1/11 A short thread on the US and Western Sahara, which Donald Trump has never heard of and could never have found on a map until one of his advisers showed him. Morocco and Mauritania invaded Western Sahara (formerly Spanish Sahara) in 1975: un.org/Depts/Cartogra…
2/11 After Spanish dictator Franco stepped down in 1974, Spain began decolonizing Spanish Sahara. Morocco and Mauritania both threatened to invade. They rejected self-determination for its mostly nomadic, indigenous people, and coveted it resources, especially phosphate.
3/11 The US also rejected self-determination for Western Sahara. Henry Kissinger told Algerian officials in late 1974 "I want it to go away! I can’t get excited about 40,000 people who probably don’t know they’re living in Spanish Sahara." Read more here: history.state.gov/historicaldocu…
4/11 Western Sahara, however, has one of the world's largest phosphate deposits, which much of Europe relies upon. In1975, following a UN mission, the International Court of Justice issued a famous opinion acknowledging WH right to self-determination: icj-cij.org/en/case/61
5/11 Fearing invasion, Spain negotiated an agreement to effectively hand Western Sahara over to Morocco and Mauritania, but they invaded WH on November 28, 1975, to global condemnation. A nationalist movement, the Polisario, declared independence in 1976.
6/11 Morocco has illegally occupied Western Sahara since 1975, stealing its resources and colonizing its territory. The UN has many times acknowledged WH's right to self-determination. The UN established a peacekeeping mission in 1991 to hold a referendum: peacekeeping.un.org/en/mission/min…
7/11 While many US administrations have tacitly accepted Moroccan control over Western Sahara, the US under both Republican and Democratic administrations has supported UN-sponsored talks to try and resolve the occupation, including Trump: usip.org/publications/2…
8/11 Trump offered US recognition of Moroccan sovereignty over Western Sahara in exchange for Morocco recognizing Israel and signing a 'peace' deal. But in doing so the Trump is recognizing the legitimacy of armed conquest and annexation, rejecting a basic principle of intl law.
9/11 In formally recognizing Moroccan sovereignty over Western Sahara, Trump is sabotaging the long-running US mission there, a mission the US supported for nearly 30 years (even if it mostly sided with Morocco). The US is sending a clear signal: aggression is ok for US allies.
10/11 This has all sorts of terrible implications for international law, and for the incoming Biden Administration. If you are interested in reading more Political Scientist Stephen Zunes has written the best treatment of the conflict: press.syr.edu/supressbooks/8…
11/11 Amy Goodman of Democracy Now has traveled to Western Sahara and produced a useful documentary on Morocco's continuing repression, displacement of Saharawi people, theft of resources, and more: democracynow.org/2020/11/27/fou…
And of course the actual story of Trump’s recognition of Moroccan sovereignty over Western Sahara is as evil and cynical as you’d imagine.
1/10 If the Pentagon Budget were a country it would rank 20th in terms of world GDP, right behind Saudi Arabia and ahead of Switzerland and 191 other countries. worldpopulationreview.com/countries/coun…
2/10 Focusing on the connections between the latest Def Sect nominee and military contractors misses the forest for the trees. The US has had a political economy of war since 1950, with bases and military contractors in every one of 435 Congressional districts.
3/10 Any serious discussion about ending US militarism, as @mbrenes1 new book shows, must envision a reorganization of the US economy, and not just an end to Forever War, overseas base closures or troop redeployments. umasspress.com/9781625345219/…
1/6 An interesting article about conservative activist Christopher Rufo, who seemingly inspired Trump's bizarre war on "critical race theory." yahoo.com/news/the-man-b…
2/6 A glance at Rufo's website christopherrufo.com tells a familiar grifter story. BA from Georgetown (School of Foreign Service, natch), zero academic background in anything related to critical race theory, and affiliated with the right wing Discovery Institute think tank.
3/6 Rufo has been churning out essays since 2018 denouncing urban policy in cities like Seattle for city-journal.org, published by the right wing Manhattan Institute. Here is a sample of his deep thoughts on the Antifa takeover of Seattle: christopherrufo.com/antifa-makes-i…
1/ What movies will President Trump’s #1776Commission recommend as part of his “Patriotic Education” program, and for which period? @HerbertHistory? American Revolution (a gimme):
Free job hunting advice from a tenured professor. 1. save your CV in multiple places. I save mine on a floppy disk and print out copies on my dot matrix printer. 2. Make sure the little tape in your answering machine is rewound in case you get called with an offer. 1/4
3. Give yourself plenty of time to mail in all of your application materials. 4. Keep the white out handy in case you have to edit your cover letter on the typewriter. 5. Mention the latest trends in your field (“social history,” “gender,” “culture,”) in your interviews. 2/4
6. Ladies, dress modestly! This is the 90s, not the 60s! 7. Demonstrate your familiarity with technology. Include your Netscape or AOL electronic mail address in your CV. 8. Since there are lots of jobs this year, be choosy! 3/4
I was a radio producer for Democracy Now! on September 11, 2001. I monitored press coverage all over the country for months and watched, in real time, as the Bush Admin exploited the grief of victims' families to justify invading Afghanistan and killing even more innocent people.
2/7 Two weeks after 9/11 around 20,000 people, many who had lots friends and loved ones in the WTC attacks, marched through Manhattan denouncing the rush to a war against Afghanistan that we knew would destroy that country and cause even more suffering. We knew it then.
3/7 As a producer for the only media outlet in the country covering protests against the coming war, I scoured press coverage for signs of protest. I read two lines on a candlelight vigil held in suburban CT and contacted the organizer, Colleen Stephen, who had lost her husband.