kabul

GRITtv: Patrick Hennessey: Forgetting Lessons of History

Patrick Hennessey joined the British army in 2004 and served in Iraq and Afghanistan. Along the way, he wrote an acclaimed book, The Junior Officers' Reading Club: Killing Time and Fighting Wars, detailing his experiences. He's since returned to Afghanistan as a reporter. Hennessey joins Laura in studio to talk about Tony Blair, the difference between the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the experience of war reporting, and winding up in a 120-year-old former British base in Afghanistan.

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GRITtv: June 14 2010

The victories of Carly Fiorina and Meg Whitman in California, Sharron Angle in Nevada, and Nikki Haley in South Carolina in last week's primaries are being hailed as a victory for women. Yet do conservative, anti-government women's candidacies spell gains for women nationwide? Or will the cuts they threaten to make to government programs hurt more women than their candidacies help? To kick off our new Monday collaboration with The Nation magazine, we are joined in studio by editor and publisher Katrina vanden Heuvel and columnist Melissa Harris-Lacewell, who break down the election results, the real history of these faux populists, and also report back on a Nation investigation in New Orleans that has led to indictments. Also, we cover The Kick It Up project at GlobalGirl Media which has trained high school girls from South Africa and Los Angeles as videographers and reporters at the World Cup of soccer in South Africa.

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GRITtv: Jeremy Scahill: Afghanistan & Blackwater for Sale

According to the news, Afghanistan is “suddenly” worth one trillion dollars of mineral wealth and there is a hunt for the founder of WikiLeaks. Is this news though? Or is this a slow, carefully timed archaeological dig of the politics that shape the news? On one hand, there are documents from decades ago indicating that Afghanistan is rich in minerals that may have led to the United States fabricating reasons to “occupy” the land in the first place. On the other, these articles of “news” could come as shockwaves to many. Blackwater author and Nation Magazine contributor Jeremy Scahill joins us in the studio to deconstruct the incoming news from Afghanistan, including the search for the founder of WikiLeaks, Blackwater for sale, and the mineral-rich Afghanistan.

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GRITtv: The F Word: Kabul, I Think We Have A Problem

At least 18 are dead including six NATO officials, five of them Americans, after a suicide attack by the Taliban. That news could sound like another rote report from Afghanistan -- except that Tuesday's attack didn't take place in that country's troubled south (what US commanders call "a Taliban stronghold.") Tuesday's attack took place in Kabul, the capital, where NATO forces were supposed to have ousted the Taliban years ago. Kabul is home to heavy military patrols, a slew of NGOS, and populated mostly by ethnic Tajiks, not the Pashtuns we're told dominate the Taliban. That a suicide bomber could drive 1,600 pounds of explosives into a NATO convoy in Kabul says all there is to say about the international mission to secure Afghanistan: it's not working. Tuesday's attack took place on a busy thoroughfare near the Afghan parliament building, a stone's throw from a military recruiting and training center, just before Afghan President Hamid Karzai was to speak to the press about his US trip -- where he hailed his success in quelling the Taliban. In DC, Karzai and Obama are also said to have discussed an upcoming NATO and Afghan offensive in Kandahar, ("a southern Taliban stronghold.") That plan is said to be on hold. Indeed. If the goal of troop escalation in the south is to make that part of the country more peaceful and Taliban resistant, like Kabul and the North. Well, Kabul to Houston: We have a problem. The F Word is a regular commentary by Laura Flanders, the host of GRITtv which broadcasts weekdays on satellite TV (Dish Network Ch. 9415 Free Speech TV) on cable, and online at GRITtv.org and TheNation.com [http://TheNation.com]. Support us by signing up for our podcast, and follow GRITtv or GRITlaura on Twitter.com [http://Twitter.com]. GRITtv with Laura Flanders brings participatory democracy onto your computer screen and into your living room, bridging the gap between audience and advocates. Watch any show, at any time: http://grittv.org Distributed by Tubemogul.

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GRITtv: Off the Map and Outside the Law

In Trevor Paglen's new book, Blank Spots on the Map: The Dark Geography of the Pentagon's Secret World, he investigates the "off the map" locations of covert government activity, including the "salt pit" in Kabul where Khaled El-Masri was held.
Ben Wizner, from the ACLU's National Security Project, is El-Masri's lawyer and he joins Paglen in studio with Laura to talk about black sites, government secrecy, and why anything goes when prisoners are taken off the map.

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