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Memories of Another day

Memories of Another day
While my Parents Pulin babu and Basanti devi were living

Thursday, September 24, 2009

US, Hindutva and Zionism Equation

US, Hindutva and Zionism Equation

Indian HOLOCUST and My Father`s Life and Time- EIGHTY TWO

Palash Biswas


Salim project is cleared by centre run by Cong led UPA aligned with Left. Now RIL gets 9,000 acres at Rs 2,200 cr for Haryana SEZ. US meeting with Muslim leader invites Left ire while US Iran stand off has intensified once again the direct battle to protect US interests in Asia. In 1999 then consul general Christopher Sandrolini ignited a similar diplomatic minefield when he sent two US consulate officials to Birbhum district following the massacre of 13 farmers allegedly by CPI-M men. On the other hand in Paris France told Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas on Saturday it would be "disposed to co-operate" with a planned government involving Abbas's Fatah and Hamas and seek support for it from other Western powers.But Abbas, ending a European tour in Paris, received no clear indications the EU would end a blockade that has caused economic hardship in the Palestinian territories. The sanctions were imposed to induce the militant Hamas group to recognise Israel, renounce violence and accept interim peace deals.

Despite Cheney warns of Iran's nuclear ambition, Iran seems not to oblige and it is well set for a repeat of Vietnam, Korea, Hiroshima, Nagasaki, Iraq and afganistan. Iran said Sunday it successfully tested a rocket that went into space, apparently part of its drive to launch five satellites into orbit by 2010.Iran’s Science and Technology and Defense ministries built the craft, state-run television quoted Mohsen Bahrami, the head of Iran’s Space Research Center, as saying.Bahrami provided no other details beyond saying that Iran had successfully launched what he called a space rocket or space missile.Psychological warfare has been a feature of Iranian-US relations since the 1979 Islamic Revolution. Both sides have made extensive use of it, not only to damage the morale of the other, but also as a way of managing the conflict and preventing it from escalating into a shooting war. But never has this psychological war been so intense and potentially dangerous as it is now.

US consul general Henry V. Jardine’s meeting with Jamait Ulema-i-Hind general secretary Siddiqullah Chowdhury has prompted political parties to take a fresh look at the organisation’s impact on the state’s Muslim population.While some argue the meeting may alienate Muslims who are hostile to Americans because of the war on Iraq, others believe it would boost Chowdhury’s image in the community.

“Siddiqullah is not just a Muslim leader but a force to reckon with. He has taken a fair amount of the anti-Left space that could have gone to the Trinamul Congress. But our vote-bank is increasing steadily because of the land movement,” said Trinamul MLA Partha Chatterjee. Chowdhury’s anti-acquisition protests had got “immense support” in Nandigram and Bhangar, where a large chunk of the population is Muslim.

According to political observers, the Jamait might see Chowdhury’s meeting with Jardine as a sign that the organisation is gaining “prominence”.

On the other hand, some parties feel the meeting might shrink Chowdhury’s political base in minority-dominated areas. “That may help the Left regain the support of Muslims who have drifted away from the CPM because of the land acquisition controversy,” said an RSP leader.

The Trinamul, however, feels otherwise. “If Siddiqullah’s base shrinks because of today’s meeting, Mamatadi will certainly be the sole gainer as she is also fighting on the same issue’’, party general secretary Madan Mitra said.

CPM central committee member Benoy Konar criticised the consul’s visit. “How can the US interfere in our state’s activities? This is an attack on our sovereignty, and they had earlier done the same in Nanoor. The matter will be discussed at our state secretariat meeting,” he said.
RIL gets 9,000 acres at Rs 2,200 cr for Haryana SEZ

Chandigarh, Feb 25: Reliance Industries has acquired 9,000 acres of land in Haryana at Rs 2,200 crore for setting up the country's largest multi-product special economic zone (SEZ), which when completed would spread over 25,000 acres.

The company, which floated a joint venture with Haryana State Industrial and Infrastructure Development Corporation for the project in June last year, paid Rs 400 crore to Haryana Government toward the portion of land acquired from it, official sources said. They said the Mukesh Ambani-led company has also identified the site for a 2,000 MW power plant that is proposed to be set up as part of the SEZ.

The power plant is expected to come up near Rohtak, the sources said, adding that a round of intense discussions was held last week between officials of the company and the state government on the power project, which could involve an investment of Rs 7,500 crore. While the money would be infused in phases, the company is understood to have initiated talks with power equipment and machinery manufacturers, including GE, Alstom, BHEL and ABB.

Former NTPC Chairman DV Kapoor is overseeing the power project.

Reliance Industries (RIL) would be investing Rs 25,000 crore, besides attract third party investments to the tune of Rs 1,00,000 crore for the SEZ project that would also house a cargo airport. The zone would be spread between Garhi Harsaru and Jhajjar. RIL hopes to develop the SEZ as a world-class hub for manufacturing, services and agro-based industries and also focus on new economy sectors like Nano-technology and biotechnology.

Reliance holds 90 per cent stake in the joint venture company, while HSIIDC the remaining stake.

The company has already developed a master plan, which envisages development of a fully integrated city having an airport, rail linkages including from Delhi Metro, an international container depot and adequate supply of power, water and communication facilities, officials said.

Singur: Farmers protest, demand return of land


February 25, 2007 14:18 IST

Buoyed by the Kolkata High Court's criticism of the West Bengal government over the acquisition of land for the Tata Motors' car plant in Singur, members of a group led by the Trinamool Congress staged a protest on Sunday outside the facility and demanded the return of the land. At least 500 members of the Save Farm Land Committee from Gopalnagar and Bajemelia villages protested outside the project site at Beraberi Purbapara and shouted slogans as a large contingent of police stood guard. The protestors said their sit-in was proof that they had not given up their land or taken the compensation given by the state government.

The demonstration came in the wake of the High Court's observation on February 23 that the state government's process for acquiring land at Singur for the project prima facie appeared to be illegal.

The court also directed it to furnish all details of the controversial acquisition of 997 acres.

The protest was planned by the Committee on Saturday.

Social activist Medha Patkar, who has criticised the 'forcible' acquisition of farmland for the small car project and was prevented from entering Singur on several occasions, is scheduled to address a rally of farmers on Monday.

This will be her first visit to Singur since prohibitory orders barring rallies and protests were withdrawn earlier this month.

The officer-in-charge of Dadpur police station, who was among the large number of policemen deployed for the past few months, was rushed to Burdwan after he complained of acute chest pain.

Iran US Stand Off
The Iranian foreign minister said Saturday the United States was in no position for another war, and maintained that negotiations - not threats - were the only way to resolve the standoff over its nuclear activities.Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki was responding to Vice President Dick Cheney, who renewed Washington's warning to Iran earlier Saturday that "all options" were on the table if Tehran continues to defy U.N. demands to halt uranium enrichment.Mottaki said the U.S. could not afford to settle its differences with Iran by launching a third war after Afghanistan and Iraq.

Vice President Dick Cheney, in a series of blunt and sometimes biting statements during a visit to Asia, defended the Iraq war, attacked administration critics at home and warned that the U.S. would confront potential adversaries abroad.His visit was meant to thank Australia and Japan for their support in Iraq. But a series of public appearances and media interviews, Cheney's tone was typically feisty.Answering growing criticism in the U.S. and Australia, he defended the Iraq war as a "remarkable achievement" in one speech, and dismissed suggestions his influence in Washington is waning.At a news conference Saturday, Cheney warned that "all options" are on the table if Iran continues to defy U.N.-led efforts to end Tehran's nuclear ambitions, leaving the door open to military action.Cheney's support for the Iraq war - he is considered one of the key proponents of the 2003 invasion - drew protesters into Sydney's streets for two days.

In Hariyana, India, the UPA head Sonia woos SEZ policy-affected farmers, promises loan waivers and US intervenes in West Bengal with Left Ire. In wake of growing opposition to the Special Economic Zone (SEZ) policy of the Congress-led UPA Government at the Centre, Congress president Sonia Gandhi today gave a clear message to the farmers that their interests will be protected while economic policies are being formulated."Your well-being is supreme for the party and the government," she said, without making any direct reference to the SEZ policy and other contentious issues.

Her remarks are important in the context of Haryana where the maximum number of SEZs (65), including three mega multi-product projects, have been proposed. Besides, the Bhupinder Singh Hooda Government has also faced criticism from within the party on this issue. Hooda also made several announcements, including waiver of interest on cooperative loans, at the rally which was held to celebrate two years of his government early next month.Congratulating the state government for the 'good work' it has done, the Congress president underlined the need for honest implementation and continuous monitoring so that maximum number of people can draw benefits from the welfare programmes.
Enslaving and eviction drive need some spirit as it needed for partition of India to ensure the trnsfer of power to Brhmins from the British. They waited for this all the Muslim Rule time, East India Misrule and the Raj period.

Now the Ruling classes in India are not ready to wait and a nonviolent Genocide is on against the Dalit, Tribal and Minority Rural India. They support US and Israel with their intelligentsia and never hesitate to liquidate whatsoever Resistance at home front.

Thus, Iraq, Afganistan or Iran are not so far away. They stand logged in as Indian neighbours including Pakistan and Bangladesh.

Meanwhile, US is not afraid to entrap itself in land mine in India. We know well US sponsored insurgency activities in North East since Indiara regime.

Zionism plus Hindutva wave is well set to overcast the sky in every part of asia very soon.

The reaction is very crucial as it means global menace. War against Terrorism has been transformed in a Global market dominated by Hindutva and Zionism as well and supervised by the Global government headed by George Bush who rightly charge for escalating US interests worldwide. From ATLANTA Reutersreports that Islam is growing fast among African Americans, who are undeterred by increased scrutiny of Muslims in the United States since the September 11 attacks, according to imams and experts.Converts within the black community say they are attracted to the disciplines of prayer, the emphasis within Islam on submission to God and the religion's affinity with people who are oppressed.Some blacks are also suspicious of U.S. government warnings about the emergence of new enemies since the 2001 attacks because of memories of how the establishment demonised civil rights leaders Martin Luther King and Malcolm X.As a result, they are willing to view Islam as a legitimate alternative to Christianity, the majority religion among U.S. blacks.

Psychological warfare is fast emerging as the key component of the conflict between Iran and the United States. It is being used extensively by the latter to influence Iranian behavior in Iraq and secure a climbdown by the Islamic Republic in the intricate negotiations over the country's controversial nuclear program.As the Iranians analyze and react to this carefully crafted psychological- warfare campaign, they run the risk of miscalculating broader developments in the region. The most important of these is Saudi Arabia's new proactive foreign policy. In this climate of heightened tensions and widespread misunderstanding it is easy for the Iranians to dismiss Saudi diplomacy as yet another plank of America's psychological warfare against the Islamic Republic. Miscalculations of this kind can have drastic long-term consequences for Iranian interests in the Middle East.

U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney said on Saturday In Sydney that the United States and its allies must not allow Iran to become a nuclear power and raised concerns about Tehran's actions and "inflammatory" rhetoric.The stern comments from Cheney, who is known for his hawkish views, followed Tehran's refusal to heed a U.N. deadline to halt uranium enrichment and a vow by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to stand up to the rest of the world and not show weakness by acceding to the West's demands.

"They have made some fairly inflammatory statements," Cheney said of Iran at a joint Sydney news conference with Australian Prime Minister John Howard. "They appear to be pursuing the development of nuclear weapons."

"We are deeply concerned and have made it very clear we're deeply concerned about Iran's activities," he said.

Iran insists that it is not trying to acquire nuclear weapons and its enrichment activities are for peaceful purposes.

Dalit Voice is an Indian political magazine published in Bangalore that claims to express the views of the Dalit movement. The current full title is Dalit Voice: the voice of the persecuted nationalities denied human rights and it appears fortnightly in both internet and print formats. It was founded in 1981 [citation needed] by V.T. Rajshekar, a former journalist for the Indian Express, who is still its editor.

The magazine has been described as characterized by a strong anti-Brahminist, anti-caste and anti-racist stance, advocacy of liberation from Brahminism, and a polemical tone. It proclaims itself as "the sole spokesman for the entire deprived, dehumanised lot of India...", Dalits, Backward Castes, Christians, Muslims, Sikhs, women, whom it describes as "all victims of the Aryan Brahminical racism."[1].

Dalit Voice has published at least one article praising Hitler as a "patriot" and praising Nazi Germany, claiming that "Zionist Jews" have "deliberately mis-portrayed" him as a villain[2].

The Dalit Voice claims that the majority of the population is "oppressed" by the minority, whom are regarded as "Aryan" and historically alien to the native inhabitents of the sub-continent. They also allege that discrimination in India as the original source of racism in the world, a claim that is not borne out by scholarly or historical sources. This extremist wing of the broader Dalit movement has formulated an "Indian variant" of Afrocentric history[3], based on the Nation of Islam in the USA, with whom it co-operates closely[4].

The publication attacks Hinduism, Jews, Zionism and American neoconservatism. Authors in this publication have also claimed that the religion of Hinduism and the Hindutva ideology are the same, conflating the religion with a political and cultural view:

"One cannot save Hinduism and destroy only Hindutva. The idea of difference, though it may be perceptible theoretically for the highly intellectual, is useless for the masses and needs to be abandoned. Let all Bahujans consider that Hindutva and Hinduism is one and the same thing and the Bahujans need to oppose and fight against both." (from Dalit Voice, vol.25, No.1)
Dalit voice has also made various anti-Semitic accusations and touted "Jewish conspiracy theories"[5][6]. In various broadcasts, VT Rajasekhar has claimed that the famous hoax book Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion as a legitimate text [7] and has verbally attacked Indian Jews with allegations of a conspiracy to "join hands (with Hindus) to crush Muslims, Blacks and India's Dalits"[8]

The writer Koenraad Elst has criticised the publication for having anti-Hindu views. [9], counter-claiming that claims of racism in Hinduism are a "crank ideology".

Dalit Voice, in addition to publishing articles about "Zionist conspiracies" regarding Hitler and the Third Reich[14][15], have also supported the Iranian regime and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's denial of the holocaust[16].

Their anti-Brahmin rhetoric, frequently follows to further anti-Semitism with claims of Brahmins in India being descended from Jews and deriving their "fanaticism" and "arrogance" from "Jewish Zionist Racism"[10] [11]. Dalit Voice has also been criticized for "buying into anti-Jewish conspiracy theories" by far left-wing organizations such as the "Maoist International Movement". The MIM, while praising the organization of having "some good information on caste and other problems in India", they suggest that[12]:

"We hope to see Dalit Voice drop its conspiracy theories about Jews that underestimate the oppressiveness of oppressor nation people in the United States and Western Europe and take up Marxism-Leninism-Maoism[12]."

In addition, scholars and Islamic intellectuals such as Yoginder Sikand have criticized the publication, referring to it as "radical" and asserting that their rhetoric does not help alleviate the Dalit situation[13]:

"Far from alleviating the prevailing situation the militant rhetoric of the writers of Dalit Voice offers nothing substantial and instead create even more disunity. One writer calls the [Islamic] Ulema as the ‘progeny of iblis’ and appeals to the Muslims to stop reading their literature at once[13]."


US Interference in West Bengal
A visit by the US Consul General here to the office of Jamait Ulema-i-Hind leader Siddiqullah Chowdhury has sparked a row in West Bengal as the Muslim group opposes farm land acquisition in Nandigram village for industry.'How can the consul general interfere in our state's affair?' a Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) leader asked even as party supporters raised slogans outside the office of Chowdhury. According to informed sources, Consul General Henry V. Jardine discussed land acquisition as well as the condition of Muslims in the state Saturday.Chowdhury is the latest bugbear of the CPI-M because of his outfit's role in the Nandigram movement. The CPI-M has dubbed the Jamait protests in Nandigram over land acquisition a 'communal campaign'. 'It is a people-to-people programme to know each other and nothing to do with interference in the state government's internal matter,' Douglas Kelly, director of the American Centre, told IANS Sunday.


'I agree that it is a sensitive issue (meeting Siddiqullah at this point) but Jardine was very careful not to interfere in any internal matter. It is part of our Muslim outreach programme and we do it in a routine way everywhere.'


Siddiqullah added: 'People are scared the way land acquisition is going on. We are not against industry but at the same it should not be (built) over farmland, schools and religious places. I communicated this to the consul general.'


Chowdhury told Jardine that the Special Economic Zone (SEZ) was an American concept and it would not work in India.


CPI-M MP Mohammed Salim reacted cautiously.'The government will comment on it. But Siddiqullah's association with the US is nothing new. He had visited Washington earlier also as a guest,' Salim said.

A visit by the US consul-general to the Jamait Ulema-i-Hind general secretary’s office here this afternoon became a red rag for the CPM, which accused America of “interfering in the internal affairs of Bengal”.

Henry V. Jardine’s meeting with Siddiqullah Chowdhury comes at a time when the CPM has charged the Jamait with turning the land war raging in the state into a “communal campaign”.Through the 40-minute meeting, CPM and Rashtriya Janata Dal supporters virtually besieged the office in central Calcutta’s Rabindra Sarani, urging Jardine to “go back” and asking why “after Iraq, the US is meddling in Singur and Nandigram”.

Police held the 150-odd protesters, led by the local Left-backed MLA, Mohammed Sohrab of the RJD, at bay.

Jardine emerged around 2.30 pm and was escorted through the slogan-shouting crowd by the police, who avoided a lathi-charge to keep things “amicable”. The US official was accompanied by Tinku Roy, senior adviser to the consulate.

A CPM central committee member later said: “How can the US interfere in our state’s affairs? This is an attack on our sovereignty.”
The visit revived memories of 1999, when two US consulate representatives had visited Nanoor in Birbhum after the murder of 13 farmers, allegedly by CPM men. Similar accusations of meddling, hurled by then chief minister Jyoti Basu and his party, had prompted the consul-general of the day, Christopher Sandrolini, to meet Basu at Writers’ Buildings.

“Jardine wanted to know the general condition of Muslims in Bengal and our stand on acquisition of farmland for industry and special economic zones,” Chowdhury said.

“I told him Muslims’ socio-economic condition is not good. I asked him to impress on the US government that the UPA should be persuaded to shelve its SEZ policy. He promised to get back to me.”

Roy had called up Chowdhury on Thursday to tell him Jardine wanted a meeting, and then confirmed the trip last night. In between, Chowdhury got the visit cleared by the Jamait’s all-India secretary, Mahboob Madani.

The American didn’t want to dig too deep into the land controversy, saying “it would not be proper for him to interfere in administrative decisions”, the Jamait leader said. Jardine also asked how madarsas are run.

Roy said: “I am not authorised to comment on his visit.’’

“The visit was part of the consulate’s Muslim outreach programme. Similar things are done elsewhere in the country,” a consulate official said.

The consulate reportedly uses the programme to fund organisations working for the uplift of Muslims.
Dasmunshi asks Bengal Government to stop work at Singur
Kolkata, Feb 25. (PTI): Senior Congress leader and Union Minister Priyaranjan Dasmunshi today asked West Bengal Government to stop work on the Tata Motors' project at Singur and open dialogue with opposition parties on land acquisition policy.

"It is not enough for Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee to admit the mistake on the Nandigram land acquisition for a chemical hub. Is the Government ready to stop work at Singur too?" Dasmunshi told a youth Congress rally here.

He was sceptical if the Chief Minister would put on hold the Singur project like Nandigram and settle land acquisition controversies.

"He should hold talk with opposition parties in this regard," the Union Minister for Information and Broadcasting said.

"The turmoil in Nandigram was the result of widespread resistance at Singur, which showed the way. It was not merely an outburst of farmers' agitation but a sequel to forcible acquisition of land," Dasmunshi observed.

Criticising the way the land was acquired at Singur for the Tata project, the Minister said "Nowhere in the world farmlands were acquired at the dead of night with the help of police as it was done in Singur".

It was done 'by force' when Trinamool Congress leader Mamata Banerjee was on fast and Congress was agitating.

Dasmunshi wanted the Chief Minister to have first hand knowledge of the Tata project at Uttarakhand where only low-lying uncultivated land was used.

"Mrs Sonia Gandhi once asked me to go to Uttarkhand for some purpose and I had the occasion of seeing the Tata project. I am asking the Chief Minister to visit the place as I have a different experience compared to what is happening in Singur".

He said, it was wrong to accuse Congress of 'hobnobbing' with CPI (M) and approving the "wrong" policies of the Left Front Government here because it was taking support of Left parties to run the central government.

"The Congress and the Centre would support Buddhadeb Bhattacherjee if his policies are right. If there is 'Dadagiri' by CPI (M) here against the Opposition, Congressmen would not sit idle but would give a reply through 'Gandhigiri," he said indicating that Congress in the State would follow a non-violent path shown by Gandhiji.

"We will not accept foisting police raj and fascist politics by the Marxists by wearing the mask of democracy," he said.

On the UPA Government's policy on Special Economic Zones, he said "Our policy is to see that there is no food shortage or suffering caused to farmers and a proper rehabilitation is put in place for the landlosers while setting up the SEZs".

"Our policy is to see that in the first instance the fertile land should be avoided", Dasmunshi said.



Alternative land and jobs for SEZ displaced people: Draft policy
From correspondents in Delhi, India, 12:39 PM IST
The government is considering giving alternative land and employment to people whose property is acquired for industry, particularly to set up special economic zones (SEZ), according to a new national rehabilitation policy being vetted at the highest level.The existing National Resettlement and Rehabilitation Policy has a provision for only cash compensation to families whose land has been taken over by the state.A draft of the new policy, a copy of which has been made available to IANS, seeks to make the 'affected persons' a stakeholder in the industrial projects, including the SEZs, by giving them land not too far from the place of displacement as well as employment, besides cash compensation.

The report concedes that 'cash compensation does not by itself enable the affected families to obtain cultivable agricultural land, homestead and other resources which they have to surrender.'

'The difficulties are more acute for persons who are critically dependent on the acquired assets for their subsistence and livelihood,' says the report.

'There are some minor points in this policy which are under discussion between our ministry and the Prime Minister's Office,' said a senior official in the rural development ministry.

'Once they are clarified, it will be sent to the union cabinet for approval and adoption. But since it is not new legislation or a bill, it would also be soon made available to members of parliament,' the official added.

According to the report, the basic theme of the new policy is that while provision of public facilities sometimes requires the exercise of legal powers by the state, it could have traumatic and psychological consequences on displaced persons.

Once adopted, the new policy will not only cover the special economic zones coming up in the country but also other projects where land is acquired by displacing families.

'There is imperative need to recognise resettlement and rehabilitation issues as intrinsic to the development process formulated with the active participation of affected persons, rather than as externally imposed requirements.'

The policy had been fast-tracked by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh after protests by farmers in Singur and Nandigram in West Bengal, Kalinganagar in Orissa and in Jhajjar in Haryana, who were threatened with displacement because of SEZs.

'We will be finalising a new rehabilitation policy in three months and this will be more progressive, humane and conducive to the long-term welfare of all the stakeholders,' Manmohan Singh had assured them in January.

'Issues such as land acquisition, displacement of people and rehabilitation and resettlement should be transparently addressed,' he said, adding that there was no reason for industrialisation to be a contentious issue.

Other salient features of the new policy are:

* Appointment of administrator and commissioner for resettlement, rehabilitation with adequate powers and functions.

* Appointment of a resettlement committee to monitor and review the progress of implementing the schemes.

* Specified infrastructure and basic amenities to be provided at the resettlement zones.

* Comprehensive dispute redressal mechanism and grievance redressal cell.

Dalit Voice Editorial


Defeat in Iraq & fall of Bush: India warned to quickly adjust to big changes in West
A big news is about to explode : the American defeat in Iraq. Of course, DV was the first in the world to predict this. (DV Feb.1, 2003 p.8: "US defeated even before attacking Iraq?").

The coming days are expected to throw up big developments:

The ignominious exit of US troops from Iraq after biting dust in Saddam's desert sands.
Death of killer Sharon.
Unity of Shia and Sunni Muslims to jointly tackle the zionist Israel and defend Iran.
The Israeli threat to bomb Iran which under President Ahmedinijad is likely to take over the leadership of entire Muslim world once held by Ayotollah Khomeini.
Victory for revolutionary Islam which the new Saudi ruler, King Abdullah, may silently support in the interest of extricating himself from the clutches of America.
Silent support of European Union to Iran to go ahead with making bomb and thereby snub the big bully America.
The slow death of zionism and its tail the "Jews of India"
The rise and rise of China and the fall and fall of America.
We have summed up only the most important eight developments that are taking shape in the world today.

Neo-Cons let down Bush: But the most interesting is the start of a sudden campaign against President Bush by the zionist- controlled Neo-Con rulers of America. It was the very Neo-Cons who forced Bush to attack Iraq in the interest of saving their darling Israel from Saddam using the WTC attack by "terrorists" (read Muslims) as a pretext. But the moment they felt that US was sinking in Iraq, they suddenly changed their stand and started their attack on Bush who is today facing unprecedented fire.

Changes in Palestine: Anybody who embraces zionists is sure to meet with a tragic end. Bush has further proved it.

Remember, the same zionist forces used President Clinton and once they found him inconvenient they set up a Jewish girl called Monica Lewinsky to blackmail and finish him (DV Sept.1, 1998 p.3: "Clinton, victim of zionist conspiracy?"). Bush is facing the same situation today. We will not be surprised if the zionists demand the impeachment of Bush.

Meanwhile, the revolutionary Hamas is coming up fast in Palestine and may even guide future policies of their country which may plunge into deeper and deeper violence, forcing the victory of Amir Peretz, the socialist leader, as Prime Minister in the coming Israeli election. This will bring big changes in Israel.

But this much is certain that:

with the defeat of US in Iraq and the exit of two killers — Bush and Sharon;
better unity in the Muslim world and the
rise of China, the world situation will definitely improve.
DV congratulates Iran: We congratulate Iran for re-emerging as the leader of the entire revolutionary Muslims and also electrifying the entire world.

President Ahmadinejad announcement to hold a conference of scholars to call the bluff of the "Holocaust lies" that Hitler's nazis killed 6 million Jews is a great development.

We also welcome Iran's threat to raise oil price and thereby rattling the US and other Western countries which come in the way of producing bomb. Iran is the world's fourth largest oil producer and US is the world's largest consumer of oil.

Warning to India: Capitalist-roader Manmohan Singh must note these changes and quickly make amends. If not, Sonia Gandhi must replace this Khatri Sikh Prime Minister and also the Chettiar Finance Minister. Both are a liability to her.

India cannot afford to sink deeper and deeper into poverty and ignominy to keep its 15% micro-minority Hindus as rulers and exploiters. A more detailed article on the unfolding dramatic developments in the West will come in our next issue.

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