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Activists march with an inflatable globe during a demonstration against nuclear weapons on November 18, 2017 in Berlin, Germany. The event was organized by peace advocacy organizations including the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), which won the Nobel Prize for Peace in 2017. (Photo by Adam Berry/Getty Images)
Twenty-five years ago this month, the International Court of Justice issued its Advisory Opinion on the Legality of the Threat and Use of Nuclear Weapons. In a closely divided ruling, the Court found that the threat or use of nuclear weapons would "generally be contrary to the rules of international law applicable in armed conflict, and in particular the principles and rules of humanitarian law." In the same divided ruling, however, the Court found that it could not "conclude definitively whether the threat or use of nuclear weapons would be lawful or unlawful in an extreme circumstance of self-defense, in which the very survival of a State would be at stake."
Despite being unable to "conclude definitively" that the threat or use of nuclear weapons are illegal in all circumstances, the Court nonetheless found that those weapons pose an unacceptable danger to humankind which must be eliminated. "In the long run," the Court wrote,
"International law, and with it the stability of the international order which it is intended to govern, are bound to suffer from the continuing difference of views with regard to the legal status of weapons as deadly as nuclear weapons. It is consequently important to put an end to this state of affairs: the long-promised complete nuclear disarmament appears to be the most appropriate means of achieving that result."
Accordingly, the Court found unanimously that states are obligated "to pursue in good faith and bring to a conclusion negotiations leading to nuclear disarmament in all its aspects under strict and effective international control."
A quarter century later, the "long run" is here, and the time has come for an accounting. The tally is grim. There has been no meaningful progress towards nuclear disarmament; rather, events are trending in the opposite direction. The United States and Russia still have nuclear arsenals large enough to destroy civilization in a day. France and the United Kingdom add hundreds more nuclear weapons to a renewed confrontation between NATO and Russia. Much of the treaty architecture that placed some constraints on U.S-Russia arms racing, including limits on intermediate range missiles and on ballistic missile defense, has been abrogated. China is expanding its nuclear stockpile, and developing its own array of advanced systems to deliver nuclear weapons from the land, sea, or air. Israel's nuclear weapons remain the world's worst-kept secret. And since the 1996 nuclear weapons opinion we have three additional countries with visible and growing nuclear arsenals: India, Pakistan, and North Korea.
Nuclear weapons, moreover, are only one element of a renewed arms race, one likely far more dangerous than the Cold War. More nuclear-armed militaries are confronting one another in more places and in more ways. They are armed with a growing array of high-tech weapons and ways of making war from hypersonic missiles and missile defenses to disruptive electronic and cyber warfare systems that operate with speed and complexity that challenges human comprehension--and control.
The United States, still the largest economy with the most powerful military, should take the lead in following the rules to end one of the main existential threats that humanity has created for itself.
The erosion of international law and "the stability of the international order which it is intended to govern" extends far beyond the deterioration of the nuclear arms control regime. The United States played a leading role in constructing a United Nations system in which threats to peace were to be addressed and uses of force delimited by collective, international processes. Over the last quarter century, the United States has instead led the way in creating a climate in which the governments of the most powerful states, and particularly nuclear armed states, feel free to use military force unilaterally, and sometimes well outside their own regions. U.S. war making in the past quarter century has included two full scale wars of occupation and a global "war on terror" in which U.S. covert operations and air strikes have become routine. Most of the other nuclear-armed states have threatened or used military force without UN authorization during this period, in long-running confrontations and conflicts in Eastern Europe and the Middle East, in Africa and in South and East Asia. One result has been a proliferation of potential flash points between nuclear-armed adversaries, from the Ukraine to Taiwan to India's borders with Pakistan and China.
This climate of confrontation and arms racing is driven by a broader civilizational crisis, and at the same time intensifies it. A global economy whose animating dynamic is endless competition for wealth and power among large, authoritarian organizations has exhausted the planet's easily retrievable resources and brought the world to the brink of ecological collapse. Both the climate chaos caused by global warming and the pandemic are only the most striking manifestations of ecological overshoot. This same order of things has generated immense disparities of wealth both within and among countries, inevitably engendering as well rising levels of resentment, despair, and anger. The response of those who rule in the world's most powerful states has been to double down on nationalism and authoritarianism to facilitate repression at home, and to mobilize their publics for a new era of economic and military competition. This competition is likely to be intensified by additional ecological shocks and environmental decline, while at the same time preventing cooperation and diverting resources from addressing the true global threats that face us all.
Seeming to acknowledge the erosion of international law, the Biden administration has proclaimed that the United States should take the lead in preserving a "rules based international order." A good place to start would be U.S. compliance with the rule set forth clearly and unanimously by the International Court of Justice twenty-five years ago: that all states are bound to "pursue in good faith and bring to a conclusion negotiations leading to nuclear disarmament...." The U.S. should start the process immediately, beginning with talks with Russia, which together with the United States hold over 90% of the world's nuclear weapons. The United States, still the largest economy with the most powerful military, should take the lead in following the rules to end one of the main existential threats that humanity has created for itself. Beginning with cooperation there, seeking to eliminate the most dangerous and irrational expression of the modernity we have built, perhaps we can find ways to acknowledge and begin to address the deeper roots of our civilizational crisis.
For most people now alive, the world wars of the twentieth century that killed tens of millions and the U.S. atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki might seem like ancient history. But we must not forget the hard-won knowledge of the generation that experienced a world both before and after the advent of nuclear weapons--a generation that also experienced the horrors of the last round of great power war. The Emergency Committee of Atomic Scientists, which included Albert Einstein and several of the physicists who had participated in developing the atomic bomb, warned that,
"Through the release of atomic energy, our generation has brought into the world the most revolutionary force since prehistoric man's discovery of fire. This basic power of the universe cannot be fitted into the outmoded concept of narrow nationalisms."
This time we must find a way before the fact to constrain the nationalisms, the high-tech militarisms, and the rulers who would take us to war. Gunther Anders, an early and trenchant critic of the nuclear age, observed that we, the modern humans who invented nuclear weapons and built them in their thousands, are "incapable of mentally realizing the realities which we ourselves have produced." We must expand our imaginations now to survive.
Trump and Musk are on an unconstitutional rampage, aiming for virtually every corner of the federal government. These two right-wing billionaires are targeting nurses, scientists, teachers, daycare providers, judges, veterans, air traffic controllers, and nuclear safety inspectors. No one is safe. The food stamps program, Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid are next. It’s an unprecedented disaster and a five-alarm fire, but there will be a reckoning. The people did not vote for this. The American people do not want this dystopian hellscape that hides behind claims of “efficiency.” Still, in reality, it is all a giveaway to corporate interests and the libertarian dreams of far-right oligarchs like Musk. Common Dreams is playing a vital role by reporting day and night on this orgy of corruption and greed, as well as what everyday people can do to organize and fight back. As a people-powered nonprofit news outlet, we cover issues the corporate media never will, but we can only continue with our readers’ support. |
Twenty-five years ago this month, the International Court of Justice issued its Advisory Opinion on the Legality of the Threat and Use of Nuclear Weapons. In a closely divided ruling, the Court found that the threat or use of nuclear weapons would "generally be contrary to the rules of international law applicable in armed conflict, and in particular the principles and rules of humanitarian law." In the same divided ruling, however, the Court found that it could not "conclude definitively whether the threat or use of nuclear weapons would be lawful or unlawful in an extreme circumstance of self-defense, in which the very survival of a State would be at stake."
Despite being unable to "conclude definitively" that the threat or use of nuclear weapons are illegal in all circumstances, the Court nonetheless found that those weapons pose an unacceptable danger to humankind which must be eliminated. "In the long run," the Court wrote,
"International law, and with it the stability of the international order which it is intended to govern, are bound to suffer from the continuing difference of views with regard to the legal status of weapons as deadly as nuclear weapons. It is consequently important to put an end to this state of affairs: the long-promised complete nuclear disarmament appears to be the most appropriate means of achieving that result."
Accordingly, the Court found unanimously that states are obligated "to pursue in good faith and bring to a conclusion negotiations leading to nuclear disarmament in all its aspects under strict and effective international control."
A quarter century later, the "long run" is here, and the time has come for an accounting. The tally is grim. There has been no meaningful progress towards nuclear disarmament; rather, events are trending in the opposite direction. The United States and Russia still have nuclear arsenals large enough to destroy civilization in a day. France and the United Kingdom add hundreds more nuclear weapons to a renewed confrontation between NATO and Russia. Much of the treaty architecture that placed some constraints on U.S-Russia arms racing, including limits on intermediate range missiles and on ballistic missile defense, has been abrogated. China is expanding its nuclear stockpile, and developing its own array of advanced systems to deliver nuclear weapons from the land, sea, or air. Israel's nuclear weapons remain the world's worst-kept secret. And since the 1996 nuclear weapons opinion we have three additional countries with visible and growing nuclear arsenals: India, Pakistan, and North Korea.
Nuclear weapons, moreover, are only one element of a renewed arms race, one likely far more dangerous than the Cold War. More nuclear-armed militaries are confronting one another in more places and in more ways. They are armed with a growing array of high-tech weapons and ways of making war from hypersonic missiles and missile defenses to disruptive electronic and cyber warfare systems that operate with speed and complexity that challenges human comprehension--and control.
The United States, still the largest economy with the most powerful military, should take the lead in following the rules to end one of the main existential threats that humanity has created for itself.
The erosion of international law and "the stability of the international order which it is intended to govern" extends far beyond the deterioration of the nuclear arms control regime. The United States played a leading role in constructing a United Nations system in which threats to peace were to be addressed and uses of force delimited by collective, international processes. Over the last quarter century, the United States has instead led the way in creating a climate in which the governments of the most powerful states, and particularly nuclear armed states, feel free to use military force unilaterally, and sometimes well outside their own regions. U.S. war making in the past quarter century has included two full scale wars of occupation and a global "war on terror" in which U.S. covert operations and air strikes have become routine. Most of the other nuclear-armed states have threatened or used military force without UN authorization during this period, in long-running confrontations and conflicts in Eastern Europe and the Middle East, in Africa and in South and East Asia. One result has been a proliferation of potential flash points between nuclear-armed adversaries, from the Ukraine to Taiwan to India's borders with Pakistan and China.
This climate of confrontation and arms racing is driven by a broader civilizational crisis, and at the same time intensifies it. A global economy whose animating dynamic is endless competition for wealth and power among large, authoritarian organizations has exhausted the planet's easily retrievable resources and brought the world to the brink of ecological collapse. Both the climate chaos caused by global warming and the pandemic are only the most striking manifestations of ecological overshoot. This same order of things has generated immense disparities of wealth both within and among countries, inevitably engendering as well rising levels of resentment, despair, and anger. The response of those who rule in the world's most powerful states has been to double down on nationalism and authoritarianism to facilitate repression at home, and to mobilize their publics for a new era of economic and military competition. This competition is likely to be intensified by additional ecological shocks and environmental decline, while at the same time preventing cooperation and diverting resources from addressing the true global threats that face us all.
Seeming to acknowledge the erosion of international law, the Biden administration has proclaimed that the United States should take the lead in preserving a "rules based international order." A good place to start would be U.S. compliance with the rule set forth clearly and unanimously by the International Court of Justice twenty-five years ago: that all states are bound to "pursue in good faith and bring to a conclusion negotiations leading to nuclear disarmament...." The U.S. should start the process immediately, beginning with talks with Russia, which together with the United States hold over 90% of the world's nuclear weapons. The United States, still the largest economy with the most powerful military, should take the lead in following the rules to end one of the main existential threats that humanity has created for itself. Beginning with cooperation there, seeking to eliminate the most dangerous and irrational expression of the modernity we have built, perhaps we can find ways to acknowledge and begin to address the deeper roots of our civilizational crisis.
For most people now alive, the world wars of the twentieth century that killed tens of millions and the U.S. atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki might seem like ancient history. But we must not forget the hard-won knowledge of the generation that experienced a world both before and after the advent of nuclear weapons--a generation that also experienced the horrors of the last round of great power war. The Emergency Committee of Atomic Scientists, which included Albert Einstein and several of the physicists who had participated in developing the atomic bomb, warned that,
"Through the release of atomic energy, our generation has brought into the world the most revolutionary force since prehistoric man's discovery of fire. This basic power of the universe cannot be fitted into the outmoded concept of narrow nationalisms."
This time we must find a way before the fact to constrain the nationalisms, the high-tech militarisms, and the rulers who would take us to war. Gunther Anders, an early and trenchant critic of the nuclear age, observed that we, the modern humans who invented nuclear weapons and built them in their thousands, are "incapable of mentally realizing the realities which we ourselves have produced." We must expand our imaginations now to survive.
Twenty-five years ago this month, the International Court of Justice issued its Advisory Opinion on the Legality of the Threat and Use of Nuclear Weapons. In a closely divided ruling, the Court found that the threat or use of nuclear weapons would "generally be contrary to the rules of international law applicable in armed conflict, and in particular the principles and rules of humanitarian law." In the same divided ruling, however, the Court found that it could not "conclude definitively whether the threat or use of nuclear weapons would be lawful or unlawful in an extreme circumstance of self-defense, in which the very survival of a State would be at stake."
Despite being unable to "conclude definitively" that the threat or use of nuclear weapons are illegal in all circumstances, the Court nonetheless found that those weapons pose an unacceptable danger to humankind which must be eliminated. "In the long run," the Court wrote,
"International law, and with it the stability of the international order which it is intended to govern, are bound to suffer from the continuing difference of views with regard to the legal status of weapons as deadly as nuclear weapons. It is consequently important to put an end to this state of affairs: the long-promised complete nuclear disarmament appears to be the most appropriate means of achieving that result."
Accordingly, the Court found unanimously that states are obligated "to pursue in good faith and bring to a conclusion negotiations leading to nuclear disarmament in all its aspects under strict and effective international control."
A quarter century later, the "long run" is here, and the time has come for an accounting. The tally is grim. There has been no meaningful progress towards nuclear disarmament; rather, events are trending in the opposite direction. The United States and Russia still have nuclear arsenals large enough to destroy civilization in a day. France and the United Kingdom add hundreds more nuclear weapons to a renewed confrontation between NATO and Russia. Much of the treaty architecture that placed some constraints on U.S-Russia arms racing, including limits on intermediate range missiles and on ballistic missile defense, has been abrogated. China is expanding its nuclear stockpile, and developing its own array of advanced systems to deliver nuclear weapons from the land, sea, or air. Israel's nuclear weapons remain the world's worst-kept secret. And since the 1996 nuclear weapons opinion we have three additional countries with visible and growing nuclear arsenals: India, Pakistan, and North Korea.
Nuclear weapons, moreover, are only one element of a renewed arms race, one likely far more dangerous than the Cold War. More nuclear-armed militaries are confronting one another in more places and in more ways. They are armed with a growing array of high-tech weapons and ways of making war from hypersonic missiles and missile defenses to disruptive electronic and cyber warfare systems that operate with speed and complexity that challenges human comprehension--and control.
The United States, still the largest economy with the most powerful military, should take the lead in following the rules to end one of the main existential threats that humanity has created for itself.
The erosion of international law and "the stability of the international order which it is intended to govern" extends far beyond the deterioration of the nuclear arms control regime. The United States played a leading role in constructing a United Nations system in which threats to peace were to be addressed and uses of force delimited by collective, international processes. Over the last quarter century, the United States has instead led the way in creating a climate in which the governments of the most powerful states, and particularly nuclear armed states, feel free to use military force unilaterally, and sometimes well outside their own regions. U.S. war making in the past quarter century has included two full scale wars of occupation and a global "war on terror" in which U.S. covert operations and air strikes have become routine. Most of the other nuclear-armed states have threatened or used military force without UN authorization during this period, in long-running confrontations and conflicts in Eastern Europe and the Middle East, in Africa and in South and East Asia. One result has been a proliferation of potential flash points between nuclear-armed adversaries, from the Ukraine to Taiwan to India's borders with Pakistan and China.
This climate of confrontation and arms racing is driven by a broader civilizational crisis, and at the same time intensifies it. A global economy whose animating dynamic is endless competition for wealth and power among large, authoritarian organizations has exhausted the planet's easily retrievable resources and brought the world to the brink of ecological collapse. Both the climate chaos caused by global warming and the pandemic are only the most striking manifestations of ecological overshoot. This same order of things has generated immense disparities of wealth both within and among countries, inevitably engendering as well rising levels of resentment, despair, and anger. The response of those who rule in the world's most powerful states has been to double down on nationalism and authoritarianism to facilitate repression at home, and to mobilize their publics for a new era of economic and military competition. This competition is likely to be intensified by additional ecological shocks and environmental decline, while at the same time preventing cooperation and diverting resources from addressing the true global threats that face us all.
Seeming to acknowledge the erosion of international law, the Biden administration has proclaimed that the United States should take the lead in preserving a "rules based international order." A good place to start would be U.S. compliance with the rule set forth clearly and unanimously by the International Court of Justice twenty-five years ago: that all states are bound to "pursue in good faith and bring to a conclusion negotiations leading to nuclear disarmament...." The U.S. should start the process immediately, beginning with talks with Russia, which together with the United States hold over 90% of the world's nuclear weapons. The United States, still the largest economy with the most powerful military, should take the lead in following the rules to end one of the main existential threats that humanity has created for itself. Beginning with cooperation there, seeking to eliminate the most dangerous and irrational expression of the modernity we have built, perhaps we can find ways to acknowledge and begin to address the deeper roots of our civilizational crisis.
For most people now alive, the world wars of the twentieth century that killed tens of millions and the U.S. atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki might seem like ancient history. But we must not forget the hard-won knowledge of the generation that experienced a world both before and after the advent of nuclear weapons--a generation that also experienced the horrors of the last round of great power war. The Emergency Committee of Atomic Scientists, which included Albert Einstein and several of the physicists who had participated in developing the atomic bomb, warned that,
"Through the release of atomic energy, our generation has brought into the world the most revolutionary force since prehistoric man's discovery of fire. This basic power of the universe cannot be fitted into the outmoded concept of narrow nationalisms."
This time we must find a way before the fact to constrain the nationalisms, the high-tech militarisms, and the rulers who would take us to war. Gunther Anders, an early and trenchant critic of the nuclear age, observed that we, the modern humans who invented nuclear weapons and built them in their thousands, are "incapable of mentally realizing the realities which we ourselves have produced." We must expand our imaginations now to survive.
"This is a massive win for justice and the rule of law," said one Democratic congresswoman. "Now Trump must comply."
This is a breaking news story... Please check back for possible updates...
The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday issued a ruling with no noted dissents affirming a federal judge's order compelling President Donald Trump's administration to enable the stateside return of Kilmar Abrego García, a Salvadoran man wrongfully deported to a notorious prison in his native country.
"The rule of law won today," said Andrew Rossman, one of Abrego García's lawyers. "Time to bring him home."
Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote in Thursday's unsigned order that the Trump administration must "facilitate and effectuate" Abrego García's release from custody "and to ensure that his case is handled as it would have been had he not been improperly sent to El Salvador."
"The intended scope of the term 'effectuate' in the district court's order is, however, unclear, and may exceed the district court's authority," Sotomayor added. "The district court should clarify its directive, with due regard for the deference owed to the executive branch in the conduct of foreign affairs."
Last week, U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis gave the Trump administration until Monday April 7 to return Abrego García, who was deported last month to the Terrorism Confinement Center (CECOT) super-maximum security prison in central El Salvador after the government claimed without credible evidence that he was a gang member.
"Defendants seized Abrego García without any lawful authority; held him in three separate domestic detention centers without legal basis; failed to present him to any immigration judge or officer; and forcibly transported him to El Salvador in direct contravention" of immigration law, she wrote.
A panel of the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals declined to stay Xinis' order, with one judge on the tribunal writing, "The United States government has no legal authority to snatch a person who is lawfully present in the United States off the street and remove him from the country without due process."
The panel refuted the Trump administration's assertion that it could not return Abrego García, calling the government's argument "that the federal courts are powerless to intervene... unconscionable."
However, on Monday, Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts temporarily blocked Xinis' order just before the midnight deadline pending review by all nine justices.
Abrego García's legal team argued that their client was the victim of a "Kafkaesque mistake." Among the so-called evidence the government used to claim he is a member of the MS-13 criminal gang was a Chicago Bulls hat and hoodie he wore, and a snitch's tip. The Trump administration subsequently admitted in a March 31 court filing that Abrego García's deportation was an "administrative error" and an "oversight."
Before he was deported, Abrego García, 29, lived in Maryland with his wife, Jennifer Stefania Vasquez Sura, a U.S. citizen; their autistic, nonverbal 5-year-old child; and two children from Vasquez Sura's previous relationship. His lawyers said he left El Salvador to escape the then-endemic gang violence there.
Advocates for Abrego García welcomed the high court's order, with Congressman Joaquin Castro (D-Texas) writing on the social media site Bluesky that the justices "did the right thing."
"This is about the rule of law and due process," he added. "Kilmar Abrego García should be reunited with his family."
Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) said: "This is a massive win for justice and the rule of law. Now Trump must comply."
"Controversial speech is not illegal, and political speech that criticizes the Israeli government or U.S. foreign policy is constitutionally protected," said the NYCLU's interim legal director.
An attorney for former Columbia University student organizer Mahmoud Khalil said Thursday that a memo submitted to an immigration judge shows that the U.S. government "is clearly going after Mahmoud and persecuting him for exercising his First Amendment rights."
"After a month of hiding the ball since Mahmoud's late-night unjust arrest in New York and taking him away to a remote detention center in Louisiana, immigration authorities have finally admitted that they have no case whatsoever against him," the lawyer, Marc Van Der Hout, said in a statement about a two-page memo from the U.S. Deparment of State that was published by The Associated Press.
Plainclothes federal agents accosted Khalil, a green-card holder who finished his graduate studies at Columbia last year, and his pregnant wife—Noor Abdalla, a U.S. citizen—at their building in New York City on March 8 and took him into custody. Abdalla has said that "this felt like a kidnapping because it was," and Khalil calls himself a "political prisoner."
As Van Der Hout explained Thursday: "The government has charged Mahmoud with a rarely used provision of the immigration laws targeting the deportation of even lawful permanent residents like Mahmoud—but Secretary of State Marco Rubio has provided no proof or evidence that these charges bear any viability against Mahmoud. Further, Secretary Rubio has shown that this is merely about targeting Mahmoud's free speech rights about Palestine."
"If anything, this document only underscores the startling escalation of Trump's war on dissent and efforts to remove people who disagree with him or U.S. policy."
The AP noted that "a Department of Homeland Security spokesperson, Tricia McLaughlin, did not respond to questions about whether it had additional evidence against Khalil, writing in an emailed statement, 'DHS did file evidence, but immigration court dockets are not available to the public.'"
Rubio's memo was submitted to Judge Jamee Comans ahead of an immigration court hearing scheduled for Friday in Jena, Louisiana—and after the judge said earlier this week that the federal government "either can provide sufficient evidence or not," and "if he's not removable, I'm going to terminate this case."
The memo suggests campus protests against the U.S.-backed Israeli assault on Palestinians in the Gaza Strip were inherently discriminatory against Jewish people, stating that Rubio determined the activities and presence of Khalil and another lawful permanent resident whose name is redacted "would have potentially serious adverse foreign policy consequences and would compromise a compelling U.S. foreign policy interest."
"These determinations are based on information... regarding the participation and roles of [redacted] and Khalil in antisemitic protests and disruptive activities, which fosters a hostile environment for Jewish students in the United States," the memo continues. "The public actions and continued presence of [redacted] and Khalil in the United States undermine U.S. policy to combat antisemitism around the world and in the United States, in addition to efforts to protect Jewish students from harassment and violence in the United States."
Van Der Hout said that "an immigration judge would have to find that the secretary of state has 'reasonable ground' to believe that the immigrant's presence or activities in the U.S. 'would have potentially serious adverse foreign policy consequences,' and that his presence—though he has only engaged in lawful conduct that is protected by the First Amendment—'compromise[s] a compelling United States foreign policy interest,' which purportedly justifies the government's ability to override the U.S. Constitution's free speech clause. But Rubio cites no real foreign policy issues or evidence whatsoever, and it is critically important to note that the U.S. government is always constrained by the Constitution, regardless of what its officials might think."
"The two-page memo, which was obtained by The Associated Press, does not allege any criminal conduct by Khalil" "Rather, Rubio wrote Khalil could be expelled for his beliefs." Free this man immediately. apnews.com/article/mahm...
[image or embed]
— Adil Haque (@adhaque.bsky.social) April 10, 2025 at 2:13 PM
In addition to Van Der Hout's firm, Khalil is represented by Dratel & Lewis, the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR), the Creating Law Enforcement Accountability & Responsibility (CLEAR) project, New York University Immigrants' Rights Clinic, and the national, New Jersey, and New York arms of the ACLU.
Molly Biklen, interim legal director at the NYCLU, said that Rubio's memo "underscores that the government has ripped Mahmoud Khalil from his home and nine-months pregnant wife, Dr. Noor Abdalla, solely because it disagrees with his speech. Controversial speech is not illegal, and political speech that criticizes the Israeli government or U.S. foreign policy is constitutionally protected."
The New York Times reported earlier this week that under President Donald Trump, nearly 300 students have had visas revoked and could face deportation. Biklen said that "if anything, this document only underscores the startling escalation of Trump's war on dissent and efforts to remove people who disagree with him or U.S. policy. It's nothing more than a naked attack on all of our free speech rights."
Khalil's immigration case is occurring alongside a federal court battle in New Jersey, where his lawyers are arguing that he has been unlawfully detained. Referencing the latter proceedings, CCR staff attorney Samah Sisay said that the Rubio memo "shows that the secretary of state's determination that Mr. Khalil is deportable is based solely on his free speech activities as he has alleged in his habeas litigation."
"The government has not stated any legitimate foreign policy interest that is negatively impacted by Mr. Khalil but instead erroneously attributes prejudiced views to him for participating in the student encampment at Columbia University and speaking out against the United States' support of Israel's genocide in Gaza," Sisay added. "The government has not met its burden, and Mr. Khalil should be released."
"The Milei government has picked a fight with workers and pensioners, and now they will feel the full force of organized labor," said one union leader.
Increasingly fed up with economic policies under which poverty and inflation have soared while vital social services, wages, and the peso have taken huge hits, disaffected Argentinians took to the streets of cities across the South American nation Wednesday for the third general strike of right-wing President Javier Milei's tumultuous 16-month presidency.
Led by the General Confederation of Labor (CGT)—an umbrella group of Argentinian unions—the "paro general," or general stoppage, drew workers, the unemployed, pensioners, educators, students, and others affected by Milei's severe austerity measures and his administration's plans for more deep cuts. Demonstrations continued throughout Thursday.
"In the face of intolerable social inequality and a government that ignores calls for better wages and a dignified standard of living for all, the workers are going on strike," CGT explained ahead of the action.
Airlines canceled hundreds of flights as air traffic controllers and other airport workers joined the strike; many schools, banks, and other offices shut down; and ports, some public transport, and other services ground to a halt.
"The only thing the administration has brought is a wave of layoffs across state agencies, higher poverty rates, and international debts, which are the biggest scam in Argentina's history," the Association of Airline Pilots (APA) said.
Rodolfo Aguiar, secretary general of the Association of State Workers (ATE), said Wednesday that "after this strike, they have to turn off the chainsaw; there's no room for more cuts," a reference to both Milei's ubiquitous campaign prop and his gutting of public programs upon which millions of Argentinians rely.
"Right now, the crisis Argentina is facing is worsening," Aguiar added, warning about government talks with the International Monetary Fund. "The rise in the dollar will quickly translate into food prices, and the new deal with the IMF is nothing more than more debt and more austerity measures."
Milei's government is nearing agreement on a $20 million IMF bailout, a deeply unpopular proposition in a country left reeling by the U.S.-dominated institution's missteps and intentional policies that benefit foreign investors while causing acute suffering for millions of everyday Argentinians. Argentina already owes $44 billion to the IMF.
"We already have experience as Argentinians that no agreement has been beneficial for the people," retiree and striker Rezo Mossetti told Agence France-Press in Buenos Aires Thursday, lamenting that his country keeps getting into "worse and worse" debt.
CGT decided to launch the general strike during a March 20 meeting that followed a pensioner-led March 12 protest outside the National Congress in Buenos Aires. After fringe elements including rowdy soccer fans known as "barrabravas" joined the protests and committed acts of violence and vandalism, police responded by attacking demonstrators with "less-lethal" weapons including water cannons and tear gas. A gas canister struck freelance photojournalist Pablo Grillo in the head, causing a severe brain injury that required urgent surgery.
This, after Argentinian Security Minister Patricia Bullrich invoked controversial measure empowering more aggressive use of force against protesters and rescinding a ban on police use of tear gas canisters. The Security Ministry also filed a criminal complaint dubiously accusing organizers of the March 12 protest of sedition.
Milei and his supporters have portrayed the general strike as a treasonous assault on the fragile Argentinian economy and those taking part in the day of action as lazy and jobless.
When Clarín, the country's largest newspaper, cited a study by the Argentine University of Enterprise claiming that the general strike would cost the national economy around $185 million per day, University of Buenos Aires professor Sergio Wischñevsky retorted: "Very revealing. It means that's the magnitude of the wealth workers produce every day. It's the best argument to stop ignoring workers."
As he has done with past protests against his rule, Milei has also framed the general strike as "an attack against the republic" and repeated his threat that police would "crack down" on demonstrators.
Orwellian use of state infrastructure by Milei's "anarcho-capitalist" gvmnt. in Argentina. As the 36 hr. general strike begins, signs & loudspeakers at train stations across Buenos Aires read: "Attack against the republic! The syndicalist caste punishes millions of Argentines who want to work."
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— Batallon Bakunin ( @batallonbakunin.bsky.social) April 10, 2025 at 4:11 AM
General strikers largely shrugged off the threats of police violence and state repression.
"The right to strike is a worker right and I think there has to be more strikes because the situation with this government is unsustainable," Hugo Velazuez, a 62-year-old worker striking in Buenos Aires, told Reuters.
While the Argentinian mainstream media's coverage of the general strike was largely muted, images posted by independent progressive media showed parts of central Buenos Aires appearing practically empty.
Workers around the world showed solidarity with striking Argentinians.
"The Milei government has picked a fight with workers and pensioners, and now they will feel the full force of organized labor," said Paddy Crumlin, president of the London-based International Transport Workers' Federation (ITF), which boasts nearly 20 million members in 677 unions in 149 nations. "The international trade union movement stands ready to fight back with our Argentine comrades. We will not rest until these attacks on workers' rights are defeated."
ITF noted that various sectors of Argentina's transportation sector "are under direct threat of privatization," including the national commercial airline, Aerolíneas Argentinas, the National Highway Board, and the Argentinian Merchant Marine.
Milei—a self-described anarcho-capitalist who was elected in November 2023 on a wave of populist revulsion at the status quo—campaigned on a platform of repairing the moribund economy, tackling inflation, reducing poverty, and dismantling the state. He made wild promises including dollarizing Argentina's economy and abolishing the central bank.
However, the realities of leading South America's second-largest economy have forced Milei's administration to abandon or significantly curtail key agenda items, leading to accusations of neoliberalism and betrayal from the right and hypocrisy and rank incompetence from the left. According to most polling, Milei's approval rating has fallen from net positive to negative in just a few months.
Particularly galling to many left-of-center Argentinians is Milei's cozying up to far-right figures around the world, especially U.S. President Donald Trump.
Andrew Kennis, a Rutgers University media studies professor specializing in Latin America, noted similarities between the protests in Argentina and anti-Trump demonstrations in the United States.
"It's no coincidence that 5.2 million people were in the streets in all 50 states just this past Saturday and that the U.S. is now catching up with the mass resistance that's long been going on in Argentina," Kennis told Common Dreams Thursday.
Kennis—who this week published a deep dive on Milei's "destructive chainsaw theory" in Common Dreams—added that in the cases of both Milei and Trump, "there was no real honeymoon period, as there almost always is" for most new presidencies.
"In both countries, people were in the streets pretty damned fast and furiously," he added.