Carl Bloice, writing for Fahamu in Oxford, UK, elucidates the failure or unwillingness of the Western media to accurately report the invasion and occupation of Somalia by a US backed Ethiopian government. He asserts that behind the US-Ethiopian political alliance lies a strategic move to secure positioning in this oil region:
The US bombing of Somalia took place while the World Social Forum was underway in Kenya, three days before a large anti-war action in Washington on 27 January 2007.
Nunu Kidane, network coordinator for Priority Africa Network (PAN), was present in Nairobi. After returning home, she asked: how ‘to explain the silence of the US peace movement on Somalia?’
Writing in the San Francisco community newspaper Bay View, Kidane suggested one valid reason: ‘Perhaps US-based organizations don’t have the proper analytical framework to understand the significance of the Horn of Africa region. Perhaps it is because Somalia is largely seen as a country with no government and in perpetual chaos; with “fundamental Islamic” forces, not deserving of defense against the military attacks by US in search of “terrorists”.’
To that it may be added the role of the major US media in the lead up to the invasion and the suffering now taking place in the Horn of Africa.
‘The carnage and suffering in Somalia may be the worst in more than a decade - but you’d hardly know it from your nightly news’, wrote Andrew Cawthorne for Reuters from Nairobi last week.
Amy Goodman’s Democracy Now recently examined the coverage of ABC, NBC and CBS on Somalia in the evening newscasts since the invasion.
ABC and NBC had not mentioned the war at all. CBS mentioned the war once, dedicating three whole sentences to it. Despite the fact that there have been more casualties in this war than in the recent fighting in Lebanon.
Boris Johnson at the Daily Telegraph
“Training Iraqi troops no longer driving force in U.S. policy” — The McClatchy Newspaper story pointed out, “Military planners have abandoned the idea that training Iraqi troops will enable American soldiers to start coming home soon and now believe that U.S. troops will have to defeat the insurgents and secure control of troubled provinces.”
WASHINGTON (AP) — An odd-looking Canadian coin with a bright red flower was the culprit behind a U.S. Defense Department false espionage warning earlier this year about mysterious coin-like objects with radio frequency transmitters.
war is a very profitable business for some very big and powerful corporations such as Halliburton, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, Vinnell and Blackwater. It has been argued that rather than profiteering from war, these corporations are making war for profit. Many of them would not exist as we know them without war. 
Wired Magazine reports on 