U.S. launches air strike in Somalia: report

Albertabound

Electoral Member
Sep 2, 2006
555
2
18
Unprotected like Japan and Germany? Weak like Vietnam? Or Iraq? Afghanistan weak?

Here are the ones you missed.




[FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica][SIZE=+3]List of countries the USA has bombed since the end of World War II [/SIZE][/FONT]


"This is our calling. This is the calling of the United States of America. The most free nation in the world. A nation built on fundamental values that reject hate, reject violence, rejects murderers and rejects evil. We will not tire."
[SIZE=-4]President George W Bush [/SIZE]

[SIZE=-6]"Gee, looks a bit dark" "Mr President Sir, you have to take the caps off"[/SIZE]

China 1945-46
Korea 1950-53
China 1950-53
Guatemala 1954
Indonesia 1958
Cuba 1959-60
Guatemala 1960
Belgian Congo 1964
Guatemala 1964
Dominican Republic 1965-66
Peru 1965
Laos 1964-73
Vietnam 1961-73
Cambodia 1969-70
Guatemala 1967-69
Lebanon 1982-84
Grenada 1983-84
Libya 1986
El Salvador 1981-92
Nicaragua 1981-90
Libya 1986
Iran 1987-88
Libya 1989
Panama 1989-90
Iraq 1991-2002
Kuwait 1991
Somalia 1992-94
Croatia 1994 (of Serbs at Krajina)
Bosnia 1995
Iran 1998 (airliner)
Sudan 1998
Afghanistan 1998
Yugoslavia 1999
Afghanistan 2001-02

The Targets
It's become a commonplace to accuse the United States of choosing as its bombing targets only people of color, those of the Third World, or Muslims. But it must be remembered that one of the most sustained and ferocious American bombing campaigns was carried out against the people of the former Yugoslavia -- white, European, Christians. The United States is an equal-opportunity bomber. The only qualifications for a country to become a target are: (1) It poses a sufficient obstacle to the desires of the American Empire; (2) It is virtually defenseless against aerial attack.
 
Last edited:

EagleSmack

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 16, 2005
44,168
96
48
USA
Here are the ones you missed.




[FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica][SIZE=+3]List of countries the USA has bombed since the end of World War II [/SIZE][/FONT]


"This is our calling. This is the calling of the United States of America. The most free nation in the world. A nation built on fundamental values that reject hate, reject violence, rejects murderers and rejects evil. We will not tire."
[SIZE=-4]President George W Bush [/SIZE]

[SIZE=-6]"Gee, looks a bit dark" "Mr President Sir, you have to take the caps off"[/SIZE]

China 1945-46
Korea 1950-53
China 1950-53
Guatemala 1954
Indonesia 1958
Cuba 1959-60
Guatemala 1960
Belgian Congo 1964
Guatemala 1964
Dominican Republic 1965-66
Peru 1965
Laos 1964-73
Vietnam 1961-73
Cambodia 1969-70
Guatemala 1967-69
Lebanon 1982-84
Grenada 1983-84
Libya 1986
El Salvador 1981-92
Nicaragua 1981-90
Libya 1986
Iran 1987-88
Libya 1989
Panama 1989-90
Iraq 1991-2002
Kuwait 1991
Somalia 1992-94
Croatia 1994 (of Serbs at Krajina)
Bosnia 1995
Iran 1998 (airliner)
Sudan 1998
Afghanistan 1998
Yugoslavia 1999
Afghanistan 2001-02

Half of these things are wrong (BS) to begin with... we BOMBED El Salvadror. Give me a break. The same with Nicaragua. Oh were these SECRET BOMBINGS that were kept quiet by those willy CIA Agents and their puppets. El Salvador was an ally for Pete's Sake!

And we never BOMBED Iran. We blew up a couple of oil platforms. That is in response to them mining the Gulf and one of our ships hit one of their mines. I guess they BOMBED the USA first!

And we BOMBED Kuwait because the country was full of invading Iraqi's. The Kuwaities wanted them BOMBED the HECK OUT of their country. And you guys were BOMBING with us!

And China in 1945...perhaps because we were trying to BOMB Japanese that were invading their country during a World War.

It must have been a neat trick to BOMB an Iranian Airliner.

And when did we BOMB Libya in 1989? Did you mean we shot down two of their aircraft in a dogfight...or did we manage to drop BOMBS on their MIG-21's.

And all of our BOMBING in Yugoslavia were at the constant begging of NATO because they could not control ****e there.

It tickles me to see one just yank a list out of the blue and have NO CLUE of what the list really is...just so he can have a long BOMB list.
 

Praxius

Mass'Debater
Dec 18, 2007
10,677
161
63
Halifax, NS & Melbourne, VIC
Of course it is silly. It has always been a silly notion that the US would ATTACK Canada. I get a kick out of how some Canadians rub themselves to this.

It is a topic left to the writers of South Park...and Canadian Content members.

Hey as long as it keeps reminding you guys we're still pissy about the idea and most won't go down without a fight... perhaps it's helping yas to think twice ;) You guys did it before.... we got more to worry about then you guys.... but then again, we never attempted to invade you before either. Call it a lingering paranoia and mistrust. :p
 

Albertabound

Electoral Member
Sep 2, 2006
555
2
18
El Salvador....



Fiercest Aerial War in America is Unreported in U.S. Press

SYNOPSIS: While the President of El Salvador, Jose Napoleon Duarte, boasted about the decline in death squad killings, the people of El Salvador were victims of the most intense saturation bombing ever conducted in the Americas.

From June 1984, when the U.S. provided Duarte with the largest air force in Central America, the Salvadoran Air Force dropped over 3,000 tons of U.S.-made bombs on civilian populations, causing more than 2,000 deaths. Between January and mid-March of 1985, there were more than 105 attacks on civilian populations. These missions were often directed by U.S. military leaders. Investigative journalist Alexander Cockburn asked, "How is it that over the past two years the United States has been organizing, supplying, overseeing and in many cases actually executing the heaviest bombing and most ferocious aerial war ever seen in the Americas and not one coherent report of the extent, viciousness, or consequences of this campaign has ever appeared in any major U.S. newspaper or magazine?"

Cockburn reported the aerial war was responsible for most of El Salvador's 500,000 internal refugees and for many of the 750,000 refugees out side the country's borders. More than one-fifth of the Salvadoran population of five million became refugees-a higher percentage than the corresponding figure in South Vietnam at the height of that war.

Patrick M. Hughes, director of Refugee Legal Services, in Laredo, Texas, wrote Project Censored to say, "The most outrageous omission in the press is the refusal to report the bombing campaigns in El Salvador."



UPDATE: Two weeks after Alexander Cockburn wrote the 1985 source article about the El Salvador aerial war, he reported that he watched for news of the bombing in The New York Times, The Washington Post, and the Miami Herald, and found none. Instead the press continued to herald Duarte's Administration despite the fact that "the death squads were at their worst in his first term and the aerial war had risen to a climax in his second" (The Nation, 6/15/85).

While the media ignored the largest aerial war ever conducted in America, protesters attempted to get the message to the public. In October 1985, students at Brown University and the University of Michigan jointly protested the media's cover-up of the bombing in El Salvador (The Nation, 11/30/85). Protesters urging the United States to stop the bombing rallied in August 1986 at the Illinois State Fair, where President Ronald Reagan was making a major speech on farm policy (Chicago Tribune, 8113186). And protesters interrupted Macy's 63rd annual Thanksgiving Day parade in 1989 when they were arrested for marching with an unauthorized 30-foot-long bomb-shaped balloon that read "Stop the bombing in El Salvador" (UPI, 11/23/89).

The American media were loathe to report the U.S.-supported aerial war in El Salvador, but the Russian news agency, TASS, eagerly reported the U.S. complicity in the brutal bombing of civilians in El Salvador (TASS, 1/25/87).


http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Project Censored/CensoredNews_1985.html
 

Milko

Nominee Member
Mar 3, 2008
51
1
8
Children killed, pff who cares, America liberated another country /cheers!
 

Albertabound

Electoral Member
Sep 2, 2006
555
2
18
Iran....and this is how you BOMB an airliner....oh yeah, real neat trick.



Navy Missile Downs Iranian Jetliner

By George C. Wilson
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, July 4, 1988; Page A01


A U.S. warship fighting gunboats in the Persian Gulf yesterday mistook an Iranian civilian jetliner for an attacking Iranian F14 fighter plane and blew it out of the hazy sky with a heat-seeking missile, the Pentagon announced. Iran said 290 persons were aboard the European-made A300 Airbus and that all had perished.

"The U.S. government deeply regrets this incident," Adm. William J. Crowe Jr., chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told a Pentagon news conference.

The disaster occurred at mid-morning over the Strait of Hormuz, when the airliner, Iran Air Flight 655, on what Iran described as a routine 140-mile flight from its coastal city of Bandar Abbas southwest to Dubai in the United Arab Emirates, apparently strayed too close to two U.S. Navy warships that were engaged in a battle with Iranian gunboats.

The USS Vincennes, a cruiser equipped with the most sophisticated radar and electronic battle gear in the Navy's surface arsenal, tracked the oncoming plane electronically, warned it to keep away, and when it did not fired two Standard surface-to-air missiles.

Navy officials said the Vincennes' combat teams believed the airliner to be an Iranian F14 jet fighter. No visual contact was made with the aircraft until it was struck and blew up about six miles from the Vincennes; the plane's wreckage fell in Iranian territorial waters, Navy officials said.

Iranian vessels and helicopters searched for survivors, but there was no indication last night that anyone survived what apparently is the sixth worst aviation disaster. Iranian television broadcast scenes of bodies floating amid scattered debris.

It was the first time any U.S. military unit had shot down a civilian airliner. It occurred almost five years after a Soviet fighter pilot shot down an off-course Korean Air Lines Flight 007, killing 269 people.

Iran accused the United States of a "barbaric massacre" and vowed to "avenge the blood of our martyrs."

President Reagan in a statement said he was "saddened to report" that the Vincennes "in a proper defensive action" had shot down the jetliner. "This is a terrible human tragedy. Our sympathy and condolences go out to the passengers, crew, and their families . . . . We deeply regret any loss of life."

Reagan, who was spending the Fourth of July holiday at Camp David, said the Iranian aircraft "was headed directly for the Vincennes" and had "failed to heed repeated warnings." The cruiser, he said, fired "to protect itself against possible attack."

News of the downing of the plane began with sharply conflicting accounts from Iran and from the Defense Department of what had transpired in the Persian Gulf. Early yesterday, Tehran broadcast accusations that the United States had downed an unarmed airliner.

The Pentagon at first denied the Iranian claims, declaring that information from the fleet indicated that the Vincennes, equipped with the Aegis electronic battle management system, had shot down an attacking Iranian F14 jet fighter. But after sifting through more detailed reports and electronic intelligence, Reagan directed the Pentagon to confirm there had been a tragic case of mistaken identity in the war-torn gulf.

Crowe, in his hastily called news conference at the Pentagon, also backed up the skipper of the Vincennes and faulted the Iranian airline pilot. Crowe said the Airbus had flown four miles west of the usual commercial airline route from Bandar Abbas to Dubai and that the pilot ignored repeated radioed warnings from the Vincennes to change course.

Why and how the Vincennes mistook the bulky, wide-bodied Airbus A300 for a sleek, supersonic F14 fighter plane barely a third the transport's size will be the subject of "a full investigation," Reagan promised. A military team under the command of Rear Adm. William N. Fogarty of the U.S. Central Command will leave this week to begin that investigation, Defense Department officials said.

The shootdown of the Airbus represents the biggest loss of life on the strategic waterway since the U.S. warships began escorting Kuwaiti tankers in and out of the Persian Gulf last July. Pentagon officials then said the increased U.S. naval presence would have from a "low to moderate risk" of provoking confrontations with Iran.

But in the past year, although the United States and Iran are not in a formal state of war, there have been a series of brief but fierce sea battles in the gulf between the two countries' military forces. Vigilance and readiness among U.S. forces intensified after the near-sinking of the patrol frigate USS Stark by an Iraqi fighter-bomber on May 17, 1987, in a missile attack that killed 37 sailors.

Yesterday started out as another sea battle, and ended with what the Vincennes commanders misinterpreted as a "Stark profile" attack on the high-tech cruiser. Crowe in his briefing and other Navy and Defense Department officials offered a detailed version of how the shoot-down occurred.

At 2:10 a.m. EDT, the Pentagon said, three Iranian Boghammar gunboats fired on a helicopter that had flown off the Vincennes on a reconnaissance mission. The helicopter flew back to the cruiser unscathed. The Vincennes and a smaller warship, the frigate USS Elmer Montgomery, a half-hour later closed on the gunboats and put them under fire with 5-inch guns, sinking two and damaging the third.

At 2:47 a.m. EDT, the Iranian Airbus with almost a full load of passengers took off from Bandar Abbas, a big Iranian naval base on the northern coastal elbow of the Strait of Hormuz. The field at the base is used by civilian and military aircraft and recently had become the center for Iran's dwindling force of F14s, a twin-engine, two-place fighter that the United States sold to Iran during the rule of the shah.

Two minutes after the Airbus took off, the far-reaching radars of the Vincennes Aegis cruiser saw the plane was coming its way. The skipper of the ship, operating under liberalized rules of engagement that call for U.S. captains in the Persian Gulf to fire before being fired upon to avoid another Stark disaster, warned the approaching aircraft to change course, according to the Pentagon.

The Vincennes and most airliners are equipped with identification of friend or foe (IFF) electronic boxes that query each other across the sky to establish identities. The Vincennes' IFF questioned the Airbus IFF via telemetry, but received no response. A response would come in radio pulses that would be deciphered and displayed as an identifying number on the ship's combat information center consoles.

Failing to raise the Airbus by IFF, the Pentagon said, the Vincennes broadcast its warnings by voice radio, using the emergency UHF and VHF channels that aircraft crews would hear if they followed standard practice of monitoring those frequencies. Crowe said three warnings were sent over the civilian emergency channel and four over the military one, called "Guard." The Pentagon said the Vincennes could have issued the warning over the air traffic control channel but did not.

"The suspect aircraft was outside the prescribed commercial air corridor," Crowe told reporters. Defense Department officials said later that the Airbus was four miles west of commercial air corridor. "More importantly," Crowe continued, "the aircraft headed directly for Vincennes on a constant bearing at high speed, approximately 450 knots."
Without becoming specific, Crowe said there were "electronic indications on Vincennes" that led the U.S. crew to conclude the approaching airliner was an F14. "Given the threatening flight profile and decreasing range, the aircraft was declared 'hostile' " at 2:51 a.m. EDT. The airliner at that crucial moment was on a course of almost due south, 185 degrees, and descending toward the Vincennes from an altitude of 7,800 feet, according to Crowe. Visibility was no more than five miles, Crowe said.

Three minutes later, at 2:54 a.m. EDT, the Vincennes launched two Standard surface-to-air missiles from its deck. The missiles whooshed toward the twin-jet airliner, which was nine miles away and not visible to the naked eye because of the haze hanging over the gulf. The Standard missiles homed in on the heat of the quarry's engines and at least one of them exploded when it pulled abreast of the Airbus. Such a missile hit usually slices an aircraft apart and turns it into a fireball of burning fuel.

"At least one hit at an approximate range of six miles," Crowe said. "We do have some eyewitness reports that saw the vague shape of the aircraft when the missile hit, and it looked like it disintegrated."

Asked if the Vincennes' skipper had been prudent or impetuous by firing at a plane he could not see, Crowe replied: "The commanding officer conducted himself with circumspection and, considering the information that was available to him, followed his authorities and acted with good judgment at a very trying period and under very trying circumstances . . . . Not only was he following this aircraft and concerned about it," but he also "was engaged on the surface with Iranian units."

Crowe said it was "logical" for the skipper to assume an aircraft that was coming down from the sky at high speed and would not respond to radio warnings was putting the Vincennes "in jeopardy."

At another point in the news conference Crowe broadened his defense of the Vincennes skipper, declaring "the No. 1 obligation of the commanding officer of a ship or units are the protection of his own people. We deeply regret the loss of life here, but that commanding officer had a very heavy obligation to protect his ships, his people. We've made that clear throughout the Persian Gulf mission . . . . "

Crowe, who used a chart of the Strait of Hormuz that displayed the approximate positions of the vessels and the route of the airliner, said he did not have enough data to explain fully why the multiple kinds of detection gear aboard the Vincennes mistook a wide-bodied jetliner for a fighter.

But he noted that the Vincennes' radar was focused on a plane coming at it head-on, reflecting a smaller dot on the console screens than would be the case from a side view. Also, he said, no Air Force Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS) or Navy Hawkeye sentry planes were aloft over the Strait of Hormuz to provide additional identification data to the Vincennes at the time of the shootdown.

Navy leaders said Iranian commercial aircraft had flown over U.S. warships in a threatening manner at least eight times before the Stark was hit by two French Exocet missiles fired by an Iraqi jet. Ever since the Stark attack, skippers in the gulf have been less tolerant of such apparent threats.

Asked if the skipper of the Vincennes would have held his fire under the interpretation of the rules of engagement followed before the Stark was attacked, Crowe replied: "I don't know. Certainly the rules of engagement would not have been as specific as the authorities granted him." He said another review of the rules of engagement would be part of the general investigation of the shootdown.

Crowe said there were "fundamental differences" between the actions of United States in this incident and the Soviet Union in the downing of Korean Air Lines Flight 007, which strayed into Soviet airspace on the night of Sept. 1, 1983, during a flight from Alaska to Japan. The Soviet airspace was not a war zone like the Persian Gulf, Crowe said, "and there was not combat in progress" as was the case yesterday. "It was at very high altitude" and no Soviet warnings were issued.
"In the Persian Gulf," Crowe said, there is very little time or maneuver room when ships are put at risk. "We're fighting in a lake."

I imagine it was all over this.......

The one unforgettable image of what Iran did to Americans in 1979 is of the militant Iranian revolutionaries parading the blindfolded and handcuffed US hostages before TV cameras.

If Iranians have a single image of what America did to them,it's of the day, July 3, 1988, that the USS Vincennes shot down an Iranian passenger jet over the Persian Gulf, killing 290 people.
 

Albertabound

Electoral Member
Sep 2, 2006
555
2
18
It tickles me to see one just yank a list out of the blue and have NO CLUE of what the list really is

So.....who is the one that has no clue? Would you like me to continue?
 

dancing-loon

House Member
Oct 8, 2007
2,739
36
48
Nope...it ain't going to happen. The Ruskies have their own problems with islamic radicals in Chechnya. I even read that the Chinese have some issues in their Eastern Borders but it is not so much talked about. Islamic Radicals pretty much hate everyone who isn't them.
Is that right?!:smile:
I have read and seen gruesome pictures of the war in Chechnya. No people on this earth deserve to be treated and slaughtered like the poor Chechens. I think it had more to do with them wanting to separate from Russia.
Anyway, I was just sarcastic mentioning Moscow and Beijing to drive a point home.
 

dancing-loon

House Member
Oct 8, 2007
2,739
36
48
from Praxius:
Honestly, WTF is the point in having different countries and borders, if nobody respects them or their sovereignty / way of life?

Exactly whch is worse? The Criminal, or those who will stop at nothing to catch them which in turn makes them criminals once they overstep their authority?

We have rules, laws and procedures for doing these sort of things, and when you have the countries who preach about law and order in turn breaking them, exactly what kind of image is that showing the rest of the world?
I fully support what you are saying, Praxius!!
I also feel it is high time after more than 60 years to stop the witch hunt!! Most of these men were barely 20 years old at the time of their alleged crime!! These young men followed orders, it was war time!! Was it not enough to punish the country collectively and hang their leaders?
 

gopher

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 26, 2005
21,513
65
48
Minnesota: Gopher State
Kill the enemy where you find them


Innocent children hardly meet anyone's criterion for ''enemy''.

When Clinton made a similar mistake in Africa a few years ago the right wingers made a big meal of it. Now let's see what they say about the latest in Bush's long line of mistakes.:angryfire:
 

Colpy

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 5, 2005
21,887
848
113
70
Saint John, N.B.
What a f#cknut you are.

The US only attacks unprotected, weak countries......not where ever the enemy is. The sooner you figure out that when the US "attacks or invades" another country, it is not "ever" for the reasons you are told, it is only for the better interest of the United States of America and now they have the OK to go ahead and bomb any country they wish in the world (including Canada).......just because they want to. Al be it, there is always a reason.......you and I just don't know what that reason is.

Oh BULL****!

Nothing in the post is worthy of a more in depth response.

Speaking of bigots! Geez!
 

Colpy

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 5, 2005
21,887
848
113
70
Saint John, N.B.
So.....who is the one that has no clue? Would you like me to continue?

You are, Sonny.

First of all, bombing with bombs made in the USA does not constitute the USA bombing.....if so, Canada bombed the hell out of Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, and every other place our American friends have visited......we sell them arms, you know.

The shoot-down of the Iranian airliner was a tragic accident.....only an idiot would imagine it waas done purposely.

Let me guess, the WTC was felled by controled demolition, right?

Yeah, right.
 

Albertabound

Electoral Member
Sep 2, 2006
555
2
18
Let me guess, the WTC was felled by controled demolition, right?

First of all, don't go putting words into other peoples mouths, I notice alot of you here like to do that.

The shoot-down of the Iranian airliner was a tragic accident.....only an idiot would imagine it waas done purposely.

or just one blind motherf#cker, you should really learn the law of world politics. I'm sure you also do not believe that the US set up Iraqs military and Saddam to fight against Iran.and when he became to powerfull for the country that created him, they hung him and take over his country. Yeppeee for democracy.
I'm sure you also believe the US went into Iraq because of WMD, oh wait now it's for the bad taliban, oh wait it's for domocracy ......yeah that's it. People like you should really open your eyes to the world.

All these attacks on other countries are for the better interest of the United States of America.

First of all, bombing with bombs made in the USA does not constitute the USA bombing.....if

No it certainly does not, however sending their commanders and generals in to over see the operation and to lead the operations sure the hell does. Yes Canada has sold and continues to sell arms they do not however oversee military operations of government take overs in other countries.
I'll provide the list, ready when you are.
The fact that the US military admits these things is what makes it so silly, You're not arguing against me you are arguing against the pentagon.

Yes Colpy, stick out your chest and raise your arms, for the good and mighty United States of America is here to protect you. We will save your country, from evil, We will of course bomb the living **** out of it first. We then get rid of the evil ones, kill a couple of hundred thousand people while doing it,
send in our contractors to rebuild your country, you know we can't have your contractors doing it, that might make you some money, can't have that, must keep you broke, then we will put in power who ever we feel fits the position, and wahlah ....you have democracy.

Yes thank the lord for Captain America......you're my hero. Please start building your wall.
 

Colpy

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 5, 2005
21,887
848
113
70
Saint John, N.B.
Oh and at no extra cost to you...a bonus feature

HOW NATO & THE MEDIA MISREPRESENTED THE CHINESE EMBASSY BOMBING

SORRY, WRONG BUILDING sound familiar, sorry we know it's an airliner but we thought it was a fighter jet.

http://www.srpska-mreza.com/Kosovo/NATO-attack/bombed-Embassy.html

yep them Americans sure like their bombs.

Yeah right, they zapped the Chinese Embassy on purpose........but then took no action when the Chinese attacked and forced down one of their spy planes in international airspace.....NOT BLOODY LIKELY!
 

EagleSmack

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 16, 2005
44,168
96
48
USA
El Salvador....



Fiercest Aerial War in America is Unreported in U.S. Press

SYNOPSIS: While the President of El Salvador, Jose Napoleon Duarte, boasted about the decline in death squad killings, the people of El Salvador were victims of the most intense saturation bombing ever conducted in the Americas.

From June 1984, when the U.S. provided Duarte with the largest air force in Central America, the Salvadoran Air Force dropped over 3,000 tons of U.S.-made bombs on civilian populations, causing more than 2,000 deaths. Between January and mid-March of 1985, there were more than 105 attacks on civilian populations. These missions were often directed by U.S. military leaders. Investigative journalist Alexander Cockburn asked, "How is it that over the past two years the United States has been organizing, supplying, overseeing and in many cases actually executing the heaviest bombing and most ferocious aerial war ever seen in the Americas and not one coherent report of the extent, viciousness, or consequences of this campaign has ever appeared in any major U.S. newspaper or magazine?"

Cockburn reported the aerial war was responsible for most of El Salvador's 500,000 internal refugees and for many of the 750,000 refugees out side the country's borders. More than one-fifth of the Salvadoran population of five million became refugees-a higher percentage than the corresponding figure in South Vietnam at the height of that war.

Patrick M. Hughes, director of Refugee Legal Services, in Laredo, Texas, wrote Project Censored to say, "The most outrageous omission in the press is the refusal to report the bombing campaigns in El Salvador."



UPDATE: Two weeks after Alexander Cockburn wrote the 1985 source article about the El Salvador aerial war, he reported that he watched for news of the bombing in The New York Times, The Washington Post, and the Miami Herald, and found none. Instead the press continued to herald Duarte's Administration despite the fact that "the death squads were at their worst in his first term and the aerial war had risen to a climax in his second" (The Nation, 6/15/85).

While the media ignored the largest aerial war ever conducted in America, protesters attempted to get the message to the public. In October 1985, students at Brown University and the University of Michigan jointly protested the media's cover-up of the bombing in El Salvador (The Nation, 11/30/85). Protesters urging the United States to stop the bombing rallied in August 1986 at the Illinois State Fair, where President Ronald Reagan was making a major speech on farm policy (Chicago Tribune, 8113186). And protesters interrupted Macy's 63rd annual Thanksgiving Day parade in 1989 when they were arrested for marching with an unauthorized 30-foot-long bomb-shaped balloon that read "Stop the bombing in El Salvador" (UPI, 11/23/89).

The American media were loathe to report the U.S.-supported aerial war in El Salvador, but the Russian news agency, TASS, eagerly reported the U.S. complicity in the brutal bombing of civilians in El Salvador (TASS, 1/25/87).


http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Project%20Censored/CensoredNews_1985.html

So the El Salvadorean Air Force was doing the BOMBING then. Yet we are getting the blame because it makes the BOMBING list longer.

Look at the real BOMBING of the US Marines in Lebanon done by Iranian backed Hezbollah. So I guessed Iran BOMBED us twice.