Su función principal, ahora, es ayudar a los parientes a localizar a los desaparecidos y proveerlos de una documentación que les permita presentar querellas y pedir reparaciones al gobierno iraquí (cuando éste exista). La Asociación cuenta también con un grupo de abogados voluntarios que prestan asesoría a los familiares de desaparecidos que acuden a este local. Converso con uno de ellos, Ammar Basil, que me cuenta algunos casos espeluznantes que le ha tocado dilucidar, como el fusilamiento de un niño recién nacido, hijo de una pareja de médicos opositores a Saddam Hussein a la que infligieron el suplicio de presenciar el infanticidio antes de ejecutarla también.

El vicepresidente de la Asociación de Prisioneros Libres, Abdul Fattah Al-Idrissi, me asegura que, por exagerado que parezca, el número de asesinados y desaparecidos desde que el partido Baath dio el primer golpe de Estado y comenzó la irresistible ascensión de Saddam en 1963 oscila entre los cinco y seis millones y medio de personas. Es decir, algo así como el veinte por ciento de la población de Irak. "Ni Hitler tiene un récord semejante", dice.

Acostumbrado a las fantasiosas cifras que escucho por doquier en boca de los iraquíes, no le digo que me parece improbable. Pero no importa, estas exageraciones son más locuaces que los datos objetivos que nunca se conocerán: ellas expresan sobre todo la reacción desesperada de un pueblo impotente frente al horror vertiginoso que se encarnizó con él y que nadie podrá nunca documentar con exactitud, sino por vagas aproximaciones.

Sin distinciones

La represión golpeó a todos los sectores, etnias, clases sociales, religiones, pero, sobre todo, a kurdos y chiitas. Víctimas privilegiadas fueron los intelectuales ±profesores, escritores, artistas-, por los que Saddam -un ignorante funcional, pese a sus ralos estudios de derecho, en El Cairo, donde estuvo exiliado- sentía una desconfianza particular. El vicepresidente de la Asociación me dice que de un estudio de 1500 casos se desprende "que el régimen se había propuesto acabar con todas las personas cultas del país. Porque la proporción de gente educada y con títulos entre los asesinados y desaparecidos es enorme".

Aldeas, barrios enteros, clanes, familias, fueron desaparecidos en operaciones de exterminio que muchas veces ocurrían sin motivo aparente, en períodos en los que Saddam gozaba de dominio absoluto y de servidumbre popular abyecta, en un país enfermo de terror. Era, dice Abdul Fattah Al Idrissi, como si, presa de un súbito ataque de paranoia homicida, el déspota decidiera de pronto una rápida matanza como un escarmiento preventivo generado por algún pálpito o pesadilla macabra.

Sólo así se explica la alucinante aglomeración de víctimas, en que aparecen sacrificadas familias enteras, en las fosas comunes que se han ido descubriendo en los últimos meses. Otras veces, las matanzas colectivas tenían un objetivo preciso: por ejemplo, arabizar enteramente la región petrolera de Kirkuk desarraigando a la fuerza a las poblaciones kurdas mediante exterminios colectivos para reemplazarlas por comunidades sunnitas, o castigar a la mayoría chiita por su rebelión de 1991.

Todos los locales del Baath en las provincias servían como casas de torturas, pues las oficinas de la Mukhabarat eran insuficientes. Las torturas más frecuentes a los prisioneros eran la corriente eléctrica, arrancarles ojos y uñas, colgarlos hasta descoyuntarlos, quemarlos con ácidos y, pegoteándoles el cuerpo con algodones embebidos en alcohol, convertirlos en antorchas humanas. Cuando se informaba a los familiares de la muerte de la persona, algo poco frecuente, se les alcanzaba un parte de defunción que invariablemente atribuía el deceso a "una meningitis".

La Asociación tiene un tesoro: un testigo ocular de una de estas alucinantes matanzas, que ocurrió en Tuz, una aldea al norte de Bagdad, en el rumbo de Kirkuk. Era conductor de autobús y éste fue requisado por la policía, junto con él. Así, el chofer fue un actor pasivo de toda la operación. Circulando por distintas aldeas, vio cómo su vehículo era colmado con familias enteras, esposos acompañados de abuelos y niños, que acarreaba la policía de toda la región. Con su carga humana fue dirigido por los hombres del Baath que dirigían el operativo a un descampado en las afueras de Tuz. Allí había ya miles de personas, a las que descargaban de camiones, camionetas y autobuses como el suyo policías y militantes del partido, y a las que, de inmediato, ponían a cavar un pozo alargado en forma de trinchera.

El testigo dice que él llegó allí a las cuatro de la tarde y que la ocurrencia duró toda la noche. Cuando el pozo estuvo lo bastante hondo, los policías y milicianos baathistas se pusieron máscaras antigases y le embutieron también una a él, que estaba paralizado de pavor.

A culatazos o disparos empujaron al pozo excavado a la despavorida multitud, a la vez que con ella arrojaban cilindros de gas tóxico. Al amanecer, todo había terminado. Entonces, el conductor fue despachado por los asesinos sin agradecerle los servicios prestados y recomendándole discreción. La fosa ha sido localizada ahora. Es una de las muchas que van apareciendo, en todas las comarcas de Irak con, a veces, cuatro o cinco mil cadáveres cada una. "Más que fosas eran trincheras", precisa Abdul Fattah Al-Idrissi. Y, también, que en ciertos casos las víctimas no tenían la suerte de ser gaseadas, porque los baathistas preferían enterrarlas vivas.

Una familia desintegrada

Esas fosas que se descubren ahora atraen a miles de personas que vienen a ver si entre los restos que vuelven a la luz a testimoniar sobre el horror del reciente pasado de Irak descubren a sus deudos desaparecidos. Una de esas parejas que desde el mes de abril recorren el país en busca de los huesos de un hijo que se hizo humo hace doce años son dos ancianos, ella muy enferma, a los que, me dice su hija, sólo mantiene vivos la ilusión de recuperar los restos de ese ser querido. Es la señora Al Sarrat, a quien visito en una frágil y humilde casa de madera, erigida sobre pilares, también en el barrio de El-Kadimía.

"Mi vida son 35 años de dolor", afirma, sin llorar, con una cara que parece de espanto: dura y como disecada por la desesperación. Es una mujer sin edad, sumergida en la negra abaya que sólo le deja la cara al descubierto, y flanqueada por sus dos hijas, muy jóvenes, veladas también, y que a lo largo de toda la entrevista permanecen inmóviles y mudas, como estatuas trágicas. La habitación es muy modesta y calurosa, atestada de retratos, y desde las ventanas hay una vista majestuosa del Tigris.

"No podíamos respirar, orar, porque las desgracias nos caían una detrás de otra. Primero, fue uno de los muchachos más jóvenes de la familia. Era estudiante de bachillerato y firmó una lista en la que se pedía dinero para costear el entierro de un compañero difunto. Alguien mandó esa lista, que era un mero gesto de caridad, a la Seguridad. Todos los muchachos fueron arrestados y condenados a diez años de cárcel, como conspiradores. Algunos perecieron en prisión."

Otro de los hermanos de la señora Al Sarrat era militar. Fue tres veces herido en los ochos años de la guerra con Irán. "Un héroe, ¿no es verdad?" Pues un día lo detuvieron, delatado por alguien de querer fugarse del Ejército, delito que, cuando no pena de muerte, además de cárcel acarreaba que al culpable le arrancaran una oreja. La familia se enteró de esto por rumores, pues nunca recibió información alguna en sus múltiples averiguaciones en centros oficiales. Nunca más volvieron a tener noticias de él.

Poco después de esta segunda desgracia, sobrevino la tercera. El padre fue arrestado y desapareció en la noche de la dictadura. Tres años después, un desconocido alcanzó a la familia un trozo de papel: "Vayan a la cárcel de Abu Ghraib", la cárcel de las afueras de Bagdad escenario de las peores torturas y asesinatos políticos. Allí estaba su padre, al que pudieron visitar cada cierto número de meses, por pocos minutos. Lo soltaron seis años después, tan misteriosamente como lo habían capturado. Nunca le dijeron por qué lo detuvieron.

Finalmente, le tocó al hermano menor, que desapareció cuando el levantamiento chiita de 1991, aplastado por el régimen en una orgía de sangre. Fue soldado durante la guerra en Kuwait. La última vez que alguien lo vio estaba de servicio, en uniforme, en Najaf. Desde entonces no han sabido nada de él y es a este desaparecido al que los padres de la señora Al Sarrat buscan, en su peregrinaje doloroso, por las fosas comunes que se descubren dispersas por la geografía de Irak.

Al despedirme, medio aturdido por ese baño de sufrimiento y salvajismo que ha sido mi mañana, en vez de hacerle a la señora Al Sarrat la venia consabida con la diestra en el corazón, le alargo la mano. Ella me mira, alarmada.

Las violaciones, tema tabú

Como si no hubiera tenido ya bastante de barbarie, en la tarde, en el Hotel Rimal, en el que he venido a refugiarme traicionando la hospitalidad de los amigos de la Fundación Iberoamérica-Europa por unas miserables horas de aire acondicionado que por fin me permiten dormir algo, tengo una conversación con una funcionaria de la oficina de las Naciones Unidas, que acaba de sumirme en la depresión, y que, estoy seguro, me deparará esta noche una pesadilla. Me refiere una investigación hecha por America´s Watch, todavía sin hacerse pública y a la que ella ha tenido acceso, sobre el tema de las violaciones y raptos de mujeres cometidos en Bagdad desde que se desató la anarquía, el 9 de abril. Este es un tema tabú porque, para la moral tradicional, una mujer violada es en la sociedad iraquí un baldón que deshonra a toda su familia y, en vez de compasión y solidaridad, merece repudio y odio. Ella ya sabe que su vida ha terminado, que nunca contraerá matrimonio, y que en su propia casa será objeto de exclusión y escarnio.

Para lavar la afrenta, no es raro que el padre o alguno de los hermanos le dé muerte. La Justicia fue siempre considerada con estos medievales "asesinatos cometidos para lavar el honor" y sus autores recibían sentencias simbólicas, de apenas tres o cuatro meses de cárcel.

America´s Watch ha reunido 25 testimonios de niñas, jóvenes y mujeres secuestradas y violadas en Bagdad por los forajidos y que, por razones obvias, se resisten a denunciar el delito de que han sido víctimas. No sólo porque ahora no hay policías y tribunales que funcionen, sino, sobre todo, porque, aun cuando los hubiera, los trámites y humillaciones infinitas que debieron sufrir las heroicas mujeres que se atrevieron a hacerlo en el pasado no consiguieron resultado práctico alguno. Sólo exponerlas al desdén y a las vejaciones de la opinión pública y a la hostilidad aun mayor de la propia familia. Por eso, según el informe de America´s Watch, las niñas y mujeres violadas tratan desesperadamente de ocultar lo que les ocurrió, avergonzadas y con remordimientos, como si, en efecto, ellas fueran las únicas culpables de su desgracia.

Ahora comprendo mejor por qué, en las puertas de la Universidad de Bagdad, que visité ayer, había tantas madres de familia esperando a sus hijas para llevarlas de vuelta a su casa, como si fueran niñitas de parvulario.

(C) Mario Vargas Llosa

Segunda-feira, Agosto 04, 2003

----------------------------------------------------

Cuba : les touristes arrivent, l'embargo demeure

LE vendredi 11 juillet, le drapeau des Etats-Unis était hissé sur le château d'El Morro, fleuron de l'architecture coloniale surplombant la baie de La Havane. La mise en scène n'était pas destinée à évoquer un épisode de la guerre hispano-américaine de 1898, mais un événement qui engage l'avenir de Cuba. Les couleurs américaines saluaient l'entrée en rade de La Havane du premier bateau portant la bannière étoilée, depuis la rupture des relations entre les Etats-Unis et Cuba, en 1961. Le Helen III apportait son lot de marchandises made in USA, avec la double bénédiction du département du Trésor et du gouvernement cubain, disposé à payer cash.

Depuis que le Congrès américain a assoupli l'embargo en 2001, Cuba a importé pour un montant de 480 millions de dollars. Les Etats-Unis sont devenus le premier fournisseur de l'île pour les produits agroalimentaires, reléguant la France et le Canada aux deuxième et troisième rangs. Alors que les importations cubaines dans ce domaine totalisent 950 millions de dollars, la concurrence annonce déjà l'après-Castro.

A Washington, des tour-opérateurs se sont associés pour mettre fin aux limitations de voyager librement à Cuba. Selon Brent Gibadlo, directeur de l'Association des professionnels du tourisme (Atrip), quelque 2,8 millions d'Américains pourraient voyager tous les ans à Cuba, générant ainsi jusqu'à 1 milliard de dollars pour les lignes aériennes et les agences de voyages américaines. Ce chiffre est à rapprocher des 100 000 Américains qui se rendent légalement à Cuba dans le cadre d'échanges culturels et aux 800 000 touristes européens. Selon certaines projections, 80 % des touristes américains séjournant actuellement dans les Caraïbes pourraient être orientés vers Cuba par les voyagistes.

La meilleure année reste 2001, avec 1,9 million de visiteurs. La participation touristique dans la balance des paiements étant passée de 4 % en 1990 à 41 %, ce secteur a remplacé l'industrie sucrière comme moteur de l'économie. Sur la même période, le nombre de chambres d'hôtels a triplé, passant de 12 900 à 40 000 en 2001. Entre-temps, la production sucrière est à son plus bas niveau depuis 1930, à peine 2 millions de tonnes, insuffisante pour couvrir la demande intérieure et les exportations.

"UN SEUL BÉNÉFICIAIRE"

L'Espagne et l'Uruguay ont été accusés par Fidel Castro de mener campagne contre La Havane, dans des termes frisant l'insulte. Or c'est au World Affairs Council, à Los Angeles, que le président du gouvernement espagnol, José Maria Aznar, est allé plaider la fin de l'embargo. "Après quatre décennies, son inefficacité est avérée", a-t-il dit devant un parterre d'hommes d'affaires. Dans le journal madrilène El Pais, l'ancien président de l'Uruguay, Julio Maria Sanguinetti, s'est livré à un plaidoyer argumenté : "Après tant d'années d'échecs, un changement de stratégie s'impose."

"Par les temps qui courent, l'embargo signifie bien peu en termes économiques, écrit M. Sanguinetti. Pendant les premières années de la révolution, avec un outillage américain et le besoin de pièces de rechange de même origine, cela a pesé. Mais dix ans plus tard, Cuba s'était tourné vers la technologie de l'Europe de l'Est."

Depuis les années 1970, Cuba peut faire des affaires avec le monde entier. "Qu'ont donc les Etats-Unis que ne puissent offrir le Japon ou l'Allemagne, l'Espagne ou la France ?", demande M. Sanguinetti. Cuba "n'a-t-il pas attiré un important investissement étranger, espagnol notamment, vers le secteur touristique" ? L'ancien président uruguayen voudrait enlever à La Havane le drapeau de David contre Goliath : "Le fameux embargo n'a qu'un seul bénéficiaire, le régime, auquel il sert d'alibi pour couvrir l'inefficacité qui imprègne toute l'économie, le gaspillage des années passées à essayer de remplacer la culture sucrière et le tourisme, avant d'y revenir."

Ni l'Europe ni l'Amérique latine ne sont d'accord avec une mesure qui a de moins en moins de partisans aux Etats-Unis. A Miami, "80 % des Cubano-Américains estiment que l'embargo ne fonctionne pas, mais 60 % sont partisans de le maintenir", assurait au Monde Lisandro Perez, à l'université internationale de la Floride. "On ne peut comprendre l'embargo de manière rationnelle car il se situe au plan symbolique. Sa levée serait perçue comme une victoire de Fidel Castro", ajoutait l'universitaire.

Les considérations politiques n'empêchent pas les Cubains de Floride d'envoyer de l'argent à leurs proches vivant dans l'île, tout en sachant pertinemment qu'ils contribuent ainsi à renflouer l'économie socialiste en crise : le Miami Herald évalue à 800 millions de dollars le montant de ces remesas. Avec le tourisme, c'est la principale ressource en devises du pays. Un tiers de la population cubaine aurait accès à la monnaie américaine, indispensable pour l'achat de produits de première nécessité.

Cuba est devenue une société à deux vitesses, remarquait l'économiste Oscar Espinosa Chepe, condamné en avril dernier à vingt ans de prison. "L'ouverture de l'économie rend Cuba chaque jour plus dépendante de facteurs externes, alors que l'on bloque l'initiative, la capacité créative des Cubains",écrivait-il dans la revue Encuentro de la cultura cubana. Des journalistes indépendants ont été condamnés pour avoir touché quelques centaines de dollars alors que toute l'économie est sous perfusion.

UN GESTE ENVERS L'EUROPE

Des voix de l'exil cubain et la dissidence intérieure prônent une approche multilatérale, capable de "désaméricaniser le dossier cubain". La coopération entre Washington et l'Union européenne a été souhaitée par le secrétaire d'Etat Colin Powell, mais elle bute sur l'embargo. Au nom d'une convergence, tourner la page ne serait plus une concession à Fidel Castro, mais un geste envers les Européens. Otto Reich, émissaire spécial de George Bush pour l'Amérique latine, ne l'entend pas ainsi, tout en admettant la portée symbolique de l'embargo. De passage à Paris récemment, Otto Reich déclarait au Monde : "L'embargo n'est pas la cause des problèmes de Cuba, qui peut acheter partout dans le monde, y compris des produits américains. Néanmoins, la mesure a son importance symbolique. Les Etats-Unis ont été le seul pays qui n'ait jamais reconnu l'annexion des pays baltes par l'URSS. De même, l'embargo unilatéral contre Fidel Castro est un signe de solidarité avec le peuple de Cuba. Nous n'avons demandé à personne de s'y joindre, ni d'adopter des sanctions économiques. Mais si l'Europe veut une transition pacifique, il faut assurer l'existence d'une société civile qui puisse prendre la relève après la fin de cette dictature. Il faut donc l'aider, sans donner des moyens au gouvernement pour se maintenir au pouvoir."

Le rapprochement transatlantique en vue de l'après-Castro a encore des limites.

Paulo A. Paranagua

• ARTICLE PARU DANS LE MONDE DU 05.08.03

-------------------------------------

Si esto no es racismo, ¿me explican que coño es racismo?


BC-FL Hanging Investigation
King's son to examine hanging death in Belle Glade

BELLE GLADE, Fla. (AP) The son of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. plans to travel here to examine the death of a black man found hanging from a tree in his grandmother's back yard.

Martin Luther King III, speaking to the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in Memphis, Tenn., on Sunday, said he intends to find out who is responsible for Feraris "Ray'' Golden's death, which officially has been ruled a suicide.

"We're going to come down there,'' said King, the SCLC's president. "Black folk don't hang themselves.''

(...)

------

Sábado, Agosto 02, 2003

---------------------------------------------------

EXCLUSIVE Time MAGAZINE

THE HUSSEIN BROTHERS ARE LAID TO REST

The U.S. burries Uday and Qusay under a blazing Iraqi sky. Some Iraqis vow revenge.

Saturday, Aug. 02, 2003

Uday and Qusay Hussein were buried today under the scorching noon sun in a cemetery just outside of their father's ancestral village of Owja. U.S. soldiers escorted the bodies of the sons of Saddam Hussein, and that of Qusay's 14-year-old boy Mustafa, and handed them over to the care of the local sheik.

(PHOTOS AND TEXT)


... and more, from Newsweek magazine

SEE HOW THEY RAN

They hoarded money. And they huddled in fear. Inside the flight path of Saddam’s sons. The raid that grounded them—and the hunt for the Ace of Spades.

(TEXT AND PHOTOS)

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Washington defiende la política de devolver a los balseros en altamar

RUI FERREIRA y JOAQUIM UTSET
El Nuevo Herald

La Casa Blanca defendió ayer la política de devolver a Cuba a los balseros encontrados en alta mar, acorde con la política de ''pies secos-pies mojados'' y no mencionó que la misma se estuviera revisando.

''Nuestra política es de una inmigración segura, en orden y legal. Esto se refiere a la política de pies secos-pies mojados que está vigente. Esperamos que esta política sea implementada y llevada a cabo de un forma consistente. Aún así, nuestros puntos de vista y nuestro apoyo al pueblo de Cuba en su lucha por la libertad es muy claro'', declaró ayer el portavoz presidencial de la Casa Blanca, Scott McClellan.

Instado a precisar si el Presidente estuvo de acuerdo con la devolución a Cuba el 20 de julio de 12 personas, a raíz de una critica emitida el día anterior por el gobernador de la Florida, Jeb Bush, quien se manifestó inconforme con la decisión, McClellan añadió: ''El presidente espera que la política sea implementada y hecha respetar de una forma consistente. Eso es lo que el Presidente cree. Esa política es clara, y esos actos son llevados a cabo por quien tiene la responsabilidad de aplicar esa política'', declaró el portavoz.

Aún así no quedó claro si en el caso de los cubanos devueltos el 20 de julio, el presidente Bush cree que la política fue implementada de forma apropiada. En un intercambio con los periodistas, en los cuales todos hablaban a la vez, McClellan afirmó en cierto momento que había sido informado de que ``eso no sucedió''.

No está claro si lo que ''no sucedió'' fue una supuesta negociación con el gobierno cubano sobre la suerte de ese grupo, o si la devolución fue hecha de forma consistente con la política de ``pies secos-pies mojados''.

Al cierre de esta edición, la Casa Blanca no había esclarecido a El Nuevo Herald las palabras del portavoz, pese a que se le pidió en varias oportunidades.

En ningún momento de la reunión con los periodistas en la Casa Blanca McClellan declaró que la política de la administración Bush hacia la isla estuviera siendo revisada o que habría un anuncio al respecto.

El gobernador Jeb Bush dio a entender que pudiera haber anuncios sobre la política hacia Cuba antes de las elecciones del 2004.

Ayer, Bush recibió en Miami a una delegación del Consejo por La Libertad de Cuba en el marco de un intercambio periódico. A la salida, la directora de la entidad, Ninoska Pérez Castellón, aseguró que en el encuentro con el gobernador se les expresó que la política de pies secos-pies mojados sigue bajo revisión, y pronto se tomará una decisión.

''Nuestro interés es que esta administración esté consciente de que estos acuerdos no funcionan'', agregó Pérez Castellón, quien añadió que el presidente Bush ha sido un ''aliado'' que se ha mantenido ''firme'' en el embargo.

Cuando El Nuevo Herald le preguntó si cree que se cumplirá la promesa de una futura revisión del decreto presidencial, Pérez Castellón señaló que ''hay que tener fe en las personas'', señaló.

A su vez, el gobernador Bush manifestó que, pese a la polémica, la política de su hermano terminará siendo percibida como lógica y coherente.

''Confío en que, en un tiempo, los ciudadanos del país y de Miami se darán cuenta que hay una política coherente con respecto a Cuba cuyo objetivo principal es una transición a la democracia'', dijo.

En el fondo, amplió, ''hay una buena política, lo que no hemos visto es una exposición pública de una política coherente, y eso creo que va a ocurrir porque es importante''. El gobernador lamentó la reciente polémica entre la Fundación Nacional Cubana Americana (FNCA) y el congresista republicano Lincoln Díaz-Balart.

''Me siento mal porque haya grupos atacando a Lincoln Díaz-Balart. ¿Por qué atacarlo, cuando es un hombre que tiene el respeto de la administración y es un gran congresista? Se aprovechan de la situación por razones políticas que no tienen que ver con Cuba y es un lástima'', añadió.

Aún así, la crítica anterior del gobernador a la administración de su hermano fue recibida con agrado por la FNCA.

''Felicitamos al gobernador por reconocer la política fracasada y sin dirección de esta administración'', declaró Joe García, director ejecutivo de la FNCA. ''Por donde empezamos, es por donde estamos terminando'', agregó.

© 2003 El Nuevo Herald

--------------------------------------------------

Los que ellos dijeron...

“Yo critico a Bush, a Clinton, a la mamá de Clinton, a la abuela de Clinton, porque para eso vivo en libertad”.

Poeta y escritor Andrés Reynaldo
en un debate en el programa de Maria Elvira Salazar
Miami, julio 30, 2003

Sexta-feira, Agosto 01, 2003

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

BUSH BROTHERS DESAGREE ON CUBAN'S RETURN

Jeb Bush Says Migrants' Return "Just Not Right"

NBC 6 News Team

MIAMI -- In rare criticism of his brother's administration, Gov. Jeb Bush called the return of 12 suspected boat hijackers to Cuba, "just not right."

The 12 were repatriated after the U.S. reached an agreement with the Cuban government that the suspected hijackers would face maximum ten-year prison sentences, and would not be executed. The decision sparked anger from Cuban exile groups in South Florida, including a decision by a leading exile group, Brothers to the Rescue, to leave the Republican Party over what it called the George W. Bush administration's failure to keep its promises to the Cuban people.

Although the governor said he has not spoken directly to President Bush, he told The Miami Herald he has asked several high-level officials in the administration to review what happened and why.

"Despite the good intentions of the administration to negotiate the safety of these folks, that is an oppressive regime, and given the environment in Cuba, it's just not right" to have sent the Cubans back, Gov. Bush said Thursday in an interview aboard his plane from Tampa to Miami.

"There's an expectation that I'm going to be in lock step with the administration, and that tends to happen," the governor added. "But from time to time I have to disagree, and this is one of them."

The governor said neither he nor his brother knew about the U.S. government's decision to send the 12 back to Cuba until it was too late.

"Early on, I was under the impression they would be sent to a third country," the governor said.

Cuban-American exile leaders have expressed a growing frustration that despite a succession of Republican presidents, from Nixon to George Bush Sr., they have seen little change in Havana, and no significant moves by the U.S. to oust Cuban dictator Fidel Castro. Several exile leaders said last week's repatriation of the boaters is the latest offense by another GOP president who has failed to fulfill campaign promises to toughen policies targeting Castro's government.

And the groups have grown increasingly angry over strict enforcement of immigration laws against Cuban refugees.

In May, the federal government indicted three Cuban migrants who staged a dramatic bid to get into the United States, treading water in the Atlantic Ocean for hours before eluding Coast Guardsmen and wading onto shore. The three were charged with threatening the agents with a machete while still on board their boat.

And in July, a Cuban man was convicted of hijacking a Cubana Airlines passenger plane from the communist island to Key West earlier in the year.

Before the repatriation of the 12 Cubans who hijacked a passenger plane in a bid to reach Florida, the Cuban government had accused the United States of being too lenient with hijackers, and encouraging Cuban citizens to make illegal attempts to emigrate. The United States has denied that charge.

Groups Fault Cuban-American Policitians

Groups like the Cuban American National Foundation have also expressed disappointment that the three Cuban American members of Congress from Florida, Reps Lincoln Diaz-Balart, Mario Diaz-Balart and Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, all Republicans, appear to have little leverage with the Bush administration, despite expressions of solidarity from the president.

The CANF's executive director, Jose Garcia, recently called Lincoln Diaz-Balart politically "impotent" for his inability to influence the Bush administration's policy toward Cuba.

This comes as an increasing number of Democrats, including presidential candidates Sen. Bob Graham and Sen. Joseph Lieberman, as well as Sen. Bill Nelson and Miami-Dade Mayor Alex Penelas, are making their own bids for support among South Florida's 400,000 voter-strong Cuban exile community.

Nelson has called for an investigation into the decision to send the migrants back.

No doubt aware of the political ramifications of a split between the GOP and Cuban American voters, the governor this week hinted at a major announcement of some kind by his brother's administration in the coming months related to Cuba policy.

"I think this can be rectified," he said.

But President Bush's spokesman Scott McClellan said Friday that this country's policy on Cuba is clear when it comes to "wet feet, dry feet." Under the "wet-foot, dry-foot" policy adopted by the Immigration and Naturalization Service in the 1990s, Cubans who reach U.S. soil are automatically allowed to stay; those caught at sea usually are sent home.

"The president and governor agree with one another on many, many issues, even though there are a few times when they may disagree," McClellan said. He said the repatriation policy is carried out by the agencies responsible for implementing it, but the administration "expects it to be carried out in a consistent way."

He said, however, that the president agrees with his brother that Cuba's government is an oppressive regime.

"The president stands firmly on the side of the Cuban people and their struggle for freedom and democracy," McClellan said. "The president has been very clear that sanctions need to remain in place until Cuba has free elections, freedom of speech and frees political prisoners."

In negotiations with Cuba last week, the U.S. government agreed to return the would-be migrants if their lives would be spared. The Cubans, suspected of hijacking a boat and three of 15 passengers, could each be sentenced to up to 10 years in prison.

The governor was careful during Thursday's interview to defend his brother's overall record on Cuba policy. He blamed the lack of action on the national security team's focus on terrorism and war.

"One incident is not what will be remembered about the record of my brother's administration," the governor said.

(C) NBC6 - Miami

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The New York Times August 1, 2003

North Korea Agrees to Multilateral Talks

By DON KIRK with STEVEN R. WEISMAN

SEOUL, South Korea, Aug. 1 — North and South Korea said today that North Korea had agreed to multilateral talks on its development of nuclear weapons, signaling a breakthrough in the nuclear standoff that has cast a shadow over the region for most of the past year.

Pyongyang's Korean Central News Agency quoted a North Korean foreign ministry spokesman today as saying that North Korea had agreed to a format for six-party talks involving the two Koreas, the United States, China, Japan and Russia. The format also includes separate talks between the United States and North Korea, the news agency said.

Also today, South Korea's deputy foreign minister, Lee Soo Hyuck, told reporters that the North had notified the South on Thursday of its willingness to engage in multiparty talks "to resolve the nuclear issue," as the United States has demanded. But Mr. Lee did not disclose when or where the talks would be held.

In Washington, the White House's chief spokesman, Scott McClellan, confirmed North Korea's consent to multilateral talks. "This would include six-party talks," he said. The details and timing, he said, were still being worked out in consultation with other countries in the region. Mr. McClellan did not name the six parties.

President Bush hailed the development of multinational talks as "good progress." He said, "We're upbeat about the fact that others are assuming responsibility for peace besides the United States of America."

The United States has repeatedly rejected the idea of bilateral talks with North Korea and has said there could be no substitute for talks in which South Korea and the main countries closest to North Korea participated.

North Korea had insisted for months on one-on-one talks with Washington, and its willingness to accept American-proposed multilateral talks was seen as a concession.

But the North Korean spokesman, quoted by the North Korea's news agency, said that the United States had agreed to bilateral talks between Washington and Pyongyang, which would be held within the framework of multilateral talks.

American officials did not confirm plans for bilateral talks within the context of the multilateral dialogue, but Mr. McClellan said such United States-North Korea conversations were a possibility.

"There is always the opportunity during these meetings for North Korea or any other party to talk directly to another party while these meetings are going on," he said. "But we continue to pursue a multilateral approach."

The North Korean news agency said that North Korea had informed the United States of its agreement on multilateral talks in a meeting on Thursday in New York, where American envoys have periodically met with North Korean diplomats attached to the North's mission to the United Nations.

The comments from North Korea and South Korea came a day after the Bush administration said that North Korea appeared ready to agree to proposed multiparty talks to resolve the impasse over the North's refusal to dismantle its accelerating nuclear weapons program.

The issue of who should take part in such talks, while seemingly obscure, has been contentious throughout the latest crisis over North Korea, which began last October when it admitted that it had violated a promise not to produce nuclear weapons.

North Korea has said that its main security threat comes from the United States and that it would negotiate only with Washington. It also said it would reach a deal to end its nuclear weapons program only in return for infusions of aid and American guarantees that it will not be attacked.

The Bush administration has refused to exclude Japan and South Korea from any negotiation, in part because their citizens would not tolerate a deal arranged without them and also because Washington believes that any possible deal is more enforceable if more nations take part. The administration is still divided over how much of a concession to make to North Korea's demand for a nonaggression guarantee in return for an agreement to dismantle the nuclear program.

Many hard-liners in the administration openly question whether any promise by North Korea is worth accepting, on the grounds that it cannot be trusted, especially since Pyongyang agreed to end its nuclear program in 1994 and then renounced that agreement last year. That occurred after the United States confronted the North with incriminating evidence that it had secretly restarted the program.

Some administration hard-liners say they would prefer to put pressure on North Korea economically, politically and perhaps militarily in hopes that the government would collapse. But they say they also support the negotiation approach, in part because they think the talks will fail and provide a stronger reason for raising pressure.

South Korean officials said today that they were confident that negotiators from all six countries would meet by late August or early September.

"This is a breakthrough," a senior official at South Korea's foreign ministry said. "It's a very significant development. We regard our efforts as bearing fruit."

The official said South Korean officials had been uneasy after the top American arms control envoy, John R. Bolton, undersecretary of state for arms control, described life in North Korea under Kim Jong Il as "a hellish nightmare."

"We were relieved when we saw that North Korea chose to ignore his remarks," the South Korean official said.

Mr. Bolton, who was visiting Tokyo today on the final stop of a trip to northeast Asia, said the news from Pyongyang was "encouraging" and the result of the American insistence on multilateral talks. The United States, he said, would stick to its demand for verifiable evidence that the North was on its way to giving up its nuclear program.

Although Mr. Bush has brought Russia, China, South Korea and Japan into the process, it is not clear what each party would be willing to accept as a final settlement.

North Korea's basic demand for a nonaggression guarantee from the United States has been rejected by Washington. American officials say they would be willing to consider making a statement to that effect as part of an accord, but the idea of a treaty was ruled out this week by Secretary of State Colin L. Powell.

A senior administration official, speaking anonymously this week, was more blunt. "Nonaggression agreements went out with the 1920's," he said.

A separate part of any agreement with North Korea would address its demand for vast assistance in terms of energy, food and money. Administration officials say such aid can be forthcoming only after it is clear that the North had dismantled its nuclear program irreversibly.

As for how the impasse over the talks appeared to have been overcome, administration officials and Asian diplomats said China had played a crucial role.

They said that in October at Mr. Bush's ranch in Crawford, Tex., the president told Jiang Zemin, then China's president, that improved Chinese-American relations hinged on China's help with North Korea, whose nuclear arms program had just been confirmed.

An Asian diplomat said that at first China did not take North Korea's nuclear threat seriously but that intelligence evidence had convinced Mr. Jiang and his successor, Hu Jintao, that a North Korean nuclear program could lead to nuclear weapons proliferation in South Korea, Japan and perhaps Taiwan.

At the same time, this diplomat said, China feared that the Bush administration's hard-liners would gain advantage in determining policy, possibly provoking a military conflict in the region.

The United States has persuaded a dozen nations to declare their willingness to interdict missile exports by North Korea. Some Asian diplomats worry that such steps might be provocative to the North.

The United States did not ever make clear whether Russia would take part in the talks with North Korea, but Moscow appears to have seized on the opportunity to do so, perhaps to keep its influence in the region. An Asian diplomat said the North might have, in like fashion, seized on the idea of having Russia take part in order to bring a potentially friendlier nation to the talks.

As if to reinforce the influence of administration hard-liners, Mr. Bolton, one of the members of the hard-line camp, delivered a stern denunciation of Mr. Kim in a speech here on Thursday.

"Kim Jong Il seems to care more about enriching uranium than enriching his own people," Mr. Bolton said. "While he lives like royalty in Pyongyang, he keeps hundreds of thousands of his people locked in prison camps, with millions more mired in abject poverty, scrounging the ground for food. For many in North Korea, life is a hellish nightmare."

Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Célia Cruz se murió. Es cierto. Yo la vi tendida en la Torre de la Libertad rodeada de miles de cubanos cantando, llorando, rezando y tomando café. Pero nadie, como mi amigo Andrés Reynaldo supo describir las presencias, ausencias, reflexiones, sueños y dolores, que ese día allí se reflejaron. Vale la pena leerlo. ¡Azúcar!, pues.

¿VISTE, FIDEL?

ANDRES REYNALDO
El Nuevo Herald


Fidel, ¿viste lo de Celia?

Apuesto a que lo viste. De un rincón al otro una ola de pesar ha barrido el mundo. Una ola, Fidel, que ha batido con pertinaz furia contra ese muro, endeble pero oprobioso, que tú has alzado entre los cubanos.

¿Lo viste? Se nos murió el sinsonte, Fidel. Y estamos tristes. Aunque, a la vez, mira tú, no nos cabe un alpiste del orgullo que sentimos por ella. Por Cuba. Por esa Cuba profunda y mágica que Celia simboliza y que tú no has podido destruir.

¿Viste, Fidel? Estoy seguro de que hiciste la misma comparación que nosotros. Su muerte y tu muerte. La muerte de los que son llorados por todo un pueblo (en este caso, muchos pueblos) y la muerte atonal y protocolaria de los tiranos. ¿Dime, Fidel, quién tú crees que te va a llorar?

Veinte a uno a que lo viste. El cortejo fúnebre avanzando lentamente hacia la Ermita de la Caridad, al tiempo que la gente, su gente, cubría con pétalos de rosas el coche mortuorio. ¿Viste esos rostros, Fidel? El rostro del joven balsero que perdió sus piernas (podridas por la sal, mordidas por los peces) por escapar de ti sobre la llanta de un automóvil. El rostro del guajiro que sin ningún inglés (y un mal español) trabajó dos trabajos durante 20 años para enviar a sus hijos a la universidad y construirse la casa de sus sueños. El rostro del cubano que vive honesta y esperanzadamente de su trabajo, sin comité de defensa, sin discursos obligatorios, sin miedo. Estos son, tú lo sabes, los rostros de ''la mafia de Miami'', con sus zapatos nuevos y su ropa de domingo fragante de agua de lavanda, agitando banderas y mordiendo las lágrimas mientras la Guarachera de Cuba era llevada a los pies de Nuestra Señora de la Caridad del Cobre.

¿Y viste, Fidel, lo que decían de ti los periódicos? ''El gobierno de Fidel Castro no le permitió entrar a la isla para ver morir a su padre''. Esa simple frase, lo mismo en checo que en francés que en italiano, te retrata en toda tu mezquindad. Así eres tú, Fidel, seco y roñoso, privado de todo amor. Un rencoroso matoncillo de zarzuela. Y hasta el más obtuso de tus admiradores advierte que se lo hiciste a Celia como se lo has hecho a todos. Que lo tuyo no es la izquierda ni la derecha, sino el abismo.

Así es la vida, Fidel, tú tienes al Gabo, todo un premio Nobel, que va de país en país como una modistilla deslumbrada contando lo mucho que lees, lo tanto que te gustan los helados de coco y lo bueno que eres con tus vacas. (El pobre, ¿qué otra cosa iba a decir?) Tienes a Oliver Stone, a Pérez Esquivel, a la mercurial Hebe de Bonafide que se alegra incluso de los atentados terroristas del 11 de septiembre. Y de pronto, Fidel, en el momento que menos te convenía, cuando la historia te califica como un bullicioso anacronismo, la muerte de Celia arroja una cirujana luz sobre tu dictadura y tu persona.

¿Y qué me dices, Fidel, de esa nota que publicaste en Granma? Siete líneas que intentan escatimar la gloria de una mujer que se hizo sinónimo de Cuba. ¿Quieres qué te diga algo? Nadie te lo ha perdonado. Ni dentro ni fuera. Puedes afirmar sin dudarlo que en eso estuviste a tu verdadera altura. Caramba, Fidel, ¿quién te habrá hecho tanto daño? ¿Cómo habrán depositado en tu pecho esa costra tan amarga y sórdida? ¿Quién te disminuyó en tal grado que ni siquiera en tu vejez has podido saciar, como todo hombre, una medida de ti mismo? ¿En qué horrible rincón de tu infancia te arrancaron de Dios?

Y no digas, Fidel, que la política tuvo vela en este entierro. No, Fidel. Fíjate si no hubo política que ni siquiera el gobernador Jeb Bush se sintió obligado a venir a Miami. Estaba en California, pasando el cepillo para su hermano. Nuestro Jeb, Fidel, el amigo histórico de los cubanos. ¿Te imaginas? No envió ni a la vicegobernadora. (Aquí entre nosotros: ¿sabrá la vicegobernadora que hay cubanos en Miami?) Ni ambos Bob: Graham y Menéndez, nuestro flanco demócrata. Ni ese avispero de senadores y representantes que nos caen en La Pequeña Habana en tiempos de elecciones con un tabaco mal encendido, una guayabera prestada y un par de frasecitas en tu contra, como si fuéramos un corral de imbéciles. Ni nuestra Ileanita, Fidel, creyó necesario interrumpir sus sagradas vacaciones. Nada de política, te lo juro.

¿Y viste, Fidel, los honores que le tributó New York? Carroza blanca con un tren de cuatro caballos. Digno de una reina. Y allí estaban, bajo la lluvia, colombianos, puertorriqueños, dominicanos, judíos, nigerianos, irlandeses, salvadoreños... La Quinta Avenida cortada un martes a las 10 de la mañana para sacar el féretro de esta gloriosa negra de Santos Suárez envuelto en la bandera del triángulo de sangre. Y la estrella, Fidel, la dura estrella de nuestra nación, ardiéndole sobre el pecho.

Y si no lo viste esta vez ojalá puedas verlo la otra, cuando los restos de Celia vuelvan a su patria libre. Y de que volverán, volverán. Ah, Fidel, de todas las personas del mundo tú eres el único que no debía perderse esa tremenda fiesta. (A lo mejor hasta Silvio le tiene su canción.) Que veas a su pueblo salir a la calle, sin mordaza, sin movilización compulsiva, sin cerveza de limosna. La libertad, Fidel, de punta en blanco, recibiendo a su guarachera. Y que escuches la conga subir por malecón. Y que veas las lágrimas y las risas y las fotos de Celia en cada casa, como las de una hermana ilustre y añorada. Y que se te peguen, sin querer, los estribillos. Y que las muchachas rompan caderas bajo el sol. Eso sería justicia poética. Y que alguien, apiadado de tu senil tristeza, te diga con habanera displicencia: ``Vamos, comandante, no hay que llorar, que las penas se van cantando''.

(C) El Nuevo Herald 2003