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美国 乌克兰 美西方军事出口助长了战争罪行

(2023-04-17 09:27:43) 下一个

【世界说】美国新闻机构:乌克兰的和平不应被军火商控制 美西方军事出口助长了战争罪行

2023-04-17 20:32 来源:中国日报网
 

中国日报网4月17日电 据美国新闻机构“揭露真相”(truthout)报道指出,世界各地的冲突使得武器需求量增加,这促使了北约国防生产的“繁荣景象“。北约成员国严重依赖外国市场,将暴力输出到全球各地。反过来,这些冲突在一个破坏性的反馈循环中使需求永久化。美西方利用紧张局势来追求地缘政治霸权和工业复兴,其军事出口也助长了战争罪行和有罪不罚现象。

美国军工企业洛克希德·马丁公司(Lockheed Martin)正在扩大业务,以满足乌克兰对武器的需求。最近几个月,其位于阿肯色州卡姆登的工厂赢得了近5亿美元的高机动性炮兵火箭系统(HIMARS)合同,使其生产目标翻倍,甚至需要增加生产班次,阿肯色州商会甚至将其命名为 "阿肯色州制造的‘最酷’东西!"

卡姆登的繁荣反映了北约集团国防生产的繁荣。去年,西班牙炸药和弹药制造商Expal为乌军队生产了280吨炸药。德国莱茵金属集团甚至在考虑在乌建造一家坦克工厂。自俄乌冲突爆发以来,北约领导人一直主张武装乌克兰,美西方工业界人士则认为,军事援助既是战略需要,也是所谓的“道德”必须。

然而,包括洛克希德·马丁和莱茵金属在内的主要承包商都有助长腐败和破坏和平的鹰派政策的臭名昭著的记录。许多国家积极违反武器禁运,加剧了世界各地的冲突。根本上,西方对乌的军事出口揭示了危险的行业趋势和军国主义的复兴历史。随着军事预算的增加,权力越来越集中在有动机寻求冲突的美西方国防官员手中。

不择手段追求 “武器”销售 “滋养”自身军事力量

文中指出,自1949年北约成立以来,其成员国一直依赖外国市场来降低武器成本以维持其工业基础。从历史上看,激烈的竞争促使各国政府容忍程度惊人的腐败和非法销售手段。冷战在第三世界爆发,超级大国竞相把新独立的国家变成其客户,引发了地区争端和代理人战争。

到20世纪70年代,武器贸易成为推动全球化的不可控制的“燃料”。1973年,美国对以色列的军事援助引发了阿拉伯国家的能源禁运,使得石油价格上涨了四倍,并打击了全球经济。越来越多的石油生产商和国防承包商用能源交换武器,将两大产业融合在一起。

美国官员支持出售武器,同时向企业保证,他们“不反对武器换石油的想法”。美国前总统吉米·卡特(Jimmy Carter)在担任佐治亚州州长时曾为洛克希德公司拉拢生意,在其入主白宫的第一年,就向伊朗出售了创纪录的57亿美元武器。如果说北约确保了欧洲的和平,那么全球南方(国家和地区)的冲突则一再滋养了北约的军事力量。

北约东扩 军火公司腐败现象普遍存在

冷战结束后,西方国家军费开支下降,开启工业整合过程。说客们争先恐后地寻找维持战时经济的新论据。1992年,美国国防部官员公布了其最新战略,宣称美国的首要任务是“防止新的竞争对手重新出现”。"没有相匹敌的对手 "这一政策,在遏制俄罗斯等国的同时,合理的维持一个庞大军工复合体以维护美国的霸权。

与此同时,军火商们发起了一场主张北约扩张以确保新市场安全的运动。据《纽约时报》报道称,商人们认为中欧和东欧是“下一个全球军火市场”。洛克希德·马丁公司副总裁布鲁斯·杰克逊(Bruce Jackson)成为美国北约扩张委员会主席,他在吃羊排和红酒的晚餐时说服国会议员扩大北约的军事保护伞。

一系列军火丑闻接踵而至,法国最大的国防集团也卷入其中。2005年,泰雷兹公司前首席执行官米歇尔·约瑟兰(Michel Josserand)宣布,腐败现象普遍存在,称该公司的道德准则“伪善到了极点”。他甚至声称该公司曾操纵了一项向伊拉克出售武器的联合国计划。争论同样困扰着德国和英国。

在推动北约东扩的同时,军火商也帮助欧洲军事化。2015年,欧盟委员会成立了国防研究专家小组(GoP),为官员提供安全政策建议。16个成员中有9个建立了行业关系,包括与领先的国防承包商,如空客(Airbus)和BAE系统(BAE Systems)等。之后,委员会成立了欧洲防御基金(EDF)。

在某种显著的程度上,欧洲防御基金标志着行业对欧洲安全政策的占领。行业压力迫使欧盟将知识产权控制权让渡给私人承包商。令人难以置信的是,武器制造商受到的监管很少,而且有一种与官方“合谋”的文化。一名欧洲监察员总结说,“没有对项目是否符合国际法进行详细评估。”

北约的军事开支不成比例地让一小群公司富了起来。在2022年俄乌冲突爆发前,仅空客、莱昂纳多、泰利斯、达索航空和英德拉系统五家公司就获得了欧洲国防工业发展基金的75%。

美西方将暴力输出到全球各地使武器需求“永久化”

与此同时,北约成员国仍然严重依赖外国市场,将暴力输出到全球各地。反过来,这些冲突在一个破坏性的反馈循环中使需求永久化。德拉斯(Delàs)和平研究中心的结论表明,2003年至2014年期间,欧盟将其国防出口的三分之一运往63个发生冲突的国家,这些客户占世界难民的75%。

然而,军火商甚至把难民当作威胁和牟利的借口。作为北约军事建设的支柱,西班牙英德拉集团(Indra)将自己标榜为“电子战”的“先驱”, 强调其针对非法移民的举措。去年6月,西班牙和摩洛哥安全部队武力袭击了试图翻越其在非洲海岸的西班牙城市梅利利亚修建的边境墙的难民,造成至少23名平民丧生,200人受伤。

最重要的是,中东仍然是北约成员国的重要市场。美国和欧洲国家长期以来一直向部分国家提供武器设备,将被占领土变成了一个噩梦般的武器实验室。西方的军事出口助长了战争罪行和有罪不罚现象。事实上,对利润的追求产生了奇怪的伙伴关系。美国、法国、德国和西班牙向土耳其和希腊提供武器,尽管两国关系紧张。国际特赦组织等人权组织报告说,在秘鲁、哥伦比亚、尼日利亚、西撒哈拉和其他冲突地区,北约集团的设备被滥用。

俄乌冲突发生后,四天内,27个欧洲国家同意提供4.5亿欧元的武器,启动了连续的“军事援助”浪潮,加速了向军国主义的漂移。随着战争吞噬了西方军火,国防类股票价格飙升,促使SEB等银行取消了对武器投资的限制。军火承包商们在美国国防部会面,讨论对乌提供武器和补充美国物资等问题。制造反坦克导弹的雷神公司的首席执行官格雷戈里·海恩斯(Gregory Haynes)强调,乌克兰的需求“在未来几年对该公司有利”。通过吸收旧装备,这场战争不仅让北约成员国增加了军费开支,还让它们自己的军火库实现了现代化。

文章指出,乌克兰已经成为西方技术的试验场。“乌克兰是最好的试验场,因为我们将有机会在战争中检验所有假设,并在军事技术和现代战争中引入革命性的变化,”乌克兰副总理兼数字化转型部长米哈伊洛·费多罗夫(Mykhailo Fedorov)说。西方领导人将这场冲突视为东欧的代理人战争,他们利用紧张局势来追求地缘政治霸权和工业复兴。

今年3月,欧盟成员国达成了一项价值20亿欧元的协议,将向美国提供100万枚炮弹,而美国国防部则提出了创纪录的8420亿美元国防预算。文末指出,军工行业领袖不是和平缔造者,而是现代的军阀,在将冲突变成推销之前先煽动冲突。如果乌克兰想要争取和平,不能被其控制。

Peace in Ukraine Is Too Important to Leave in the Hands of Arms Dealers

https://truthout.org/articles/peace-in-ukraine-is-too-important-to-leave-in-the-hands-of-arms-dealers/

Arms makers are stoking conflicts and then pitching weapons as a path to peace.

By  ,  ; 

Family members cry as Ukrainian soldiers carry the coffin of fallen soldier Ihor Yurchak, arriving at the Saints Peter and Paul Garrison Church in Lviv, Ukraine, on April 12, 2023.

 

This spring, Lockheed Martin is expanding operations to meet Ukraine’s demand for arms. In recent months, its Camden, Arkansas, plant won nearly a half-billion dollars in contracts for the High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) — doubling production targets and prompting Lockheed officials to consider adding a night shift.

Russia’s war in Ukraine has turned the HIMARS rocket launcher into a lethal symbol of U.S. innovation. Last year, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy presented President Joe Biden with a military medal from the captain of a Ukrainian HIMARS unit. The Arkansas Chamber of Commerce named it the “Coolest Thing Made in Arkansas!

Camden’s brush with prosperity reflects a boom in NATO-bloc defense production. One Spanish munitions company, Expal, produced 280 tons of explosives at a single plant for Ukrainian forces last year. The German conglomerate Rheinmetall is even considering building a tank factory in Ukraine.

RELATED STORY
 

Since the 2022 Russian invasion, NATO leaders have advocated arming Ukraine, as images of besieged civilians and stoic soldiers confronting foreign aggression transfix observers. Industry voices argue that military aid is both a strategic necessity and moral imperative.

Yet, leading contractors — including Lockheed Martin and Rheinmetall — have notorious records of promoting corruption and hawkish policies that undermine peace. Many actively violate arms embargoes, exacerbating conflicts across the world, and previously aided the Russian war effort.

Ultimately, Western military exports to Ukraine reveal dangerous industry trends and a resurgent history of militarism. As military budgets rise, power has increasingly concentrated in the hands of defense officials with an incentive to seek conflict.

Cold Blaze

 

 

Since the formation of NATO in 1949, members have relied on foreign markets to reduce weapons costs and sustain their industrial base. Historically, fierce competition encouraged governments to tolerate staggering levels of corruption and illegal sales tactics. The Cold War blazed in the Third World, where superpowers competed to transform newly independent countries into clients, inflaming regional disputes and proxy wars.

By the 1970s, the arms trade was the uncontrollable fuel propelling globalization. In 1973, U.S. military aid to Israel triggered an Arab energy embargo, increasing the price of oil fourfold and flooring the global economy. To recover the petrodollars filling Middle-Eastern treasuries, NATO members sold massive quantities of arms to the region. Increasingly, oil producers and defense contractors bartered energy for weapons, fusing the two industries.

U.S. officials championed sales, while assuring corporations that they had “no objection to the arms-for-oil idea.” President Jimmy Carter previously drummed up business for Lockheed as governor of Georgia, before selling Iran a record $5.7 billion in weapons during his first year in the Oval Office. Eventually, sales precipitated an Iranian debt crisis, accelerating the 1979 revolution.

Amid the political chaos, Iraqi President Saddam Hussein invaded Iran in 1980, beginning a grueling eight-year war that NATO members stoked with arms. President François Mitterrand of France, whose brother directed Aérospatiale, vigorously promoted sales to Hussein, emphasizing that foreign clients were essential for defense contractors. “The French market would not suffice to keep factories operating, since we would not be able to make that policy profitable,” Mitterrand explained. By 1983, Iraq absorbed 40 percent of French arms production.

Most NATO members sold equipment to both sides during the war, which killed 680,000 people. French and U.S. policymakers illegally exported explosives to Iran, mobilizing proceeds to reportedly finance the French Socialist Party and covert operations in Nicaragua. From Britain, Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher exploited the regional buildup to seal what was then the largest weapons deal in history, while her son allegedly received commissions.

Ironically, Hussein invaded Kuwait in 1990 partly to pressure creditors into renegotiating the arms debt he accumulated over the previous war. Once more, NATO members turned a crisis into a business opportunity, overseeing a spike in regional sales. British officials called the war an “unparalleled opportunity” and a “vast demonstration … with live ammunition and ‘real trials,’” while flooding Iraq’s neighbors with arms.

Thus, the Cold War ended in flames. If NATO ensured peace in Europe, conflicts across the Global South repeatedly nourished its military muscle.

Revolving Wars

 

 

The end of the Cold War ushered a decline in Western military spending, initiating a painful process of industry consolidation. Lobbyists scrambled for new arguments to maintain a war economy. In 1992, Pentagon officials unveiled their latest grand strategy, declaring that the U.S.’s priority was “to prevent the re-emergence of a new rival.” The “no peer rival” policy justified maintaining an extensive military-industrial complex, while containing Russia and China, in order to preserve U.S. hegemony. One author, Lewis “Scooter” Libby, has owned defense stock and consulted for Northrop Grumman.

Meanwhile, arms makers led a movement propounding NATO expansion to secure new markets. Previously, Secretary of State James Baker promised Russian leaders that the alliance would move “not one inch eastward.” Yet The New York Times reported that businessmen regarded Central and Eastern Europe as “the next global arms bazaar.” Vice President Bruce Jackson of Lockheed Martin became president of the U.S. Committee to Expand NATO, convincing legislators to extend the military umbrella over dinners of lamb chops and red wine.

After pushing the alliance eastward, Jackson led the Committee for the Liberation of Iraq, which spearheaded the drive for the 2003 invasion — inaugurating an era of soaring military budgets.

Lacking similar domestic demand, other NATO members remained heavily reliant on foreign markets, pursuing sales with unscrupulous zeal. France exemplified this alarming pattern. In 1995, Prime Minister Édouard Balladur financed his presidential campaign with kickbacks from arms deals. Eventually, a scandal ignited when the director of Sofremi revealed that the export organization’s middleman, Pierre Falcone, had “showered everyone with bribes for years.” Investigators concluded that dozens of officials and Mitterrand’s own son participated in illegal sales.

A string of arms scandals followed, embroiling the largest French defense conglomerates. In 2005, former executive officer Michel Josserand of Thales announced that corruption was endemic, calling the corporation’s ethics code “hypocrisy pushed to its maximum.” He even claimed that the firm manipulated a UN program to sell arms to Iraq. Authorities also concluded that Airbus dedicated a 250-person bureau to managing its global network of illegal payments, exposing the “massive practice of corruption within the company.”

Controversy equally dogged Germany and Britain. After notoriously pocketing arms kickbacks, Christian Democrats selected Angela Merkel as party leader in 2000 to signal a break with the past. During her tenure, investigators uncovered monumental bribery schemes at Siemens and Rheinmetall, the largest German defense firms. Likewise, British and American officials fined BAE Systems for corrupting Saudi leaders, even as the United States maintained a former Raytheon director as ambassador to Riyadh. In 2017, another industrial colossus, Rolls-Royce, paid a £671 million penalty after authorities uncovered “truly vast corrupt payments” and “egregious criminality over decades.”

As NATO pressed eastward, arms lobbyists escalated tensions with Russia, contributing to the outbreak of the Russo-Ukrainian War in 2014. By then, the industry had dashed hopes for a durable “peace dividend,” distorting economic development and corrupting public policy.

NATO Incorporated

 

 

While promoting NATO expansion, arms makers helped militarize Europe. In 2015, the European Commission created the Group of Personalities on Defence Research (GoP), a panel advising officials on security policy. Nine of the 16 members nurtured industry connections, including ties to leading defense contractors, such as Airbus and BAE Systems. Afterward, the commission established the European Defence Fund (EDF), justifying the weapons development program with arguments lifted from a GoP report. The initiative’s €8 billion military research and development budget for 2021-2027 is over 13 times the allocation for the previous budgetary cycle. By March 2022, the firms that the GoP represented had absorbed 30.7 percent of distributed funds — even though many faced recent corruption allegations.

To a remarkable degree, the EDF signified the industry capture of European security policy. By then, the commissioner overseeing arms development, Thierry Breton, was the former chairman of the defense giant Atos, while the previous director of the European Defence Agency, Jorge Domecq, was an Airbus lobbyist. Industry pressure convinced the European Union to cede control over intellectual property to private contractors. Incredibly, arms makers enjoy minimal oversight and a culture of official complicity. A European Ombudsman concluded that “there is no detailed assessment of the compliance of projects with international law.”

NATO-bloc military spending disproportionately enriches a small clique of corporations. On the eve of the 2022 Russian invasion, five companies alone – Airbus, Leonardo, Thales, Dassault Aviation, and Indra Systems — had received 75 percent of European Defence Industrial Development funds. Instead of competitors, contractors are shades of the same shadow. Edisoft and Naval Group form part of Thales, Thales forms part of Dassault, and Dassault forms part of Airbus. And the pattern peels on. In turn, foreign investment firms like BlackRock and Wellington Management own major shares of both European defense contractors and their American rivals.

Capital flows reflect the existence of a global military-industrial complex, as interlocking conglomerates collectively organize the defense market – turning public funds into private property. A small number of transnational corporations with the same shareholders shuffle contracts between enterprises, moving profits across borders, while claiming that military spending is a patriotic duty and national imperative. The intense concentration of economic power allows companies to ratchet up prices, stifle competition and extort new contracts from governments.

Since 2014, NATO has cited the Russo-Ukrainian War to justify the military buildup. Yet, between 2014 and 2020, one-third of EU members shipped weapons to Russia, authorizing over 1,000 export licenses despite a 2014 embargo. Top EDF recipients sent thermal cameras for tanks, navigation systems for fighter jets, armored vehicles, rifles and pistols — all while Russian forces annexed Crimea and spliced Ukraine into separatist republics.

Misery Abundant

 

 

Meanwhile, NATO members remain critically dependent on foreign markets, exporting violence across the globe. In turn, these conflicts perpetuate demand in a devastating feedback cycle. The Delàs Center for Peace Studies concluded that the EU shipped one-third of its defense exports to 63 countries in conflicts between 2003 and 2014. And these clients accounted for 75 percent of world refugees.

Yet the arms industry casts even refugees as threats and pretexts for profit. A pillar of the NATO military buildup, the Spanish conglomerate Indra advertises itself as a “pioneer” in “electronic warfare,” emphasizing its initiatives against undocumented immigrants. Last June, Spanish and Moroccan security forces targeted refugees trying to scale the border wall that it constructed at Melilla, a Spanish city on the African coast, massacring at least 23 civilians and injuring 200. Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez called the operation “well handled” (“bien resuelto”), before blocking a parliamentary investigation. Tellingly, the victims were from Sudan — a country that Spain illegally supplied with weapons during its civil war.

Above all, the Middle East remains the essential market for NATO members. U.S. and European states have long supplied Israelis with equipment to colonize Palestine, turning the Occupied Territories into a nightmarish arms laboratory. Israel remains the largest cumulative recipient of U.S. aid, at times receiving more money than Latin America and Sub-Saharan Africa combined. Western military exports foster both war crimes and impunity. After Israeli forces pounded the Gaza Strip in 2014, the United States nearly doubled Israel’s weapons package the following year. In May 2022, IDF soldiers murdered the American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh. Yet U.S. authorities accepted Israel’s version of events without question.

In a complex circular trade, NATO also supplies markets for Israeli weapons, importing drones and other sophisticated arms, while Israel helps develop cutting-edge technology such as the F-35 fighter. Relying on its defense sector for foreign exchange, Israel even sells arms to neo-Nazis.

Indeed, the search for profit engenders strange partnerships. The United States, France, Germany, and Spain supply arms to both Turkey and Greece, despite tensions between the two countries and Ankara’s ruthless war against Kurds. They also outfit the Saudi coalition attacking Yemen, inflaming a war that has killed over 377,000 people. Human rights groups such as Amnesty International report the abuse of NATO-bloc equipment in PeruColombiaNigeriaWestern Sahara, and other conflict zones, dramatizing that repression is a global business.

The Military Sublime

 

 

The Russian invasion in February 2022 triggered an outburst of solidarity with Ukraine, as NATO members shipped arms and accelerated the drift toward militarism. Within four days, 27 European states agreed to send €450 million in weapons, initiating successive waves of military aid. As fighting devoured Western munitions, defense stock prices soared, leading banks such as SEB to eliminate restrictions on arms investments.

That spring, contractors met in the Pentagon to discuss weapons for Ukraine and replenishing U.S. materiel. Elsewhere, President Joe Biden quipped: “We will speak softly and carry a large Javelin, because we’re sending a lot of those.” CEO Gregory Haynes of Raytheon, which manufactures the anti-tank missile, emphasized that Ukrainian demand was “a benefit to the business over the … coming years.” By absorbing old equipment, the war allows NATO members to not only boost military spending, but modernize their own arsenals.

As with Palestine, Ukraine has become a testing ground for Western technology. Seeking new equipment, Ukrainian leaders even advertise their country as an weapons laboratory to secure imports. “Ukraine is the best test[ing] ground, as we’ll have the opportunity to test all hypotheses in battle and introduce revolutionary change in military tech and modern warfare,” Minister of Digital Transformation Mykhailo Fedorov argues. Western officials and contractors study the performance of systems, such as the HIMARS and M777 howitzer, while the prominence of unmanned aircraft has galvanized new drone research.

Beyond the rhetoric of solidarity, NATO’s considerations are overwhelmingly strategic and economic. Western leaders regard the conflict as a proxy war over Eastern Europe, exploiting tensions to pursue geopolitical supremacy and industrial regeneration. Many promote arms exports to safeguard “our strategic autonomy and sovereignty.” Senator Christian Cambon of France openly argues that officials must “make the necessary efforts, so that we will conserve our rank as the no. 1 Army in Europe!” Last summer, President Emmanuel Macron embraced “a war economy,” exhorting EU members to invest in defense and prepare for long-term hostilities.

This January, France promised to send AMX armored vehicles to Ukraine. Weeks later, the United States and Germany agreed to ship M1 Abrams and Leopard 2 tanks, signaling a qualitative leap in military aid. And this March, EU members concluded a €2 billion agreement to send 1 million artillery shells, while U.S. officials proposed a record-shattering $842 billion budget for the Pentagon.

In recent weeks, Finland announced plans to buy David’s Sling, an Israeli missile defense system, after joining NATO. That very day, one of the contractors, Elbit Systems, sponsored an industry seminar on the war. “[I]f DoD [Defense Department] and industry can work together, we can move mountains,” waxed keynote speaker Christine Michienzi, a senior technology advisor for the Pentagon. “We’re mobilizing the defense-industrial base in a way that we haven’t seen since World War II.”

Arming Ukraine has become accepted wisdom, garnering support across the political spectrum and forging passionate commitments, as citizens across the world identify with battered Ukrainians repelling foreign aggression. Yet the arms trade’s underlying dynamics contradict simple narratives of solidarity. The very corporations and governments that direct the buildup previously aided the Russian war effort. And they still inflame conflicts across the Global South to sustain their industrial base and accumulate profits. The strategies they propound — ranging from the “no peer rival” policy to NATO expansion — not only foster war but commodify it.

Rather than peacemakers, industry leaders are modern warlords, instigating conflicts before turning them into sales pitches: spectacles of sublime terror. If solidarity with Ukraine is a moral imperative, the struggle for peace is too important to leave in their hands.

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…READING LIST

EDUCATION & YOUTH

Educators and Publishers Are Fighting the Right’s Attempt to Erase Black History

HUMAN RIGHTS

University of California Workers Center Disability Justice in Union Organizing

WAR & PEACE

Billionaire Space Flight Isn’t About Colonization. It’s Stoking a New Cold War.

HUMAN RIGHTS

Organizers Are Resisting a 2-Tiered Legal System in Majority-Black Jackson, MS

 

New Report Reveals Systemic Medical Neglect and Violence in CA Women’s Prisons

 

2 California Prisons Face Imminent Flooding. They Must Be Evacuated Now.
RELATED STORIES

 

Weapons makers like Raytheon don’t just follow U.S. foreign policy; they make it through allies embedded in government.

 

The task of the left is to build a mass anti-imperialist, antiwar movement capable of intervening on the side of peace.

 

Human Rights Groups Urge Ceasefire as Dozens Killed in Sudan

Fighting between the Sudanese military and a paramilitary group left dozens dead and hundreds injured over the weekend.

 

Space hegemony is among the core strategies the U.S. is using to maintain its primary global superpower status.

 

The lawmakers say it is time for a fundamental “shift in U.S. policy” toward recognizing Palestinian rights.

 

The junta increasingly uses airstrikes to crush resistance, targeting schools and clinics run by the opposition.

 

Journalist James Bamford says that the U.S. has lost a huge number of documents related to cyberweapons in recent years.

 

The assault followed two consecutive nights of Israeli forces’ violent raids on the Al-Aqsa mosque compound.

 

Syrian women are building on the legacy of Kurdish feminism to lead a political and cultural transformation.

 

Defense officials have been required to submit a budgetary “wish list” every year since 2017.

 

Pentagon’s Proposed 2024 Budget Reflects Arms Industry’s Capture of Congress

Pentagon wants $842 billion for next fiscal year. Reining in this spending is essential to the safety of the world.

The move follows controversial new UK plans to provide Ukraine with arms containing depleted uranium.

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