Features
DEMOCRATS CLOSING THE GAP AFTER NOVEMBER 7 STATE ELECTIONS
TRUMP LEADS BIDEN IN BATTLEGROUND STATES
by Vijaya Chandrasoma
The involvement of the United States in two international wars in Ukraine and Israel, coupled with inflation and a general dissatisfaction in President Biden’s handling of the economy, has resulted in his lowest ratings in the polls in years.
Trump, with all his criminal baggage, has healthy leads over Biden in all the battleground states bar Wisconsin, according to a recent New York Times poll. Trump leads Biden by 49% to 45% in a CNN national poll of registered voters.
However, last Tuesday, November 7, Election Day in at least 37 states, where citizens voted on everything from Governorships and state legislatures to local referenda on specific issues, Democrats had a solid night, both in results and attendance. Democratic Governor Andy Beshear won re-election in the deep-red state of Kentucky, Democrats won both chambers in the Virginia legislature and Ohio voted to enshrine abortion rights in the state constitution.
Abortion rights is likely to be one of the decisive factors in the November 2024 election. Many diehard pro-life Republican candidates are seen to be softening their previously intransigent stance on an issue they know will cost them votes. Even Trump, who padded the Supreme Court with pro-life justices, and claimed the entire pro-life credit of overturning women’s reproductive freedom, is changing his tune.
Last week’s state elections proved that ratings in polls do not automatically translate into success at elections. Democrats had a successful night in state elections in spite of Biden’s unfavorable ratings. Hopefully, Biden and the Democrats will win the November 2024 presidency, again in spite of Biden’s low ratings.
Biden’s first term presidential performance has been outstanding, displaying the positive facets of age – experience and wisdom. The enactment of bipartisan legislation like the sweeping $1.9 billion American Rescue Plan, the $1.2 trillion Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act and other progressive laws rescued the nation from the sinking economy and massive debt inherited from the Trump administration.
However, unlike inflation and economic downturn, which can be reversed, Biden is afflicted with a condition which cannot – old age. He will be 86 if he survives to the end of a second term. The performance of the duties of the most important job in the world at such an advanced age could be an insurmountable problem.
Trump testified in the $250 million New York state case of fraud against the Trump Organization last Monday. The guilt of his Organization in submitting fraudulent documents to defraud banks and tax and insurance authorities has already been established. His testimony contained many falsehoods under oath, and he proved, yet again, to be a defense counsel’s worst nightmare.
Ivanka also testified on Wednesday, and like her brothers, Donald Jr and Eric who testified the week before, pretended that her involvement in the Organization was minimal. She was most disciplined and cordial, though her favorite words during her four-hour testimony were, “I don’t recall”. She was, however, a little more forthcoming than her brothers. To some extent, she, the favorite child, threw her father under the bus, especially about the documentation of a large Deutsche Bank loan, and the project for the conversion of the Washington DC post office to a super-luxury hotel, which had been under her control. New York State Attorney General, Letitia James said after her testimony, “This case is about numbers, and numbers don’t lie”, and indicated that Ivanka did move the needle against her father to some extent.
This New York case is only about the determination of the legal damages to be paid by Trump; and whether his New York business licenses would be canceled, which will destroy his business empire in New York. This, in his mind, is a fate even more humiliating than the 91 felony charges he faces. The Trump Organization was the cornerstone of his reputation, his creation, his baby.
The third Republican debate last Wednesday, in Miami, Florida, featured five candidates, Ron DeSantis, Nikki Haley, Vivek Ramaswamy, Chris Christie and Tim Scott, who have no chance of beating Donald Trump, who didn’t even bother to participate. Instead, he spoke at a campaign rally in nearby Hialeah, dismissing the presidential aspirations of those who were participating in the Republican debate a few miles away.
The debate gave the opportunity for the Republican hopefuls to outdo each other in their futile quest for the Republican nomination. Ron DeSantis and former UN Ambassador Nikki Haley emerged as the winners, though their hopes to win the nomination would materialize only if something disastrous, like disqualification or conviction – not unlikely – befalls Trump before November 2024. In fact, there was a hint of conviction in the attitude, if not the words, of many of the candidates, that Trump would be defeated by his legal woes, that he will not end up as the Party’s nominee, in spite of his current lead in the polls.
Every single candidate questioned Trump’s absence at the debate, his refusal to be confronted with, and to explain the numerous questions about his current legal status. Legitimate questions, where his perennial defense of a “Witch Hunt” may satisfy his cult, but is certainly not an adequate answer for those who refuse to accept it solely on face value.
As for the Israeli airstrikes on Gaza and the continuing murder of thousands of Palestinian civilians since the Hamas atrocity on October 7, the support for Israel was unanimous on the debate stage.
The 2024 presidential election is beginning to be strangely reminiscent of the 2016 election.
In 2016, the Republican Party of Law and Order and Family Values, nominated as its presidential candidate Donald Trump, a man with five children by three wives, convicted as a co-conspirator for paying $130,000 with campaign funds to have sex with a porn star while his third and current wife was pregnant with his youngest son. A convicted, self-confessed sexual predator and fraud, Trump defeated Democratic nominee, Hillary Clinton, possibly the most qualified and experienced presidential candidate in US history.
You may guess the reason for this disastrous defeat was misogyny. No woman has been elected to the presidency in US history. You will be only partly correct.
In 2024, Donald Trump is the prohibitive favorite to be, once again, the nominee of the Republican Party of Law and Order and Family Values. But a new, even more seriously flawed and treasonous version. A twice-impeached former president, a man who has been convicted of rape and fraud, and arrested and on bail on four indictments for 91 felonies, is amazingly favored to defeat incumbent President Joe Biden, who has one of the best achievements of a first-term president in US history.
You may guess the possibility of an even more disastrous defeat is ageism. Biden will be 86 if he survives till the end of his second term. Again, you will be only partly correct. Especially because Trump is not that much younger.
The real reason is the continuing resentment and hatred caused by the election of a black president in 2008. Even worse, the scandal-free and brilliant two-term performance of President Obama, personal and administrative, scared the hell out of the predominantly white electorate. Hatred that has been almost surgically exploited by the white supremacist, corporate and billionaire base, through its bigoted front man, Donald Trump. Hatred that has been blatant during Trump’s administration until the present day.
If Biden loses in 2024, then Trump and his white American cult would hold sway over the American electorate, America’s Great Experiment of Democracy would have come to an ignominious end. That won’t happen, not in a million years.
The American electorate is crying for a new generation of leaders. Historically, third-party candidates have had no success in presidential elections. But 2024, which features two candidates with chronic deficiencies – Biden with senility, Trump with senility combined with criminal, treasonous corruption – may well throw the path wide open for a third-party candidate who, even if they cannot win, will at the very least act as a spoiler.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr, nephew of JFK, has launched an independent run for the 2024 presidency. A convicted drug addict and anti-vaxxer, a liar second only to Trump, he espouses Republican values in spite of his illustrious Democratic background. He has been disowned by his family, but he is capable of picking up votes from both Trump and Biden, if only because of his famous name.
More dangerous to the Democrats is the proposed independent candidacy of Princeton Professor Dr. Cornell West, an outspoken voice in left-wing politics in the United States and a former surrogate of Senator Bernie Sanders. As an independent, he will split the Democratic vote right down the middle, and hand over the 2024 presidency to the Republicans on a progressive platter.
To make an already complex situation even more enigmatic, Joe Manchin, Democratic Senator from West Virginia who invariably voted Republican in the Senate during the Trump administration, and Jill Stein, Green Party candidate who probably cost Hillary Clinton the presidency in 2016, have both announced their presidential bids for 2024.
The rules of the Electoral College make it well-nigh impossible for a third party or independent candidate to win the presidency. But in the context of the 2024 election, these third-party candidates would help the chances of a second Trump presidency.
The Republican Party is no longer the Party of Moderate Conservatism, of Law and Order and Family Values. It is the Party of Trump, of Phony Christianity, of White Supremacy, of tax-cheating billionaires and corporations and of authoritarian Kleptocracy. If, for some reason, Trump fails in his bid for the Republican nomination, then his replacement will be a younger version of Trump, like Florida Governor Ron DeSantis or former UN Ambassador, Nikki Haley, who both espouse Trump’s radical-red worldviews. Anti women’s reproductive freedom, anti all and any measures of gun control, anti LGBTQ and gay marriage. In short, against all progressive issues that have the approval of the majority of the American electorate.
In fact, the Republican Party already has compiled an agenda that will be put in force if Trump wins the election, without the guard rails of re-election. An agenda that will terminate the constitution; weaponize the Department of Justice and Law Enforcement, bringing them under the control of the Executive; raise the retirement age and cuts to Social Security and Medicare; in short, repress the freedoms and privileges of all but the privileged class.
On the other hand, the Democrats have highly competent and experienced candidates, many of who are reluctant to challenge for the Democratic nomination out of misplaced loyalty to President Biden. An admirable quality which has no place in the context of today’s politics, as it may possibly present the 2024 presidency to the Republicans.
Candidates like California Governor Gavin Newsom, Transportation Secretary, Pete Buttigieg, Michigan Governor, Gretchen Whitmer, VP Kamala Harris, there are many others, who will continue with Biden’s progressive policies and not only strengthen the economy and save the nation’s democratic freedoms, but will drive the radical-red, white supremacist element back into the woodwork.
As for Trump, he will be where he belongs – in prison, or, if the legal system shows mercy for his senility and mental condition, in a comfortable lunatic asylum.
Features
A World Order in Crisis: War, Power, and Resistance
Article 2(4) of the United Nations Charter prohibits member states from using threats or force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state. Violating international law, the United States and Israel attacked Iran on February 28, 2026. The ostensible reason for this unprovoked aggression was to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon.
The United States is the first and only country to have used nuclear weapons in war, against Japan in August 1945. Some officials in Israel have threatened to use a “doomsday weapon” against Gaza. On March 14, David Sacks, billionaire venture capitalist and AI and crypto czar in the Trump administration, warned that Israel may resort to nuclear weapons as its war with Iran spirals out of control and the country faces “destruction.”
Although for decades Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei, opposed nuclear weapons on religious grounds, in the face of current existential threats it is likely that Iran will pursue their development. On March 22, the head of the WHO warned of possible nuclear risks after nuclear facilities in both Iran and Israel were attacked. Indeed, will the current war in the Middle East continue for months or years, or end sooner with the possible use of a nuclear weapon by Israel or the United States?
Widening Destruction
Apart from the threat of nuclear conflagration—and what many analysts consider an impending ground invasion by American troops—extensive attacks using bombs, missiles, and drones are continuing apace, causing massive loss of life and destruction of resources and infrastructure. US–Israel airstrikes have killed Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and top Iranian officials. Countless civilians have died, including some 150 girls in a primary school in Minab, in what UNESCO has called a “grave violation of humanitarian law.” Moreover, the targeting of desalination plants by both sides could severely disrupt water supplies across desert regions.
Iran’s retaliatory attacks on United States military bases in Persian Gulf countries have disrupted global air travel. Even more significantly, Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz—the critical maritime energy chokepoint through which 20% of global oil and liquefied natural gas pass daily—has blocked the flow of energy supplies and goods, posing a severe threat to the fossil fuel–driven global economy. A global economic crisis is emerging, with soaring oil prices, power shortages, inflation, loss of livelihoods, and deep uncertainty over food security and survival.
The inconsistent application of international law, along with structural limitations of the United Nations, erodes trust in global governance and the moral authority of Western powers and multilateral institutions. Resolution 2817 (2026), adopted by the UN Security Council on March 12, condemns Iran’s “egregious attacks” against its neighbours without any condemnation of US–Israeli actions—an imbalance that underscores this concern.
The current crisis is exposing fault lines in the neo-colonial political, economic, and moral order that has been in place since the Second World War. Iran’s defiance poses a significant challenge to longstanding patterns of intervention and regime-change agendas pursued by the United States and its allies in the Global South. The difficulty the United States faces in rallying NATO and other allies also reflects a notable geopolitical shift. Meanwhile, the expansion of yuan-based oil trade and alternative financial settlement mechanisms is weakening the petrodollar system and dollar dominance. Opposition within the United States—including from segments of conservatives and Republicans—signals growing skepticism about the ideological and moral basis of a US war against Iran seemingly driven by Israel.
A New World Order?
The unipolar world dominated by the United States—rooted in inequality, coercion, and militarism—is destabilising, fragmenting, and generating widespread chaos and suffering. Challenges to this order, including from Iran, point toward a fragmented multipolar world in which multiple actors possess agency and leverage.
The BRICS bloc—Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, along with Iran, the UAE, and other members—represents efforts to create alternative economic and financial systems, including development banks and reserve currencies that challenge Western financial dominance.
However, is BRICS leading the world toward a much-needed order, based on equity, partnership, and peace? The behaviour of BRICS countries during the current crisis does not indicate strong collective leadership or commitment to such principles. Instead, many appear to be leveraging the situation for national advantage, particularly regarding access to energy supplies.
A clear example of this opportunism is India, the current head of the BRICS bloc. Historically a leader of non-alignment and a supporter of the Palestinian cause, India now presents itself as a neutral party upholding international law and state sovereignty. However, it co-sponsored and supported UN Security Council Resolution 2817 (2026), which condemns only Iran.
India is also part of the USA–Israel–India–UAE strategic nexus involving defence cooperation, technology sharing, and counterterrorism. Additionally, it participates in the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (QUAD) with the United States, Japan, and Australia, aimed at countering China’s growing influence. In effect, despite its leadership role in BRICS, India is closely aligned with the United States, raising questions about its ability to offer independent leadership in shaping a new world order.
As a group, BRICS does not fundamentally challenge corporate hegemony, the concentration of wealth among a global elite, or entrenched technological and military dominance. While it rejects aspects of Western geopolitical hierarchy, it largely upholds neoliberal economic principles: competition, free trade, privatisation, open markets, export-led growth, globalisation, and rapid technological expansion.
The current Middle East crisis underscores the need to question the assumption that globalisation, market expansion, and technological growth are the foundations of human well-being. The oil and food crises, declining remittances from Asian workers in the Middle East, and reduced tourism due to disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz and regional airspace all highlight the fragility of global interdependence.
These conditions call for consideration of alternative frameworks—bioregionalism, import substitution, local control of resources, food and energy self-sufficiency, and renewable energy—in place of dependence on imported fossil fuels and global supply chains.
Both the Western economic model and its BRICS variant continue to prioritise techno-capitalist expansion and militarism, despite overwhelming evidence linking these systems to environmental destruction and social inequality. While it is difficult for individual countries to challenge this dominant model, history offers lessons in collective resistance.
Collective Resistance
One of the earliest examples of nationalist economic resistance in the post-World War II period was the nationalisation of the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company and the creation of the National Iranian Oil Company in 1951 under Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh. He was overthrown on August 19, 1953, in a coup orchestrated by the US CIA and British intelligence (MI6), and Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi was installed to protect Western oil interests.
A milestone for decolonisation occurred in Egypt in 1956, when President Gamal Abdel Nasser nationalised the Suez Canal Company. Despite military intervention by Israel, the United Kingdom, and France, Nasser retained control, emerging as a symbol of Arab and Third World nationalism.
Following political independence, many former colonies sought to avoid entanglement in the Cold War through the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM), officially founded in Belgrade in 1961. Leaders including Josip Broz Tito, Jawaharlal Nehru, Gamal Abdel Nasser, Kwame Nkrumah, Sukarno, and Sirimavo Bandaranaike promoted autonomous development paths aligned with national priorities and cultural traditions.
However, maintaining economic sovereignty proved far more difficult. Patrice Lumumba, the first democratically elected Prime Minister of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, was assassinated in 1961 with the involvement of US and Belgian interests after attempting to assert control over national resources. Kwame Nkrumah was similarly overthrown in a US-backed coup in 1966.
In Tanzania, Julius Nyerere’s Ujamaa (“African socialism”) sought to build community-based development and food security, but faced both internal challenges and external opposition, ultimately limiting its success and discouraging similar efforts elsewhere.
UN declarations from the 1970s reflect Global South resistance to the Bretton Woods system. Notably, the 1974 Declaration on the Establishment of a New International Economic Order (Resolution 3201) called for equitable cooperation between developed and developing countries based on dignity and sovereign equality.
Today, these declarations are more relevant than ever, as Iran and other Global South nations confront overlapping crises of economic instability, neocolonial pressures, and intensifying geopolitical rivalry. Courtesy: Inter Press Service
by Dr. Asoka Bandarage
Features
Neutrality in the context of geopolitical rivalries
The long standing foreign policy of Sri Lanka was Non-Alignment. However, in the context of emerging geopolitical rivalries, there was a need to question the adequacy of Non-Alignment as a policy to meet developing challenges. Neutrality as being a more effective Policy was first presented in an article titled “Independence: its meaning and a direction for the future” (The Island, February 14, 2019). The switch over from Non-Alignment to Neutrality was first adopted by former President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and followed through by successive Governments. However, it was the current Government that did not miss an opportunity to announce that its Foreign Policy was Neutral.
The policy of Neutrality has served the interests of Sri Lanka by the principled stand taken in respect of the requests made by two belligerents associated with the Middle East War. The justification for the position adopted was conveyed by President Anura Kumara Dissanayake to Parliament that Iran had made a formal request on February 26 for three Iranian naval ships to visit Sri Lanka, and on the same evening, the United States also requested permission for two war planes to land at Mattala International Airport. Both requests were denied on grounds of maintaining “our policy of neutrality”.
WHY NEUTRALITY
Excerpts from the article cited above that recommended Neutrality as the best option for Sri Lanka considering the vulnerability to its security presented by its geographic location in the context of emerging rivalries arising from “Pivot to Asia” are presented below:
“Traditional thinking as to how small States could cope with external pressures are supposed to be: (1) Non-alignment with any of the major centers of power; (2) Alignment with one of the major powers thus making a choice and facing the consequences of which power block prevails; (3) Bandwagoning which involves unequal exchange where the small State makes asymmetric concessions to the dominant power and accepts a subordinate role of a vassal State; (4) Hedging, which attempts to secure economic and security benefits of engagement with each power center: (5) Balancing pressures individually, or by forming alliances with other small States; (6) Neutrality”.
Of the six strategies cited above, the only strategy that permits a sovereign independent nation to charter its own destiny is neutrality, as it is with Switzerland and some Nordic countries. The independence to self-determine the destiny of a nation requires security in respect of Inviolability of Territory, Food Security, Energy Security etc. Of these, the most critical of securities is the Inviolability of Territory. Consequently, Neutrality has more relevance to protect Territorial Security because it is based on International Law, as opposed to Non-Alignment which is based on principles applicable to specific countries that pledged to abide by them
“The sources of the international law of neutrality are customary international law and, for certain questions, international treaties, in particular the Paris Declaration of 1856, the 1907 Hague Convention No. V respecting the Rights and Duties of Neutral Powers and Persons in Case of War on Land, the 1907 Hague Convention No. XIII concerning the Rights and Duties of Neutral Powers in Naval War, the four 1949 Geneva Conventions and Additional Protocol I of 1977” (ICRC Publication on Neutrality, 2022).
As part of its Duties a Neutral State “must ensure respect for its neutrality, if necessary, using force to repel any violation of its territory. Violations include failure to respect the prohibitions placed on belligerent parties with regard to certain activities in neutral territory, described above. The fact that a neutral State uses force to repel attempts to violate its neutrality cannot be regarded as a hostile act. If the neutral State defends its neutrality, it must however respect the limits which international law imposes on the use of force. The neutral State must treat the opposing belligerent States impartially. However, impartiality does not mean that a State is bound to treat the belligerents in exactly the same way. It entails a prohibition on discrimination” (Ibid).
“It forbids only differential treatment of the belligerents which in view of the specific problem of armed conflict is not justified. Therefore, a neutral State is not obliged to eliminate differences in commercial relations between itself and each of the parties to the conflict at the time of the outbreak of the armed conflict. It is entitled to continue existing commercial relations. A change in these commercial relationships could, however, constitute taking sides inconsistent with the status of neutrality” (Ibid).
THE POTENTIAL of NEUTRALITY
It is apparent from the foregoing that Neutrality as a Policy is not “Passive” as some misguided claim Neutrality to be. On the other hand, it could be dynamic to the extent a country chooses to be as demonstrated by the actions taken recently to address the challenges presented during the ongoing Middle East War. Furthermore, Neutrality does not prevent Sri Lanka from engaging in Commercial activities with other States to ensuring Food and Energy security.
If such arrangements are undertaken on the basis of unsolicited offers as it was, for instance, with Japan’s Light Rail Project or Sinopec’s 200,000 Barrels a Day Refinery, principles of Neutrality would be violated because it violates the cardinal principle of Neutrality, namely, impartiality. The proposal to set up an Energy Complex in Trincomalee with India and UAE would be no different because it restricts the opportunity to one defined Party, thus defying impartiality. On the other hand, if Sri Lanka defines the scope of the Project and calls for Expressions of Interest and impartially chooses the most favourable with transparency, principles of Neutrality would be intact. More importantly, such conduct would attract the confidence of Investors to engage in ventures impartial in a principled manner. Such an approach would amount to continue the momentum of the professional approach adopted to meet the challenges of the Middle East War.
CONCLUSION
The manner in which Sri Lanka acted, first to deny access to the territory of Sri Lanka followed up by the humanitarian measures adopted to save the survivors of the torpedoed ship, earned honour and respect for the principled approach adopted to protect territorial inviolability based on International provisions of Neutrality.
If Sri Lanka continues with the momentum gained and adopts impartial and principled measures recommended above to develop the country and the wellbeing of its Peoples, based on self-reliance, this Government would be giving Sri Lanka a new direction and a fresh meaning to Neutrality that is not passive but dynamic.
by Neville Ladduwahetty
Features
Lest we forget
The interference into affairs of other nations by the USA’s Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) started in 1953, six years after it was established. The Anglo-Iranian Oil Company supplied Britain with most of its oil during World War I. In fact, Winston Churchill once declared: “Fortune brought us a prize from fairyland beyond our wildest dreams.”
When in 1951 Dr. Mohammad Mosaddegh was reluctantly appointed as Prime Minister by the Shah of Iran, whose role was mostly ceremonial, he convinced Parliament that the oil company should be nationalised.
Mohammed Mosaddegh
Mosaddegh said: “Our long years of negotiations with foreign companies have yielded no result thus far. With the oil revenues we could meet our entire budget and combat poverty, disease and backwardness of our people.”
It was then that British Intelligence requested help from the CIA to bring down the Iranian regime by infiltrating their communist mobs and the army, thus creating disorder. An Iranian oil embargo by the western countries was imposed, making Iranians poorer by the day. Meanwhile, the CIA’s strings were being pulled by Kermit Roosevelt (a grandson of former President Theodore Roosevelt), according to declassified intelligence information.
Although a first coup failed, the second attempt was successful. General Fazlollah Zahedi, an Army officer, took over as Prime Minister. Mosaddegh was tried and imprisoned for three years and kept under house arrest until his death. Playing an important role in the 1953 coup was a Shia cleric named Ayatollah Abol-Ghasem Mostafavi-Kashani. He was previously loyal to Mosaddegh, but later supported the coup. One of his successors was Ayatollah Ruhollah Mostafavi Musavi Khomeini, who engineered the Islamic Revolution in 1979. Meanwhile, in 1954 the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company had been rebranded as British Petroleum (BP).
Map of the Middle East
When the Iran-Iraq war broke out (September 1980 to August 1988), the Persian/Arabian Gulf became a hive of activity for American warships, which were there to ensure security of the Gulf and supertankers passing through it.
The Strait of Hormuz, the only way in and out of the Gulf, is administered by Oman and Iran. While there may have been British and French warships in the region, radio ‘chatter’ heard by aircraft pilots overhead was always from the US ships. In those days, flying in and out of the Gulf was a nerve-wracking experience for airline pilots, as one may suddenly hear a radio call on the common frequency: “Aircraft approaching US warship [name], identify yourself.” One thing in the pilots’ favour was that they didn’t know what ships they were flying over, so they obeyed only the designated air traffic controller. Sometimes though, with unnecessarily distracting American chatter, there was complete chaos, resulting in mistaken identities.
Air Lanka Tri Star
Once, Air Lanka pilots monitored an aircraft approaching Bahrain being given a heading to turn on to by a ship’s radio operator. Promptly the air traffic controller, who was on the same frequency, butted in and said: “Disregard! Ship USS Navy [name], do you realise what you have just done? You have turned him on to another aircraft!” It was obvious that there was a struggle to maintain air traffic control in the Gulf, with operators having to contend with American arrogance.
On the night of May 17, 1987, USS Stark was cruising in Gulf waters when it was attacked by a Dassault Mirage F1 jet fighter/attack aircraft of the Iraqi Air Force. Without identifying itself, the aircraft fired two Exocet missiles, one of which exploded, killing 37 sailors on board the American frigate. Iraq apologised, saying it was a mistake. The USA graciously accepted the apology.
Then on July 3, 1988 the high-tech, billion-dollar guided missile cruiser USS Vincennes, equipped with advanced Aegis weapons systems and commanded by Capt. Will Rogers III, was chasing two small Iranian gun boats back to their own waters when an aircraft was observed on radar approaching the US warship. It was misidentified as a Mirage F1 fighter, so the Americans, in Iranian territorial waters, fired two surface-to-air Missiles (SAMs) at the target, which was summarily destroyed.
The Vincennes had issued numerous warnings to the approaching aircraft on the military distress frequency. But the aircraft never heard them as it was listening out on a different (civil) radio frequency. The airplane broke in three. It was soon discovered, however, that the airplane was in fact an Iran Air Airbus A300 airliner with 290 civilian passengers on board, en route from Bandar Abbas to Dubai. Unfortunately, because it was a clear day, the Iranian-born, US-educated captain of Iran Air Flight 655 had switched off the weather radar. If it was on, perhaps it would have confirmed to the American ship that the ‘incoming’ was in fact a civil aircraft. At the time, Capt. Will Rogers’ surface commander, Capt. McKenna, went on record saying that USS Vincennes was “looking for action”, and that is why they “got into trouble”.
Although USS Vincennes was given a grand homecoming upon returning to the USA, and its Captain Will Rogers III decorated with the Legion of Merrit, in February 1996 the American government agreed to pay Iran US$131.8 million in settlement of a case lodged by the Iranians in the International Court of Justice against the USA for its role in that incident. However, no apology was tendered to the families of the innocent victims.
These two incidents forced Air Lanka pilots, who operated regularly in those perilous skies, to adopt extra precautionary measures. For example, they never switched off the weather radar system, even in clear skies. While there were potentially hostile ships on ground, layers of altitude were blocked off for the exclusive use of US Air Force AWACS (Airborne Warning and Control System) aircraft flying in Bahraini and southern Saudi Arabian airspace. The precautions were even more important because Air Lanka’s westbound, ‘heavy’ Lockheed TriStars were poor climbers above 29,000 ft. When departing Oman or the UAE in high ambient temperatures, it was a struggle to reach cruising level by the time the airplane was overhead Bahrain, as per the requirement.
In the aftermath of the Iran Air 655 incident, Newsweek magazine called it a case of ‘mistaken identity’. Yet, when summing up the tragic incident that occurred on September 1, 1983, when Korean Air Flight KE/KAL 007 was shot down by a Russian fighter jet, close to Sakhalin Island in the Pacific Ocean during a flight from New York to Seoul, the same magazine labelled it ‘murder in the air’.
After the Iranian coup, which was not coincidentally during the time of the ‘Cold War’, the CIA involved itself in the internal affairs of numerous countries and regions around the world: Guatemala (1953-1990s); Costa Rica (1955, 1970-1971); Middle East (1956-1958); Haiti (1959); Western Europe (1950s to 1960s); British Guiana/Guyana (1953-1964); Iraq (1958-1963); Soviet Union, Vietnam, Cambodia (1955-1973); Laos, Thailand, Ecuador (1960-1963); The Congo (1960-1965, 1977-1978); French Algeria (1960s); Brazil (1961-1964); Peru (1965); Dominican Republic (1963-1965); Cuba (1959 to present); Indonesia (1965); Ghana (1966); Uruguay (1969-1972); Chile (1964-1973); Greece (1967-1974); South Africa (1960s to 1980s); Bolivia (1964-1975); Australia (1972-1975); Iraq (1972-1975); Portugal (1974-1976); East Timor (1975-1999); Angola (1975-1980); Jamaica (1976); Honduras (1980s); Nicaragua (1979-1990); Philippines (1970s to 1990s); Seychelles (1979-1981); Diego Garcia (late 1960s to present); South Yemen (1979-1984); South Korea (1980); Chad (1981-1982); Grenada (1979-1983); Suriname (1982-1984); Libya (1981-1989); Fiji (1987); Panama (1989); Afghanistan (1979-1992); El Salvador (1980-1992); Haiti (1987-1994, 2004); Bulgaria (1990-1991); Albania (1991-1992); Somalia (1993); Iraq (1991-2003; 2003 to present), Colombia (1990s to present); Yugoslavia (1995-1995, and to 1999); Ecuador (2000); Afghanistan (2001 to present); Venezuela (2001-2004; and 2025).
If one searches the internet for information on American involvement in foreign countries during the periods listed above, it will be seen how ‘black’ funds were/are used by the CIA to destabilise those governments for the benefit of a few with vested interests, while poor citizens must live in the chaos and uncertainty thus created.
A popular saying goes: “Each man has his price”. Sad, isn’t it? Arguably the world’s only superpower that professes to be a ‘paragon of virtue’ often goes ‘rogue’.
God Bless America – and no one else!
BY GUWAN SEEYA
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