27 Oct 2023

War in Gaza threatens global oil and gas price surge

Gabriel Black


In the almost four weeks since the October 7 rebellion by Hamas, bomb and missile strikes by the Israel Defense Forces have reduced large sections of the Gaza Strip to rubble, killing, officially, almost 7,000 Palestinian civilians. A total of 1.4 million people are thought to have been displaced from their homes. Drinkable water, food, fuel, electricity and the internet are all being denied to the 2.3 million people living in Gaza.

This genocide of the Palestinian people by the Israeli state has ignited mass protests around the world—in many cases the largest anti-war protests since those against the Iraq war in 2003.

The Biden administration, already deeply committed to the proxy war against Russia raging in Ukraine, has now asked for $105 billion in additional funds for war. This is in addition to its over $1 trillion annual military budget. The US has moved two of its 11 aircraft carrier strike groups to the eastern Mediterranean in preparation for a broader war in the Middle East involving Iran. The Associated Press reports that the US has decided to “rush defenses and advisers to Middle East,” both to aid Israel’s imminent ground invasion of Gaza and to prepare for the outbreak of a far broader war involving Iran and the US.

The frenzied preparations of US imperialism—and its key allies—for a new, regional war in the Middle East, we wrote, “marks a major step in the escalation of what is, in fact, the initial stages of a third world war.”

The Middle East has long been a central concern of global geopolitics because of its disproportionate holding of the world’s best and largest oil and gas reserves.

OPEC, whose principal members are located in the Middle East and North Africa, holds approximately 65 percent of the world’s existing oil and gas resources. Since at least the 1930s, British and American imperialism have been fixated on using a combination of military force, assassinations, coups, bribery and other means to control this region. It is for this simple reason that President Biden explained to Congress recently, “[Israel] is the best three billion dollar investment we make. Were there not an Israel, the United States would have to invent an Israel to protect her interests in the region.”

Oil prices have already climbed significantly since the war began. Brent crude, the leading price benchmark used for global oil trades, climbed by almost ten dollars per barrel in the opening two weeks of the war. Because oil and natural gas comprise two-thirds of the energy used in the global economy, movements in their prices have a broad and disproportionate impact on the prices of all goods. Oil fuels not just cars but the global trucking, shipping and aviation industries, as well as an assortment of critical petrochemical products and industrial processes. Natural gas is the leading fuel used for heating and electricity generation worldwide. Solar, though quickly growing, accounts for just 2 percent of the world’s current energy use.

Right now, oil prices remain volatile. The minute-to-minute news of the escalating war is causing speculators to nervously place bets in different directions. When two hostages were released by Hamas, prices went down. But after the relentless bombardment by Israeli forces over the last 48 hours, prices went up as traders worried about a spiraling conflict.

At the time of writing, Brent crude is traded for $88.50 a barrel on the open market. Should, however, the war unfold, and the United States launch major strikes against Iran, it is possible that the price for oil could double or even triple.

Fire and smoke billowing from Norwegian-owned Front Altair tanker said to have been attacked in the waters of the Gulf of Oman on June 13, 2019 [Photo: Iranian Students News Agency]

According to a recent research note from Bank of America, the price for oil could go as high as $250 a barrel should the war significantly escalate.

A $250 per barrel oil price would have catastrophic impacts on consumption and economic growth worldwide, likely triggering a global recession within months. The price of oil has never climbed that high. The closest it has gotten to that level was in 2008, about a month before the unraveling of the global financial crisis, when it climbed to $210 in today’s dollars.

Bank of America writes that $250 would be a more extreme case. But even its more moderate suggestion, that prices almost double to $150, would cause major duress.

The key reason behind these possibilities is that one third of the world’s sea-traded oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz every day (about a quarter of the world’s overall oil). Iran’s capacity to stop trade going through the strait is one of its leading forms of defense against a potential war with the United States.

Map of Strait of Hormuz [Photo by Goran_tek-en / CC BY-SA 4.0]

The Guardian quotes Nicholas Farr, of Capital Economics, who laid out a potential scenario of escalation.

Iranian-backed Hezbollah has exchanged missile fire with Israel from Lebanon, which has the potential to open up a new front in the conflict. If Iran were drawn into the war this would create major global risks by disrupting energy supplies and pushing up oil prices. Natural gas prices could be affected too if there’s disruption to LNG [liquefied natural gas] exports.

As General Frank McKenzie, the former head of US Central Command, stated in an interview with NPR, a regional war involving Hezbollah, the US, and Iran is “uniquely possible.”

Platts, a leading oil research service, describes oil markets as “on edge,” but notes that, at present, the majority of OPEC, which includes Iran, has no interest in disrupting global oil supplies.

Meanwhile, Washington-based think tanks are beating the drum for retaliatory economic and military strikes against Iran.

The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, a major Israeli-supported American think tank, writes, “so far America has dispatched, among other assets, two aircraft-carrier groups, their associated guided-missile destroyers and a Marine Corps expeditionary unit capable of conducting amphibious operations.”

For the Washington Institute, however, this is not enough. They continue:

America’s display of force in the Mediterranean is impressive, to be sure—and there is more to come: the Pentagon says it will send a THAAD air-defence missile system and Patriot missile battalions to the region. But it remains unclear whether this muscle-flexing is actually curbing the involvement of other actors, or will prevent the war from spreading. For America’s deterrent threat to be credible, it will have to act decisively against emerging provocations.

The institute recommends “increasing economic pressure” against Iran, ultimately declaring, “Washington may have no choice but to engage militarily.”

The logic of these positions, swirling in the minds of war planners at the Pentagon and in Tel Aviv, leads to global war. They are openly admitting that satisfying the ambitions of US imperialism in the region requires—whether they like it or not—a direct military confrontation with Iran.

Given the broader geopolitical context—the war against Russia and highly advanced plans for war with China—such a “strike of the match” could explode into a world war, or at the very least mark the first major stage of one.

But the initiation of such a conflict would, as the question of energy shows, contain enormous contradictions within it. Should the desires of the Washington Institute, and its supporters at the Pentagon and in Tel Aviv, be realized, Iran could likely retaliate through the “energy weapon.”

In 2022, following Russia’s provoked invasion of Ukraine, the NATO powers, led by the US, initiated a global ban on Russian oil and gas exports. While the actual efficacy of those measures is debated—it reduced the price at which Russia was able to sell its energy, but not block sales, instead redirecting flows to Asia—the consequences, globally, were tremendous.

The year 2022 marked an incredibly challenging year for billions of people across the globe as the prices for nearly everything surged. In the United States, the annual rate of inflation reached 8.3 percent. In Europe, a horrible winter of high electricity prices dug into all working people and slowed industrial production. In Sri Lanka in July 2022, an uprising against the government was triggered by the skyrocketing cost of fuel and cooking gas.

While inflation, globally, is not as high as it was in 2022, prices have not gone down; they are just not rising as quickly.

The machinations of US imperialism, globally, are leading the world into a spiraling crisis of global war. As the unfolding genocide against Gaza demonstrates, the pursuit of US geopolitical aims will lead to catastrophic, unforeseen and cascading impacts.

Thousands march in Costa Rica against right-wing Chaves administration

Andrea Lobo


At least 10,000 people marched from downtown San José, Costa Rica, to the presidential building on Wednesday to protest the escalation of the assault on living standards and deepening social austerity under President Rodrigo Chaves, who is openly following the diktats of his former employer, the World Bank, and the International Monetary Fund.

Workers march on the office of the presidency in San Jose

Broad sectors of the population already engaged in an escalating wave of social protests against Chaves coalesced around numerous demands in the largest demonstration since at least 2019, with the defense of public healthcare and education being the most central issues.

Since thousands protested in August 2022 to oppose cuts to universities, the country has seen an ongoing wave of protests, including in March 2023 by farmers’ associations, in July and August 2023 by high school students against budget cuts, along with several partial strikes and demonstrations by healthcare workers, among others. 

This upsurge takes place in the context of a resurgence of the class struggle internationally. In the rest of Central America, Panamanians opposing a destructive mining concession and Guatemalans resisting an attempt by prosecutors to prevent the elected President Bernardo Arévalo from taking office have carried out mass protests and roadblocks for weeks. 

The demonstration on Sunday was convoked by a “Mesa de Diálogo Social” and the “National Front of Struggle for the Defense of Social Gains” comprised of over 60 organizations, including trade unions, public universities, high school and university student groups, professional associations and neighborhood, peasant and farmers movements. 

The leaderships of these organizations explicitly seek to channel the social ferment in the working class behind talks with the Chaves administration. 

For decades, the political establishment, including all political parties, trade unions and university and state bureaucrats have betrayed countless efforts by workers to resist attacks against their social and democratic rights. There is nothing to be gained for workers through back-room talks between these forces. 

Workers and youth marching in San José, on the other hand, expressed a clear radicalization and militant determination to put a stop to these attacks on their social and democratic rights. 

Yorleny, a nurse at the Jiménez Núñez Clinic in San José, explained: “We must raise our voices. We must demand that every day we are paid what is fair. The sacrifices our families make—one deprives oneself of many things—at least it should be recognized economically. We are demonstrating because of the waiting lists [for medical services], because of all the lies they are telling that the Caja is bankrupt while the Government does not pay the debt it owes. We have had our salaries frozen for many years. We do not earn the millions that they say public employees earn. We are nurses and we are paid as auxiliaries. They overload us with work and don’t pay us for those nursing services. And if something happens, we are judged as nurses.”

The Chaves government outright refuses to pay an accumulated debt to the healthcare and pension system, called the “Caja,” of $5.8 billion. Meanwhile, next year’s public debt repayments for bankers and bondholders will amount to $11 billion, which could more than cover the debt to the Caja. But the 2024 healthcare budget will not even cover two-thirds of its yearly operational needs, according to official figures. 

Yamileth and Yorleny, nurses at the Ricardo Jiménez Núñez Clinic

Her co-worker Yamileth, added: “For every 10 people there is one assistant or nurse. It’s too exhausting, we work so hard and don’t get any recognition at all. Besides, with the pandemic, they recruited a lot of people, and as soon as it was over, they sent a lot of people home. Now they are unemployed. Internationally, it’s the same issues. Frontline workers were laid off, and now we are all facing money problems to provide for our family.” 

Elena, a worker and student at the Tecnológico college (TEC) said, “There are many countries in South America that for years have been taking to the streets to defend their rights and we have been late. We all should demand and have the right to demand improvements in education, food, security.”

“The time to fight is now,” Sergio, another worker at TEC said. “We are running out of time. If we could unite across countries, it would be much better. The cuts are obviously due to the government’s preference to distribute funds to other financial entities to further impoverish the country. Like education. If it were to be private, only the rich would be able to study.”

co-worker explained: “It is a profitable business. Without public education, without access, people are cornered into going into debt for private education. Because of the long waiting lists, if you are deprived of access to public healthcare, you have to pay for private services.” 

Marta, a professor at TEC, noted: “I am a product of a public school, a public high school, and a public university. In Costa Rica, education has always been our “Sunday dress,” something we can be proud of, and now it is not. Public education is being limited in all its aspects. What some people in the government want is to have people without education.”

As a result of a massive assault against the jobs, wages and benefits in the public sector, compensation has dropped from over 7 percent of GDP in 2013 to 3.66 percent last year. Meanwhile, the fastest growing expenditure has been servicing the debt. The government plans to spend nearly half of the 2024 budget in debt repayment and interests to the local and global financial aristocracy. This compares to 22.3 percent for employee compensations, 20.6 percent for education, 13.1 percent for social programs, 7.9 percent for security, 3.1 percent for infrastructure, 2.8 percent for healthcare and 0.4 percent for the environment. 

Chaves has prided himself on opposing the constitutionally mandated 8 percent of the GDP for public education and plans to spend 5.2 percent next year.

Gustavo, a student at the University of Costa Rica who was holding a Palestinian flag, connected the fight for social rights in Costa Rica with the struggle in defense of Palestinians and against war. 

“I came to march against the government, in defense of the Caja, but this takes place in the context of a genocide being carried out in Palestine by the illegitimate and terrorist state of Israel,” he explained and added:

Today, in spite of all the propaganda in favor of Israel in the imperialist media, people are no longer buying the story that there are child terrorists and that they organize terrorism. It is not true. The genocide that Israel has been carrying out for decades is terribly disproportionate in terms of human lives killed and technical, scientific, military and other tools that Israel has against the Palestinians, who use extremely rudimentary weapons to defend themselves. The numbers speak for themselves. 

I connect their struggle with the struggles here, which are precisely about the people removing the yoke of imperialism. 

They only care about the people paying with what we have won historically, such as the Caja, so that they can have their profits. We must be very conscious of this: the children who are dying in Gaza, the brave people who are rising up in Niger and other African countries, the Ukrainians and Russian brothers and sisters fighting—because in the end they are brothers!—have much more in common with us here in Costa Rica trying to get rid of the IMF cuts, than politicians who are very Costa Rican but who sell us out. Costa Rica is not an island isolated from the world. It is a cog in a much larger machine.

Johanna, an activist of the Committee of Struggle for Housing La Morocha in the working class suburb of Alajuelita explained that Chaves is cutting funds for the Bank for Housing (Banhvi), the CEN-CINAI [daycare] and other social programs.

Johana, a worker fighting for housing in Alajuelita, and her son

Banhvi, which develops social housing and provides housing assistance, warned earlier this year that the cuts planned by the Chaves administration would leave 6,000 families homeless and affect the jobs of 28,000 construction workers. 

She explained:

If they cut off our water and electricity, how can we iron our children’s uniforms? The struggle for housing should not be cut back any further. We are hundreds of families who need that housing. Not only for me, but for the children. 

There are single mothers who cannot work. I am one of them. I have four children; how can I work?

Drive out those officials who want to make cuts against the poor, who work so hard to pay for decent insurance for our children! They want to take this away from us. It is not fair.

A fellow member of the committee added: “We are broke. We are in bad shape. We have had to struggle too much.”

Israel targeting, censoring journalists for covering assault on Gaza

Kathleen Martin


On Wednesday an Israeli airstrike in the Nuseirat refugee camp in the south of Gaza targeted and killed the family of Al Jazeera’s Gaza bureau chief, Wael al-Dahdouh. The victims of Dahdouh’s family include his wife, his high-school-aged son, seven-year-old daughter, and a grandson. According to reports from Al Jazeera, 12 members of the Dahdouh family are dead, nine of whom were children, and others are still missing.

The family was staying in the camp, having fled to the south of the Gaza strip after the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) dropped leaflets in the north urging civilians to evacuate. Dahdouh remained behind to continue covering the bombardment. Al Jazeera’s Walid al-Omary told the press that the murders were part of Israel’s “relentless targeting of Palestinians,” and stated that in spite of the fact that the family had evacuated, the “Israeli army targeted them. This is proof that there isn’t a single safe zone in Gaza.”

Al Jazeera released a statement condemning the targeting of journalists and their families, and encouraging “the international community to intervene and put an end to these attacks on civilians, thereby safeguarding innocent lives.”

The murder of Dahdouh’s family followed reports on Monday that just two weeks ago, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken called on Qatar to “tone down” the state-owned news network’s coverage of the slaughter in Palestine. 

Axios reported that three sources who attended a meeting with Blinken “said he asked the Qataris to ‘turn down the volume on Al Jazeera’s coverage because it is full of anti-Israel incitement.’”

Shlomo Karhi, Israel’s communications minister, has been pushing for harsh censorship measures through emergency regulations to tamp down on opposition to Israel’s massively unpopular assault on Palestine. “Al Jazeera’s broadcasts and reports constitute incitement against Israel, help Hamas-ISIS and the terror organizations with their propaganda, and encourage violence against Israel,” he said.  

According to the draft emergency regulations, titled “Limiting Aid to the Enemy through Communication,” any media outlet deemed a threat to “national security” will be shut down. On October 20, the Israeli government signed off on the regulations. Karhi then announced he would bring forth a formal proposal to shut down Al Jazeera’s operations in Israel altogether at the next security cabinet meeting.

According to Haaretz, the emergency regulations “will apply to both the general public and the media, as well as both local and foreign media (in contrast to the stated objective to limit Al Jazeera). It will also apply to the publication of factually correct statements, at the minister’s discretion… The draft defines ‘aiding the enemy through communication’ as the dissemination of information that ‘undermines the morale of Israel’s soldiers and residents in the face of the enemy,’ or information that ‘serves as a basis for enemy propaganda, including the spreading of the enemy’s propaganda messages,’ or information that ‘aids the enemy in its war against Israel, its residents, or Jews.’”

The publication later notes in the same article that it is “unlikely” to be approved by the government’s legal counsel as it conflicts with Israel’s “democratic values.”

The targeting and censorship of journalists is a longstanding policy of the Israeli regime in its effort to cover up and whitewash the crimes committed by the IDF against Palestinians. 

In May 2022, Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh was targeted and gunned down by the IDF while covering a raid on the Jenin refugee camp in the West Bank. Her murder was an open attempt to prevent objective reporting on the brutal suppression of Palestinians, which has now escalated to open genocide.

The International Federation of Journalists reports that at least 23 journalists have been killed since October 7 as of this writing. Dozens more have been injured and more are missing. The Egyptian Journalists Syndicate reports that in addition to the deaths, injuries and missing journalists, over 50 media institutions have been destroyed in the airstrikes which have targeted the homes of journalists, and a further 30 journalists have been arrested in the West Bank.

A Palestinian journalist comfort his niece wounded in an Israeli strike on her family home in Nusseirat refugee camp, in a hospital in Deir el-Balah, Gaza Strip, Sunday, Oct. 22, 2023 [AP Photo/Ali Mahmoud]

Late Wednesday night, two more journalists, Saed al-Halabi and Mohammed Labad, were killed in a targeted attack. “[T]he Israeli occupation army continued to target the houses of journalists, where the bombing of the house of journalist Said Al-Halabi led to his martyrdom,” according to a press release from the Forum of Palestinian Journalists (PJS). 

Al-Halabi worked for Al-Aqsa TV and was killed at his home in Jabalia, north of the Gaza Strip. Labad was killed in a blast near his home in the Sheikh Radwan neighborhood in Gaza City. 

Motaz Azaiza, a photojournalist on the ground in Palestine with over 8.7 million followers on Instagram, has had his X/Twitter account shut down this week for “violating rules.” Following a devastating video posted to the journalist’s Instagram account on October 13, showing the ruins and rubble after an IDF bomb destroyed residential buildings, his Instagram account was suspended and not reinstated until days later. His X/Twitter account currently remains suspended.

Meta, parent company of Facebook and Instagram, released a statement last updated on October 18 blatantly denying censorship, insinuating that posts showing the devastation of Palestine and the murder of civilians equates support for terrorism and are therefore not allowed. “[C]ontent containing praise for Hamas, which is designated by Meta as a Dangerous Organization, or violent and graphic content, for example, is not allowed on our platforms,” it says. 

Language from the original statement published October 13 places blame for the Israeli attack on Gaza on the October 7 Hamas “terrorist attack.”

“Like many, we were shocked and horrified by the brutal terrorist attacks by Hamas, and our thoughts go out to civilians who are suffering in Israel and Gaza as the violence continues to unfold,” it reads. “Since the terrorist attacks by Hamas on Israel on Saturday, and Israel’s response in Gaza, expert teams from across our company have been working around the clock to monitor our platforms, while protecting people’s ability to use our apps to shed light on important developments happening on the ground.”

The massive international outrage over the brutal assault by Israel on Palestine has gone beyond the control of the ruling class and its mainstream media outlets. Photos and videos of the bombings and deaths, and of the protests against it, have been shared widely on social media platforms in spite of the lack of mainstream media reports.

The hashtag “Genocide Joe” has been trending on X/Twitter, following US President Joe Biden’s open embrace of Netanyahu and call for $105 billion to escalate war efforts in Ukraine and the Middle East, as workers and young people view with horror and disgust content from accounts like Azaiza’s, which show the reality of the situation in Palestine.

Right-wing US Army soldier massacres 18 people in Lewiston, Maine

Jacob Crosse


At least 18 people are dead in Lewiston, Maine, with another 13 injured, following the deadliest mass shooting in the history of the state Wednesday night. As of this writing, at least three of the injured are in critical condition, and the suspected shooter, 40-year-old Robert C. Card, remains at-large more than 24 hours after the mass killing.

Security footage of the Lewiston shooter released by police from inside the Just-In-Time Recreation bowling alley

According to emergency services, after 6:30 p.m. on Wednesday night, police began receiving calls of an active shooter at Just-In-Time Recreation, a bowling alley in Lewiston, which is about 30 miles north of Portland, the largest city in the state.

Lewiston, with a population of roughly 36,000, is the second largest city in Maine. Police claim the shooter killed at least seven people at the bowling alley.

Shortly after 7:00 p.m., emergency services began receiving phone calls of a second mass shooting taking place at Schemengees Bar & Grille, a restaurant located roughly four miles south of Just-In-Time and also in Lewiston. Police report at least eight people were killed there.

Following the two shootings, the suspected mass murderer, Card, a Sergeant First Class in the US Army Reserve, evaded police capture and went on the run. For over 24 hours a “shelter-in-place” order has been in effect for Lewiston and Androscoggin County, home to over 111,000 people.

On Thursday, all of the schools in the Lewiston were closed, while Bates College, with an enrollment of some 1,800 students, remained on lockdown.

Since the shooting transpired, hundreds of police, federal agents and para-military assets have flooded into the town. Videos shared on social media show drones, helicopters, armored police vehicles and camouflaged agents with helmets and rifles patrolling major streets and businesses. Despite hundreds of people and millions of dollars worth of equipment, state and federal agents have been, as of publication, unable to locate the shooter.

On Thursday, US government officials warned Canadian border patrol to be on the lookout for the “extremely armed and dangerous” Card.

Wednesday’s carnage took place at two public establishments, where Card, a resident of Bowdoin, located 15 miles east of Lewiston, had recently complained to family members and friends that he was hearing menacing voices.

“In the past year, he had an acute episode of mental health, and it’s been a struggle,” Katie Card, who is married to Card’s brother, told the Daily Beast in a Thursday interview. Katie said her brother-in-law has had hearing loss and recently purchased hearing aids. For months, she says he has been hearing “voices” attack him while in public.

“He truly believed he was hearing people say things,” Katie Card told the news outlet. “This all just happened within the last few months.”

In a separate interview with NBC News, Katie Card said the family had previously reached out to the Army Reserve base where Card worked and local police because they had grown “increasingly concerned” with Card’s mental state. Katie said Robert complained that the voices made “horrible” comments about him.

Katie Card also confirmed a previous CNN report that Robert had recently lost his job at a recycling center. She said that Robert was currently unemployed and that he had previously been a truck driver at a warehouse distribution center.

Officials with the Veterans Administration (VA) confirmed on Thursday night that Card was not enrolled in or using VA health care.

Cards’ mental state was well-known to police and military officials prior Wednesday’s massacre. On Thursday, the Associated Press confirmed that in mid-July while training at the US Military Academy at West Point in New York with the rest of his unit, the Army Reserve’s 3rd Battalion, 304th Infantry Regiment, Card’s commanders became “concerned” because he was acting “erratically.”

The official confirmed to the Associated Press that military commanders called police and had Card transferred to a medical facility, where he was committed for several weeks.

Card has been in the US Army Reserves for over two decades, having first enlisted in December 2002. The US Army has confirmed that he was a petroleum supply specialist, who had not previously served any combat deployments. As a petroleum supply specialist, Card would have overseen the transfer and storage of fuel and other liquids for his unit. JP-8 is the most widely used jet fuel used by US military vehicles. Previous studies have shown that the exposure to the fuel can cause hearing problems, as well as “headaches, dizziness, difficulty breathing, general weakness, trouble concentrating, forgetfulness, and trouble gripping things.”

While there is no current motive at this time, a review of Card’s social media accounts, specifically his Twitter/X account, reveals his far-right leanings. Before the account was suspended, it showed that Card had followed several far-right figures, including Donald Trump Jr. and Elon Musk, and regularly “liked” posts from Ohio Republican Jim Jordan, former Fox News host Tucker Carlson, right-wing commentator Ben Shapiro, and convicted felon/conservative pundit Dinesh D’Souza.

In one of the Trump Jr. posts “liked” by Card, the ex-president’s son asserts falsely that due to the “incredible rise of trans/non-binary mass shooters in the last few years ... maybe, rather than talking about guns we should be talking about lunatics pushing their gender affirming bulls*** on our kids.”

Card also “liked” posts that encouraged motorists to run over anti-police violence protesters and denied the existence of COVID-19.

His fascist politics were well-known to some members of the community. In an interview with NBC, local resident Liam Kent said that the Card family lived on “basically a compound” in Bowdoin.

“The family and Robert, they’re all gun fanatics,” Kent told NBC. “For all intents and purposes, they are very much associated with right-wing militias. It’s known in the town to stay away from them and not approach them.”

Kent recalled when he was younger going to the store as a child and seeing Card at a nearby weigh station with a dead deer. Kent said Card was “grinning, covered in blood with a gun still strapped to his body.”

“[T]hey would shoot guns all the time” he added. “You could hear them every day after school. It was like clockwork.”

According to the Gun Violence Archive, which categorizes any incident in which four or more people, not including the shooter, are injured or killed as a “mass shooting,” 2023 is on pace to set the record for most mass shootings ever recorded by the tracker. At the current pace, 2023 will end with some 700 mass shootings, or just under two a day. As of this writing, there have been at least 566 mass shootings this year, a figure higher than the total tracked in 2016, 2017, 2018 or 2019.

While officials have yet to name the victims, several have been identified by friends and family on social media, including Michael Deslauriers II, Tricia Asselin and Bob Violette.

In a Thursday night statement, Bath Iron Works confirmed that 40-year-old union pipefitter Peyton Brewer-Ross was among the victims. Brewer-Ross, like several other patrons, was playing in a cornhole tournament at Schemengees Bar & Grille when the shooting started. He was the father of a two-year-old girl.

Joseph Walker, 57, was a manager at Schemengees Bar & Grille at the time of the shooting. In an interview with the New York Times, Leroy Walker, Joseph’s father, said police told him that his son “died a hero” because he armed himself with a butcher knife and attempted to subdue the gunman.

Following the latest mass shooting, as usual, none of the capitalist politicians, including President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris have sought to provide an explanation for the increasing frequency of mass killings in the US. Instead of an explanation, they once again offered their “condolences” and “sorrow.”

Given that Biden, who along with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, is currently overseeing the genocide of the Palestinian people, these “emphatic” statements ring completely hollow.

In his statement Biden called on Congress to pass an assault weapons and high-capacity magazine ban. Besides the fact that this will never pass the Republican-controlled House, it further does nothing to address the root cause of gun violence, which is not ultimately found in the individual psychology of the shooter no matter how deranged but in American capitalist society. A wealthy ruling class that is currently funding and overseeing a genocide abroad in pursuit of its imperialist interests cannot, and will not, stop the massacre of children and workers at home.

Erdoğan denounces Israel as onslaught on Gaza sets stage for war across Middle East

Barış Demir


The support of Washington and the European powers for Israel’s genocidal war on the Palestinians in Gaza and the looming prospect of a US war with Iran have provoked a desperate crisis in Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s government.

After the Israel-Gaza war broke out on October 7, Erdoğan initially tried to block a mass movement against Israeli bombings in Gaza. Turkish riot police assaulted solidarity protests with Gaza, as Erdoğan called for “de-escalation” and a “ceasefire,” equating the violence of the Palestinians with the imperialist-backed Israeli state. On Wednesday, however, as the Israeli regime ignored his calls for “restraint” and outrage mounted in the overwhelming majority of the Turkish people, he was forced to suddenly shift his policy.

In a speech at a meeting of his party, Erdoğan said: “We have made every effort in order for this crisis to not further escalate, and will continue to do so … We have clearly stated that we never approve of any acts against civilians, including Israeli civilians, no matter who carries these acts out.” He added: “We do not have any problem with the State of Israel, but we never have and never will approve of Israeli oppression and their course of action, which resembles that of an organization rather than a state.”

In this February. 5, 2020 photo, Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan holds up a placard with a series of maps of historical Palestine, the 1947 United Nations partition plan on Palestine, the 1948-1967 borders between the Palestinian territories and Israel, and a current map of the Palestinian territories without Israeli-annexed areas and settlements, during a speech at the parliament in Ankara, Turkey. [AP Photo/Burhan Ozbilici]

Having stated that he has no problem with the Zionist regime, whose existence is based on the dispossession and now the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians, Erdoğan continued: “Israel has since October 7 been conducting one of the bloodiest, the most hideous and the most violent attacks in history against the innocent people in Gaza… Merely this fact is enough to show that the intention is not to protect themselves but a brutality aimed at committing a deliberate crime against humanity.”

Erdoğan had recently re-developed diplomatic ties with the Israeli government to share Eastern Mediterranean energy reserves and exclude the Palestinians from them. Now, however, he accused Tel Aviv of abusing his good intentions and cancelled a previously-scheduled visit. He announced that the first mass rally protesting the Gaza war by his Justice and Development Party (AKP) will be held on October 28, in Istanbul.

In his speech, Erdoğan rejected one of the imperialist powers’ main justifications for the Israeli massacre in Gaza. He said, “This Israel is killing children, we have seen the condition of these children, and we will never allow them to be torn to pieces because we have a share in humanity… Hamas is not a terrorist organization; it is a group of liberation and mujahedeen fighting to defend its lands and citizens.”

On his X/Twitter account, Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Lior Haiat condemned Erdoğan’s remarks. Haiat wrote: “The Turkish president’s attempt to defend the terrorist organization [Hamas] and his provocative words will not change the brutality and the absolute truth that the whole world has seen: Hamas is equal to ISIS,” the Al Qaeda-linked Islamic State in Iraq and Syria.

The Israeli state and the imperialist capitals clearly sense that Erdoğan’s speech threatens their policy in the region. Indeed, having already criticized the US deployment of aircraft carriers to the region, Erdoğan pointedly attacked Washington, saying: “All actors should act responsibly to prevent the spread of war, and extra-regional powers should stop adding fuel to the fire in the name of solidarity with Israel.”

Indeed, the Turkish government is dismayed by the imminent prospect of the imperialist powers plunging the entire Middle East into war. As Erdoğan spoke, Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan went to Doha, Qatar, where he said: “Our region is literally at a tipping point. The current conjuncture will either lead to a greater war or a greater peace. All those I speak to share this assessment, even if they do not say so publicly.”

The NATO imperialist powers’ support for genocide in Gaza and their threat to attack Iran present the Turkish bourgeoisie with an impossible dilemma. On the one hand, it has the closest ties with imperialism and for decades has asserted its foreign policy interests through NATO. On the other, it is virtually impossible for the Turkish government to join the other NATO powers in supporting a genocide in Gaza and waging a US-led war on Iran.

Firstly, such an utterly criminal policy must be rejected by the overwhelming majority of the Turkish people—above all, by the working class. Moreover, it would also threaten fundamental interests of the Turkish ruling class.

Turkey, which shares a long land border with Iran, is home to the US-NATO Incirlik air base in Adana and the Kürecik radar base in Malatya. These bases could easily become the targets of Iranian strikes, should war break out between the United States and Iran.

The Turkish bourgeoisie fears that a victory in a Middle East war of Washington and Tel Aviv, both of whom back Kurdish-nationalist militias on Turkey’s borders in Iraq and Syria, could lead to the formation of a Kurdish state. However, the Turkish bourgeoisie has historically been willing to take the most far-reaching measures to block the emergence of a Kurdish state and maintain the oppression of the Kurds inside Turkey.

Leading Turkish officials are therefore discussing military intervention against Israel or other NATO allies in the region.

In his speech, Erdoğan warned that Turkish military intervention is on the table, stating: “We, as a country and a nation, will continue to shout the truth and to use all political, diplomatic and, if necessary, military means to this end.”

On Sunday, Devlet Bahçeli, the leader of the far-right Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) that is the de facto coalition partner of Erdoğan’s AKP, called for military intervention in Gaza. He stated: “If a ceasefire cannot be achieved within 24 hours, if the attacks do not stop, if bombs continue to be dropped on the oppressed, Turkey must quickly step in and do whatever is required by its historical, humanitarian and religious responsibilities. Undertaking the mission of protecting and protecting Gaza is the legacy of our ancestors.” 

Erdoğan tied his criticisms of the imperialist support for Israeli crimes against humanity in Gaza to planned attacks on Kurdish militias in Syria or Iraq that he denounces as terrorist.

He said, “With the operations we carry out by saying ‘We might come one night all of a sudden,’ we will foil the projects sought to be realized through terrorist organizations and crush their heads. … Although they do not abide by what statecraft and international law require, we will never give up on fulfilling what our dignity requires us to do. We will continue to destroy the terror corridor sought to be established along our borders, and to stand up against the dirty campaigns conducted against our country and faith.”

The imperialist powers’ green light to the Israeli regime for genocide in Gaza is tearing apart the institutions through which imperialism has dominated the region for decades. More perceptive imperialist commentators are warning of a possible collapse of the NATO alliance. 

Commenting on Erdoğan’s speech, retired US Army Colonel Douglas MacGregor said: “He’s warning the Israelis and he’s warning us that you’re playing with fire, and you’re going to get a full-scale war. That’s the message. I hope we get it. We, by putting an aircraft carrier … in the Eastern Mediterranean and another one either in the Persian Gulf or the Red Sea, are attempting to provoke people like President Erdoğan and the mullahs that run the government of Iran.”

MacGregor added that the war escalation poses serious dangers for Israel: “It’s really setting the stage for a larger regional war that’s the issue right now. And we always tend to forget the Turks have the largest army in NATO, a very large air force. They don’t have as many missiles and rockets in their arsenal as Iran does. But if you put Iran together with Turkey and they end up in a coalition that includes the Peninsula Arabs … then, you know, the stage is set for something that I think could end up destroying the Israeli State.”

US surges troops to Middle East in threat against Iran

Andre Damon


Amid the largest US naval buildup in the region in decades, the United States is continuing to surge troops, warships and aircraft to the Middle East in an overt threat against Iran. The US military escalation takes place as Israel continues its unrelenting airstrikes against civilians sheltering in Gaza, bringing the death toll of its genocide against the Palestinians to over 7,000.

The USS Gerald R. Ford steams alongside the USNS Laramie during a fueling in the eastern Mediterranean Sea, October 11, 2023. The Gerald R. Ford Carrier Strike Group is currently operating in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea, at the direction of the Secretary of Defense. [Photo: Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class Jacob Mattingly ]

On Thursday, Pentagon spokesman Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder announced that another 900 US troops had been deployed or were deploying to the Middle East, joining the more than 10,000 sailors, airmen and soldiers that have been sent to the region since Hamas’s October 7 attack on Israel.

On Wednesday, Biden publicly threatened Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, “My warning to the Ayatollah was that if they continue to move against those troops, we will respond. And he should be prepared.” On Tuesday, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken threatened, “If Iran or its proxies attack U.S. personnel anywhere, make no mistake. We will defend our people.”

On Thursday, the US officials claimed that US troops had come under attack 12 times in Iraq and four times in Syria. As a result, the US claimed, 21 American troops have suffered minor injuries from these attacks. Under conditions in which the United States has declared a vast array of political forces throughout the Middle East to be Iranian proxies, these alleged attacks could serve as a direct casus belli for a US attack on Iran.

On Wednesday, retired Gen. Joseph Votel, whose final posting was as head of U.S. Central Command, urged Biden to use military force against Iran in response to the alleged attacks. “We will have to do that,” Votel said. “I think we are at the point where we can probably do that now, and we should.” He added, “We can and should respond more directly to these threats on our troops.”

Iran’s foreign minister, meanwhile, warned at the United Nations Thursday that Iran would be drawn into a war with the US if Israel’s genocide of the Palestinians continued.

Hossein Amirabdollahian warned Thursday at the United Nations, “I say frankly to the American statesmen, who are now managing the genocide in Palestine, that we do not welcome expansion of the war in the region. But if the genocide in Gaza continues, they will not be spared from this fire.”

USNI News, the official publication of the US Navy, wrote Thursday, “The Eisenhower Carrier Strike Group is more than halfway across the Atlantic on its way to join the mass of U.S. naval forces in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East.” It added, “Within the next few days, the carrier and its escorts are expected to transit the Strait of Gibraltar.” The Eisenhower’s carrier strike group includes two Arleigh Burke-class destroyers, a Ticonderoga-class guided-missile cruiser, as well as its carrier air wing.

The Gerald R. Ford Carrier Strike Group, meanwhile, is stationed in the Mediterranean, providing support for Israel’s massacre of the Palestinians. USNI wrote, “Initially tasked to operate in tandem with the Gerald R. Ford Carrier Strike Group, Ike will instead travel through the Mediterranean, through the Suez Canal to the Middle East to operate in U.S. 5th Fleet.”

Haaretz speculated, however, that the true destination of the Carrier strike group may be the Persian Gulf.

It will be operating alongside the US amphibious warships, effectively mini-carriers, USS Bataan and USS Carter Hall, which are currently in the Gulf of Aden and approaching the Red Sea. Another amphibious assault ship, the USS Mesa Verde, arrived in the eastern Mediterranean last week.

USNI News reported, “The collection of ships will be among the largest mass of U.S. ships in the region in decades,” citing the comments of Adm. James Foggo, who said it was “probably more ships that we’ve had in that area since 1993.”

This massive US armada is joined by the French Mistral-class amphibious warship Tonnerre, along with two other French guided-missile frigates. The British Royal Navy has also sent two warships to the region.

On Thursday, Haaretz reported, “Over the past two weeks, close to 80 U.S. military cargo planes have landed in the region, in addition to dozens of civilian aircraft retained by the U.S. and Israeli defense establishments.”

The Israeli newspaper continued: “Open-source information reveals even larger numbers of U.S. military transport aircraft being used to deploy troops, equipment and armaments throughout the Eastern Mediterranean. They show that eight heavy-cargo planes that took off from supply depots in the United States and Europe have landed at a Jordanian base. Two U.S. fighter squadrons of F-15E fighter-bombers and A-10 attack planes have also been deployed at the base, as have Florida-based special forces.”

On October 16, the World Socialist Web Site warned, “The dispatch of an armada of over a dozen warships to the Middle East is not simply to threaten Hamas, which has no navy. The United States is preparing for a much broader conflict in the Middle East, including war with Iran.” We added, “The US is using the present crisis to put into effect longstanding plans for a war with Iran, as the Middle Eastern front of the US war with Russia and war plans against China.”

The rapid escalation of US threats against Iran takes place amid a dramatic acceleration of Israel’s bombing campaign, whose aim is the ethnic cleansing of Gaza and the genocide of the Palestinian people.

On Wednesday, United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres accused Israel of carrying out the “collective punishment of the Palestinian people.”

The next day, Martin Griffiths, the UN’s humanitarian aid chief, warned that “20 days on, heavy bombardments on Gaza continue and are getting worse, even in areas supposed to be safer… The world itself is failing to meet the bare entitlements of a part of humanity. The rules of war are clear: Civilians must be protected and have the essentials to survive.”

On Wednesday, the international charity Oxfam condemned Israel for using mass starvation as a “weapon of war.” Sally Abi Khalil, Oxfam’s regional Middle East director, said, “The situation is nothing short of horrific—where is humanity? Millions of civilians are being collectively punished in full view of the world, there can be no justification for using starvation as a weapon of war.”

And in response to the statement of President Joe Biden Wednesday, declaring he did not have any confidence in the numbers of dead in Gaza being reported by the health ministry, because it was run by Hamas, the agency released a list of 6,747 people killed so far by Israeli bombing, with their age, gender and ID number. Another 281 bodies had been recovered which could not be identified, the ministry said, bringing the total to 7,028. Of these, 2,931 were children.

26 Oct 2023

New Reserve Bank of Australia governor warns interest hikes could continue

Nick Beams


In her first major speech since becoming Reserve Bank of Australia governor, Michele Bullock insisted that the central bank will continue to lift interest rates no matter what the consequences for families under increasing financial stress because of the rapid rise in mortgage payments.

Michele Bullock [Photo: X/Twitter @RBAInfo]

Bullock warned of further interest rate rises in an address to a Commonwealth Bank conference on Tuesday evening. She made clear there would be no let up on interest rates while inflation remained above the bank’s target range of between 2 and 3 percent.

While it was possible this could be achieved with the RBA cash rate at its present level there were risks it would come down more slowly than current forecasts, she said.

“The Board will not hesitate to raise the cash rate further if there is a material upward revision to the outlook for inflation.”

Evidence of an upward movement came yesterday with the news that consumer prices in the third quarter had risen 1.2 percent compared to 0.8 percent in the second, on the back of increased electricity and petrol prices. The next rise in rates could come as early as next Tuesday when the RBA board next meets.

Bullock said it might have been possible to bring inflation down by raising the cash rate more sharply, but this would have caused “greater hardship for households and businesses and ultimately higher unemployment” and the costs outweighed the gains.

Eager to establish her authority with financial markets, she quickly added: “At the same time, the Board has been clear that it has a low tolerance for allowing inflation to return to target more slowly than currently expected. Accepting this risk would risk eroding public credibility in our commitment to low and stable inflation.”

The RBA’s rate increases have already had a major impact on living standards. It is estimated that a family trying to pay off a $750,000 mortgage is at least $1800 per month worse off than when rate rises began in May last year. Such huge mortgages were unthinkable not so many years ago but are now a commonplace under conditions where the median price for a house is above $1 million in many areas.

The RBA is well aware of the impact of its decisions. Bullock even provided some figures in her speech showing their effect.

She said that, on average, households with a mortgage “have experienced a significant decline in spare cash flows” and that “higher interest costs have reduced their cash flow by more than the rise in inflation.”

According to RBA data, 5 percent of all borrowers on a variable rate “are estimated to be paying more for essential expenses and housing than they receive in income.” This rises to about 25 percent for highly leveraged borrowers, defined as those with loans amounting to at least four times their income, not an unusual situation.

Under conditions where house prices are continuing to rise and wage increases are being suppressed, above all because of the actions of the trade union apparatuses in imposing sub-inflation wage agreements, this cohort is likely to be increasing.

Data gathered by the Roy Morgan research group published earlier this month showed that in August a record high of 1.57 million people, representing nearly a third of all mortgage holders, were now at risk of mortgage stress.

The level for August surpassed the previous record set in July and the research found the number would rise to 1.65 million in the event of another rate increase.

Presenting its latest findings, Roy Morgan CEO Michele Levine said of even more concern than the overall increase was the number of mortgage holders considered to be “extremely at risk.” Now standing at 1.066 million for August, it had doubled since the RBA began its rate rises.

In its report on the Bullock speech, the Australian cited the findings of a survey conducted by JWS Research. It found that eight out of 10 adults chose cost of living in their top five issues and 56 percent said it was among their top three, up from 43 percent in June.

The survey reported that “there is a sense that cost of living is now a challenge for ‘most’ households, impacting not just low-income earners but also Middle Australia.” There was a “frustration at increases in essential services expenses outstripping rises in their income, limiting their ability to maintain their standard of living and to save for their future.”

The view is sometimes put forward that the RBA is not aware of the social consequences of its policies and that, if only it were, things might be different.

That is not the case as Bullock indicated in her address. She said the RBA spoke directly to organisations that provide debt advice and mental services. They “are hearing that many households are under significant stress” and this was discussed “regularly in Board meetings.”

However, she continued, while the RBA recognised that interest rates were a “blunt instrument” it had to set its policy to “serve the welfare of Australians collectively.”

Such phrases are aimed at covering up the real agenda with Orwellian doublespeak. Policies which reduce real incomes for swathes of working-class families by $22,000 a year and more are not “collective welfare” but rather the collective punishment of the population for the ills of the profit system.

The so-called fight against inflation has got nothing to do with tackling its real causes. These include the vast profiteering by food, energy and financial speculators, as acknowledged in a recent report by the United Nations and other analyses, but specifically denied by the RBA.

The interest rate hikes are aimed at only one price, the wages of the working class. The objective is to suppress wages struggles as workers seek compensation for the largest price hikes in four decades by slowing the economy and ending what the RBA, along with its international counterparts, continually refers to as “tight” labour market.

Bullock’s first speech as RBA chief after being appointed to the post by federal Labor government Treasurer Jim Chalmers made clear that, no matter what the economic social distress, there will be no letup in its class war agenda.