Wounded Knee III in the Making?
By Dave Lindorff
"As
darkness does not come at once, neither does
oppression. In both instances there's twilight where
everything remains seemingly unchanged, and it is in
such twilight that we must be aware of change in the
air, however slight, lest we become unwitting
victims of the darkness."
-- Justice William O. Douglas
November 25,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- The struggle at Standing Rock, North Dakota,
between the Sioux people and their supporters and the
oil corporations and banks trying to run a dangerous
pipeline for filthy Bakkan crude oil through their
sacred lands and underneath the Missouri River was
cranked up to a new level of violence Sunday and in
ensuing days as National Guard troops and the Morton
County Sheriff’s Department, bolstered by volunteers
from various other police departments conducted an
all-night attack using maximum violence, including
flash-bang concussion grenades, rubber bullets, mace,
tear gas and three water cannons -- this at a time the
temperature on the prairie had fallen to a low of 22
degrees fahrenheit.
The casualties
of this one-sided battle against peaceful protesters on
a bridge were enormous, with some 300 of the estimated
400 protesting water protectors, both native people and
non-native supporters, injured, 26 of them seriously.
There was evidence that police were aiming rubber
bullets at protesters’ heads and groins to inflict
maximum pain and damage, with eight of the injured
hospitalized, including a 13-year-old girl shot in the
face, whose eye was reportedly damaged.
The gravest
injuries were a tribal elder who suffered a cardiac
arrest, and Sophia Wolansky, a 21-year-old New York City
resident who had come to back the Standing Rock Sioux in
their struggle to halt construction of the pipeline. She
was hit in the arm by a flash-bang grenade thrown at her
by a Morton County Sheriff’s deputy, which blew up on
impact, blowing away the flesh and muscle and reportedly
some of the nerves the length of her forearm and some
bone of the elbow joint (see accompanying photo below of
the wound). She has been evacuated to a hospital in
Minneapolis where physicians and nurses are fighting to
save her arm and hand from an amputation.
Wolansky’s
father Wayne, a 61-year old lawyer in New York, angrily
called on President to put a halt to the violent
repression at Standing Rock. He
said of his daughter’s injury, which was the result of a
flash-bang concussion grenade being thrown directly at
her , “This
is the wound of someone who's a warrior, who was sent to
fight in a war," Wayne said. "It's not supposed to be a
war. She's peacefully trying to get people to not
destroy the water supply. And they're trying to kill
her." Concussion grenades are not supposed to be used to
target people.
The
grenade wound (left image) suffered by Sophia Wolansky
(right) blew away the muscle, exposing bone, looking
like a war injury, not the typical police-abuse type
injury.
The attack on
Sunday night, which has been rightly condemned by UN
human rights observers as an atrocity, harks back to the
simultaneous country-wide crushing of the Occupy
movement occupations in cities across the US during
early November, 2011, when local police aided in some
cases by armed federal parks police, assaulted occupiers
with maximum violence, almost always at night, barring
the media from witnessing their deliberate and
coordinated over-the-top violence.
In that case,
an aggressive campaign of legal discovery by the
Partnership for Civil Justice using the Freedom of
Information Act, resulted in the unearthing of documents
from both the Department of Homeland Security and the
FBI proving there had been a concerted campaign by those
federal agencies to coordinate the crushing of the
Occupy Movement. That campaign urged police to use
maximum violence, to operate at night, and to share the
results of their attacks with other city police
departments so that tactics of repression that “worked,”
could be replicated.
It would appear
that the repressive lessons learned by police agencies
in 2011 are now being used as a kind of repression
handbook by Morton County Sheriff Kyle Kirchmeier and
his deputies against the protesting Sioux water
protectors and their Anglo supporters.
There is no
indication that such vicious repression is working
though. Even as the brutal assault last Sunday night and
Monday morning sent dozens of people to area hospitals,
more brave people continued to pour into Standing Rock
to support the struggle of the Standing Rock Sioux and
the many representatives of some 300 US tribes around
the country, and the representatives of indigenous
peoples from around the world fighting this battle.
The decision to
run the so-called Dakota Access Pipeline through Sioux
sacred lands, some of it formerly awarded to the
Standing Rock Sioux Tribe by US treaty, but later stolen
from them, stands in stark contrast to an earlier
decision to reroute it from a planned Missouri River
crossing point near North Dakota’s capital city of
Bismarck. There, protests by the local (white,
middle-class) public forced a rethink by the companies
behind the pipeline, and the US Army Corps of Engineers.
They decided to alter the planned route to run it
through Indian territory instead.
The Standing
Rock Tribal Council has called on President Obama to put
a halt to this dangerous and obscene project, suggesting
that as president he has the power to declare the
crossing location a National Historic Site, thus
protecting it from such defilement. The president, of
course, could also look at the local Sheriff’s
repressive and and violent tactics against an Indian
people, and simply federalize local National Guard
troops, ordering them to force local police to stand
down instead of following the Republican governor’s
orders to participate in the repression as they are now
doing under his trumped-up "state emergency"
declaration.
That the
president hasn’t already acted to stop the attacks on
peaceful protesters speaks volumes about Obama's lack of
courage and of principle and of his hypocrisy. In 2014,
President Obama visited the Standing Rock Sioux, and
acknowledged their centuries of abuse by the US
government. Now, however, that abuse is occurring on
this president’s watch, and incredibly, despite the
extent of the violence, he has done nothing to stop it.
It’s time for
all decent Americans to take a stand in support of the
Sioux People of Standing Rock. Contact the White House
at 202-456-1414 and demand that the president send
troops to stand between Sioux water protectors and their
local law-enforcement assailants, and to have Federal
Marshals arrest those who commit acts of brutality.
The militarized
response to peaceful protest at Standing Rock should
stand as a warning to all who would protest America’s
slide into totalitarianism. What the government will do
to Native Americans and their Anglo supporters today is
what we can probably expect them to do to any of us who
protest in this new Trumpian America.
On the
bright side, the growing violence against the Standing
Rock Sioux and their implacable struggle to defend their
sacred lands has mobilized some 1000 or more American
military veterans of America's past imperialist wars to
plan a "deployment" to stand in unarmed defense of the
Sioux Nation against the military and police forces of
the State of North Dakota and the Dakota Access Pipeline
consortium and its private military contractors arrayed
against them. Organized by Wesley Clark, Jr., a retired
military officer and son of Gen. Wesley Clark, a former
commander of NATO, the plan of an organization called
Veterans for Standing Rock
Dave Lindorff is an American investigative reporter.
He received two Project Censored awards in 2004 and
2011. This this article was first published at
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