Friday, May 28, 2004

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Fisk: Israeli Mossad/Shin Bet Associated with Prison Torture

By Robert Fisk

26 May 2004

I can't wait to see Abu Ghraib prison reduced to rubble by the Americans -
at the request of the new Iraqi government, of course. It will be turned to
dust in order to destroy a symbol of Saddam's brutality. That's what
President Bush tells us. So the re-writing of history still goes on.

Last August, I was invited to Abu Ghraib - by my favourite US General Janis
Karpinski, no less - to see the million-dollar US refurbishment of this
vile place. Squeaky clean cells and toothpaste tubes and fresh pairs of
pants for the "terrorist" inmates. But now, suddenly, the whole kit and
caboodle is no longer an American torture centre. It's still an Iraqi
torture centre, and thus worthy of demolition.

The re-writing of Iraqi history is now going on at supersonic speed.
Weapons of mass destruction? Forget it. Links between Saddam and al-Qa'ida?
Forget it. Liberating the Iraqis from Saddam's Abu Ghraib life of torture?
Forget it. Wedding party slaughtered? Forget it. Clear the decks for both
"full (sic) sovereignty" and "chaotic events". This is, at any rate,
according to Mr Bush. When I heard his hesitant pronunciation of Abu Ghraib
as "Abu Grub" on Monday night, I could only profoundly agree.

But we're in danger again of missing the detail. Just as the unsupervised
armed mercenaries being killed in Iraq are being described by the
occupation authorities as "contractors" or, more mendaciously, "civilians"
- so the responsibility for the porno interrogations at Abu Ghraib is being
allowed to slide into the summer mists over the Tigris river. So let's go
back, for a moment, to the long weeks in which the Department of Bad Apples
allowed its jerks to put leashes around Iraqi necks, forced prisoners to
have sex with each other and raped some Iraqi lasses in the jail.

And let's cast our eyes upon that little, all-important matter of
responsibility. The actual interrogators accused of encouraging US troops
to abuse Iraqi prisoners at Abu Ghraib jail were working for at least one
company with extensive military and commercial contacts with Israel. The
head of an American company whose personnel are implicated in the Iraqi
tortures, it now turns out, attended an "anti-terror" training camp in
Israel and, earlier this year, was presented with an award by Shaul Mofaz,
the right-wing Israeli defence minister.

According to Dr J P London's company, CACI International, the visit of Dr
London - sponsored by an Israeli lobby group and including US congressmen
and other defence contractors - was "to promote opportunities for strategic
partnerships and joint ventures between US and Israeli defence and homeland
security agencies".

The Pentagon and the occupation powers in Iraq insist that only US citizens
have been allowed to question prisoners in Abu Ghraib - but this takes no
account of Americans who may also hold double citizenship. The once secret
torture report by US General Antonio Taguba refers to "third country
nationals" involved in the mistreatment of prisoners in Iraq.

General Taguba mentions Steven Staphanovic and John Israel as involved in
the abuses at Abu Ghraib. Staphanovic, who worked for CACI - known to the
US military as "Khaki" - was said by Taguba to have "allowed and/or
instructed MPs (military police), who were not trained in interrogation
techniques, to facilitate interrogations by 'setting conditions' ... he
clearly knew his instructions equated to physical abuse". One of
Staphanovic's co-workers, Joe Ryan - who was not named in the Taguba report
- now says that he underwent an "Israeli interrogation course" before going
to Iraq.

We know the Pentagon asked Israel for its "rules of engagement" in the
occupied West Bank and Gaza. Israeli officers have briefed their US
opposite numbers and, according to the Associated Press, "in January and
February of 2003, Israeli and American troops trained together in southern
Israel's Negev desert ... Israel has also hosted senior law enforcement
officials from the United States for a seminar on counter-terrorism".

Staphanovic of CACI, who may also be Australian, was accused by Taguba's
army report of making "a false statement to the investigation team
regarding ... his knowledge of abuses". Another outside interrogator, Adel
Nakhla,who may be of Egyptian origin, was a witness to the "stacking" of
naked prisoners in Abu Ghraib. John Israel "misled" investigators by
denying he had witnessed misconduct and did not have "security clearance".
Israel, according to Titan - two of whose employees were mentioned in
Taguba's report - works for one of the company's "sub-contractors". Titan
refused to name the "sub-contractor".

Why? Among the company's former directors is ex-CIA director James Woolsey,
one of the architects of the US invasion of Iraq, a friend of Ahmed Chalabi
and a prominent pro-Israeli lobbyist in Washington. Dr London says CACI
"does not condone or tolerate or endorse in any fashion (sic) any illegal,
inappropriate behaviour on the part of its employees in any circumstances
at any time anywhere".

But it is clear the torture trail at Abu Ghraib has to run much further
than a group of brutal US military cops, all of whom claim "intelligence
officers" told them to "soften up" their prisoners for questioning. Were
they Israeli? Or South African? Or British? Are we going to let the story
go?

Friday, May 21, 2004

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Does Russian Mafia Control Lithuania?

This past week a sensational political scandal rocked Lithuania,and it is connected directly with the playing of the "Russian card" in the country's politics. The Lithuanian State Security Department accused several officials in the president's inner circle of being directly connected with international criminals. Moreover, relying on the secret services of other foreign governments, the Lithuanian secret service collected recordings of conversations of close associates of Lithuanian President Rolandas Paksas with Russian "criminal figures".

Undoubtedly, Russian secret services were also involved because the most important recordings of conversations occurred in Moscow. Lithuanian secret services made public information about a direct link connecting Paksas with the chief sponsor of his election campaign, Russian businessman Yuri Borisov. The secret service made known that it has tapes of conversations between Borisov and Lithuanian Presidential National Security Advisor Remigiyus Achas. In addition, the secret service has tapes of Borisov conversing in Moscow with figures who have for a long time been suspected of connections with international criminals. These figures include Ansor Aksentyev, who is better known by his previous last name of Kikalishvili. He was the vice president of the 21st Century Association. For some time, he shared the duty with Russian State Duma deputy and popular entertainer Josef Kobson. Several Russian mass media reports have called this association an influential criminal organization with dubious ties in the former Soviet republics. The 21st Century Association was created by notorious criminal Otari Kvantrishvili, and its members included such personalities as the so-called "thief in law" Givi Beradze and the famous criminal Vyacheslav Ivankov better known as "Yaponchik."

According to several reports, the Russian secret service suspects the association of drug trafficking, the illegal smuggling of jewels and antiques with cultural and historical significance and other crimes. According to Lithuanian sources, the recorded conversations include demands to Achas "to fulfill his election campaign promises" and also threats to Lithuanian State Security Department Chief Mecys Laurinkus.

Indeed, a major criminal and political scandal is unraveling in the corridors of power in Lithuania. Recently, urgent meetings were called of the president's state defense committee and a plenary session of the Seimas, the Lithuanian parliament, and the military chiefs of staff were also summoned. They all came out with the same statements, acknowledging a serious "threat to national security."

The large role played by Russian capital in Paksas' election victory is no secret to those that followed the campaign of Paksas, who is a former Lithuanian premier and Vilnius mayor. In fact, the millions of dollars donated by Borisov covered the lion's share of Paksas' campaign expenses. However, up till now, this was considered "clean" money donated by Russian business. Some also suspect that the money came from the Russian government, Russian political groups and secret service. Now, however, it turns out that not only did the money come from Russia but that it is "dirty" money as well!

One week before the scandal broke in parliament, the head of the state security service spoke about the interests of several businessmen who were trying to privatize strategically important properties in Lithuania with their "dirty" money.

Aksentyev's daughter's godmother is Russian pop star Alla Pugacheva and her godfather is hockey player Pavel Bure. She resides in Lithuania. Aksentyev was recently prohibited from entering Lithuania.

Deputy head of Lithuania's state security service Arvidas Potsyus recently said that Aksentyev's presence in Lithuania was a threat not only to Lithuania "but also a problem for the EU." In regard to Aksentyev and his ties to criminal organizations in Lithuania, Laurinkus said "[the organizations] are trying to participate in the privatization of strategic objects." Paksas has distanced himself from the accusations calling them "provocations." Achas, who was at the center of the scandal, has been temporarily relieved of his duties.

The scandal should get hotter in the next weeks with an urgent session of the Lithuanian parliament scheduled, investigation by the Lithuanian Prosecutor General commencing and the creation of a special parliamentary commission, which all plan to delve further into the affair. This would all seem like a political provocation if the accusations came from some newspaper and not the Lithuanian Department of State Security. Indeed, the department must possess serious facts if it has decided to undergo such a large-scale political scandal. On the other hand, all the information on this theme is secret, which is the best basis for disregarding "categorical statements" and formulating personal speculation.

However, the fact that international criminal organizations are focusing on small countries as their own estates and attempting to control the state organs of these countries by financing political leaders is not speculation, but reality. It is true, however, that we are more accustomed to seeing this happen in places like Latin America. Indeed, it seems incredible that such a thing could happen in Europe.

Of course, it is difficult to imagine that Lithuanian authorities are little more than puppets in the hands of the mafia. Yet there also seems to be much influence by and obligations to other countries and plenty of personal Lithuanian ambition at play here. Indeed, "authorities" are not pushing Lithuania to the open arms of the EU and NATO.

Nevertheless, the single fact of the extortion of the president (or members of his team) by election campaign sponsors' "payment for services" - for access to certain strategic objects - has been enough to place Lithuanian society in a condition of deep shock.

It is also important to note that, on the eve of these events, Lithuania was already agitated by the YUKOS affair in that YUKOS owns the most important strategic object in Lithuania - the Ma?eikiu Nafta oil refining complex. With the arrival of YUKOS one year ago, the business began to prosper. In fact, the oil complex, which was managed by Americans, earned its first profits after suffering major losses that had put a serious strain on the Lithuanian government budget. The news of the arrest of YUKOS shares caused a great stir in Lithuania. The country's political right wing even proposed urgently buying back the property of YUKOS in Lithuania.

And, once again, there is a new "Russian" theme in Lithuania. Now an enemy has been discovered in the very heart of the government - in the president's circle:

Perhaps, it is more than just a coincidence that the scandal surrounding Paksas and his people, who are accused of ties with the "Russian mafia," began to flare up immediately after the YUKOS affair broke in Moscow. No one knows for sure how "Paksas-Gate," which is the name given to the events by one Western news agency, will end. However, it is very clear how much and how long Lithuanians have feared Russia, and what necessarily results from those fears. It is not out of the question that someone simply decided to take advantage of the moment to achieve his political goals.

Regardless of the political outcome, it seems that Lithuanians could end up rejoicing in the openness of their society. After all, not only the president of a company, but the president of the country is equal to other citizens in that he is not above suspicion by 'competent organs' in orchestrating threats to the country's national security. Is such a thing possible, say, in Russia? Whether or not the president will be removed from his post (such a mechanism exists under the country's constitution) or be acquitted, it really doesn't matter in the long run because Lithuanian democracy will triumph in the process.

Written by Alexander Lototsky, Vilnius

Ukraine, Russia, Bulgaria, Kazakhstan, Poland, Germany, France,
Italy, Israel, USA, Canada, China, Japan, Hong Kong, etc.). The mafia
members named have links to the Solntsevo crime syndicate, which
also has a powerful presence in Ukraine and elsewhere. Recall the
"vor-v-zakone" Vyacheslav "Yaponchik" Ivankov for example. Ivankov
and the Solntsevo crime syndicate have been linked to Ludwig "Tarzan"
Fainberg and the Brighton Beach "Organizatsiya", Semion "Brainy Don"
Mogilevich, Anzor Kikalishvili, Joseph Kobzon, Joseph Grisha "The
Cannibal" Roizes, et. al.

Fainberg's accomplice in cocaine trafficking was Nelson Pablo
Yester Garrido (aka any one of about 30 other aliases) who was
featured on the TV program "America's Most Wanted", while gangster
Anzor Kikalishvili, interceded between Fainberg and other Russian
Mafia leaders. Kikalishvili named NHL superstar, Pavel Bure, to be
his president of the Twenty-First Century business enterprise, which
is a mafia front worth $100 million according to the FBI. Kikalishvili
boasted he had more than 600 mafia "soldiers" in South Florida.
Fainberg and Kikalishvili's extortion of one restaurant owner couple
was described in "Red Mafiya" by Robert I. Friedman.

Stefan Lemieszewski

"Dont make a Soviet Sinatra out of him"
Igor Sedykh Moscow News
Swiss prosecutors suspect Russias popular crooner-cum-MP Iosif Kobzon of being linked to organized crime



A police court in the Swiss town of Nyon upheld the seizure of approximately one million Swiss francs ($800,000) from the bank accounts of two Russian companies, HSM and Sodepra, on grounds that persons controlling these accounts are linked to Russian organized crime. One of the lot was Iosif Kobzon, a popular singer and deputy of the RF State Duma.
Legal Collision

Investigating judge Jean Traccani handed down an arrest and seizure ruling as long ago as 1997. At the time everyone in Switzerland was talking about the case of Sergei Mikhailov (a.k.a. Mikhas) and the Solntsevo organized crime group that he purportedly controlled; the specter of the Russian mob was seen or imagined in almost every business operation. Later on, however, the case seemed to have quietly expired. But then, six years after, it came up again because, according to Pierre-Olivier Wellauer, defense counsel for the two Russian companies, it is not so much a matter of money as that the seizure casts a shadow on the reputation of persons involved in the case.

One-judge police courts in Switzerland typically deal with minor infractions, punishable by a term of up to twelve months in prison.

Cases related to organized crime are handled by a higher court: A confiscation ruling is usually handed down in the course of a criminal trial. But in this case there was a legal collision: For the first time in judicial practice, the legitimacy of a seizure ruling handed down by an investigating judge was challen- ged, and it turned out that the Code of Criminal Procedure does not provide for this. As a result, HSM and Sodepra sued for the return of seized assets as well as for moral damages.

What was it all about? In 1997, the Nyon branch of the SBS bank (later on it merged with UBS, a major Swiss commercial bank) reported to law enforcement agencies what it saw as suspect transactions involving a series of money transfers to the companies accounts.

Formally the bank was guided by the requirements of the money laundering law obligating it to report all dubious operations. Subsequent investigation established that the persons authorized to draw from the accounts in question included Iosif Kobzon, a popular singer and deputy of the RF State Duma; and Yuri Shefler, chairman of the SPI board of directors. According to Interpol, these persons were involved with Solntsevo and Perovo organized crime groups.

Investigating judge Jean Traccani suspected a link between the bank accounts and the Moscow branch of the Swiss Hopf group that acquired a 51 percent stake in the AO Sadko-Arkada joint-stock company which was privatized in 1992. The investigator had two working theories.

According to one, the Swiss company became a target of extortion racket on the part of Shefler and his associates, and it was in fact extortion money that was wired to the Nyon accounts.

The second theory assumed that the Swiss had taken advantage of their position as a shareholding majority to enrich themselves by unscrupulous methods, that being the origin of the money on the Nyon bank accounts. Traccani sent to the RF Prosecutor Generals Office an international investigation commission, asking to question persons involved in the case and secure a briefing on relevant documents. After two years of silence, however, the PGO formally refused to carry out the commission. The refusal apparently served as a signal for persons concerned in Russia to challenge the seizure of assets.

National Hero

The hearing began with the defense lawyer trying to open the judges eyes to the compelling personality of Iosif Kobzon, one of those who was authorized to use the contentious accounts, showing a video about the stage idol-cum-MP that Pierre-Olivier Wellauer had brought from Moscow. "Look at this man: He is a national hero! Dont make him into a Soviet Sinatra," the counsel exclaimed brandishing a sheaf of CDs and a hefty, lavishly illustrated tome about the life of the national celebrity.

Not surprisingly, it was the crooners outstanding personality that ended up in the focus of the court hearing. Responding to the counsels presentation, Prosecutor General Jean-Marc Schwenter recalled that despite his immense and enduring popularity the person in question was banned from entering the United States as well as from taking residence in France. An expert on organized crime added fuel to the fire by saying that police were in possession of evidence pointing to Iosif Kobzons involvement with the Solntsevo organized crime community.

As a result, Kobzons role in the case was blown out of proportion, and the judge even chose to make a point of it in her ruling. "Crooner and political figure are not the kind of occupations that are incompatible with involvement in organized crime," she concluded, recognizing the validity of the evidence pointing to Kobzons links to organized crime. The fact that his name figures on the list of persons authorized to operate suspect accounts at the Nyon bank, the judge said, only goes to support this assumption.

Involvement of persons authorized to use bank accounts with organized crime is the necessary and sufficient grounds for seizure, the judge stressed, citing the existing law. Meanwhile, investigation established that Iosif Kobzon controlled 20 percent of stock in the two companies, registered by the Nyon trust company.

Nonetheless, the prosecutor admitted that Mr. Kobzon was not directly implicated in criminal mob operations, unlike several other persons figuring in the case, who were far better known to law enforcement agencies than to the broad public.

When news about the outcome of the hearing reached Moscow, Iosif Kobzon, in an interview with Agence France Presse, said that he had neither accounts in Swiss banks nor shares in Swiss companies. What is involved in the case in question, however, is a corporate account while Kobzon is listed not as its owner but as a person authorized to draw from it. Actually, the companies are not Swiss but Russian although, again, authority to draw from an account does not mean that Kobzon was their shareholder. It will be recalled that Pavel Borodin was authorized to draw from some Mabetex company accounts but did not hold a stake in the company.

Sadko Takeover

For his part, Yuri Shefler, a Russian vodka magnate, told the Kommersant daily that the HSM and Sodepra companies were established as part of Hopfs operations in Moscow and that he had nothing to do with them after his stake was bought out by the group while the lawsuit was purportedly brought by the Swiss. As a matter of fact, Sheflers name was on the list of those who had authority to draw from the Nyon accounts in 1997, when he took over Sadko-Arkada. But the Hopf group has since sunk into oblivion and this is the reason why its former employees were so outspoken in their depositions in the Nyon court.

The groups former chief financial officer said that Yuri Shefler tried to coerce them into selling their stake below cost. To ensure their own security they had to seek protection services, paying 50,000 francs a month (approximately $30,000) for the privilege. Yet not even that could save them from a squeeze: "On April 12, 1995, Yuri Shefler and his partners, accompanied by armed bodyguards, showed up to tell us that they would cause serious problems for us if they did not get what they wanted." The battle around Sadko even became a subject of a diplomatic scandal. Jean-Pascal Delamuraz, the then president of the confederation, sent Moscow an official letter of protest, asking it to take action to ensure that Swiss firms could operate in the country problem-free. In the end, the Swiss preferred to pay off Shefler with $1.8 million. "It was a concession to the extortionists for the privilege to work on Russian territory," the prosecutor commented.

The defense lawyers attempt to draw the judges attention to the groups price machinations at its Moscow branch was of no avail.

"This is amazing," the prosecutor exclaimed. "Are you going to say next that Christmas should be celebrated in August?" Likewise the defense counsels explanation that the money that had been wired to Nyon was in fact a loan to the two companies that had won a contract from the Moscow city government to manage the Ukraina Hotel, which they were planning to renovate, fell on deaf ears.

The prosecutor dismissed all of that as mob tricks. Investigation showed that Nyon was but a transshipment point in an intricate financial route, via Cyprus to Ireland to New York, that had been worked out to shake off the trail of dirty money which was eventually to return where it had come from - to Moscow. Jean-Marc Schwenter is convinced that such complex operations are conducted not to evade taxes but to blur the origin of ill-gotten gains.

Presumption of Innocence in Reverse

By the judges own admission, the decisive factor in her ruling was the deposition by a federal police commissar that was made behind closed doors. He told about the mob action around Sadko, citing "confidential sources" which suggested that the persons in question were linked to organized crime.

"There is no doubt here whatsoever about the existence of an organized crime group," the judge said. Commenting on the turf war around Sadko, she said it was incredible that "such gangland-style methods of doing business were used even in a country with a different set of values."

"The judge put too much credit in the police commissars testimony," Wellauer said. "The confidential information that he cited is an unacceptable form of presentation of evidence in a court of law. All of these newspaper clippings and random references to other experts prove precious little. Police conducted the investigation unsystematically and without a sense of purpose, and they have neither evidence nor witnesses."

From a legal perspective, the judge claimed, all requirements for seizure had been met. The money placed on the accounts of the former SBS bank was controlled by a criminal organization. Furthermore, it belonged to persons linked to organized crime who failed to present evidence that the assets were to be used for other purposes.

Wellauer, however, denounced the violation of the presumption of innocence, demanding that the seizure be revoked for the simple reason that the court had received no testimony from the persons authorized to operate the accounts in question. But the judge explained that the RF Prosecutor Generals Office, which was asked to carry out a corresponding commission, refused, after 26 months of silence.

On the other hand, in money laundering cases, the presumption of innocence in contemporary law is turned upside down, so should any doubts arise, defendants have to prove that they are not guilty of any wrongdoing. While agreeing with that, the defense counsel said at the end of the hearing that he is going to challenge the ruling at the appeals court of the Vaud canton and, if need be, go all the way up to a federal court.

The hearing at the Nyon police court was unique. "This is the first and last case of this kind," the prosecutor stressed. "As of next year such cases will be prosecuted on the federal level."

"Confiscation of some two million Swiss francs on the two companies bank accounts will not of course ruin their owners," the Geneva based Le Temps comments on the trials outcome. "But this ruling has a symbolic value based as it is on provisions of criminal law pertaining to organized crime whose application stirs up heated controversy."

"This is amazing, the prosecutor exclaimed. "Are you going to say next that Christmas should be celebrated in August?"


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Middle East

How the Middle East is really being remade

By Nir Rosen

BAGHDAD - A few weeks prior to Operation Iraqi Freedom, the US Council of Foreign Relations held a dinner attended mostly by thirtysomething PhDs to discuss the intended consequences of the war. The participants were exuberant about the opportunity liberating Iraq presented to remake the Middle East. The "transformation of Iraqi society" would be a model and guide for the subsequent transformation of Arab society en masse, they enthused. Ecstatically, they spoke of how first the Iraqis, then other Arabs, would learn of civil society, and how it could lift them out of the morass in which they found themselves.

The criticism of Iraqi and Arab society was based on pity and academic disdain, rather than vitriol and hostility. The Persian Gulf and the Arabian Peninsula were pointed to as special examples of a blighted society in desperate need of uplifting. These "artificial societies" were regarded as the worst example of what dark turns Arab culture could take. The diners eagerly convinced each other that Arab culture and society needed a sharp and devastating blow that would "shock and awe" them, so that the English-speaking West could get its attention. They also assumed that after its liberation, a supine Iraqi population, unshackled from its old political masters, would lie quietly while American academics worked their magic and miraculously presented them with a new society.

Their reasons were not the ones proffered to the US public. Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz confessed to Vanity Fair magazine that the weapons of mass destruction claims were a useful "bureaucratic argument", and "the one issue everyone could agree on". As has been revealed in recent books by former White House anti-terrorism coordinator Richard Clarke and insider journalist Bob Woodward, the war against Iraq had been on the minds of administration planners probably long before September 11, 2001. The attacks on that day only provided a fillip, allowing the execution of their plans to remake the Middle East. Since the US public could not be sold on a scheme of grand social revision, the marketing strategy relied on fear, and the various imminent threats that Saddam Hussein allegedly posed.

A year after this bold new strategy was embarked upon, it is worth examining how the neighborhood has been changed by the events of the past 12 months. Recall that the goal was the transformation of Middle Eastern society, and not mere regime change in one state. When the United States invaded Iraq, it had the unequivocal support of just two Arab states - Kuwait and Qatar. Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) provided surreptitious support in the form of clandestine facilities or discreet overflight, but no commitment of troops or open use of facilities. Kuwait and Qatar were the indispensable launching pads for the ground and air war that was quickly concluded.

No one in the US asked the Gulf states what their expectations were about this military adventure. They went along individually with great reluctance because their fear of the US overcame their fear of the adverse reaction of their publics (Kuwait always being the exception). They were also not united in their views of the US intention to invade Iraq.

Saudi Arabia's attitude was the most complex. On the one hand, Saudi nerves had still not recovered from the fact that 15 of the 19 perpetrators on September 11 were Saudi. Acts of terrorist violence in Saudi Arabia were limited in scope and directed mostly at the US presence, but fear that violence could expand (as it later did) remained a constant worry. The al-Saud royal family had to straddle a contradiction. Supporting the Americans was an essential element of recovering from the damage of September 11 and the wave of attacks from prominent US commentators, especially the neo-conservatives who dominated the administration of President George W Bush. On the other hand, the al-Saud were equally conscious of the fact that Osama bin Laden and his sympathizers had used that very same close relationship with the United States to undermine the credibility of the ruling family. The tortured and twisted manifestation of support for the US action was the only possible way out of the dilemma.

Kuwait's attitudes were more straightforward. Iraq had threatened the existence of the Kuwaiti state in one form or another since before it became fully independent. Only a decade before, Iraq had invaded and pillaged Kuwait. Kuwaitis of almost every political persuasion still saw Iraq as a permanent threat and could be counted on to allow their government openly to support the US action. Bahrain had its own reasons for supporting the Americans, not least because the US already enjoyed the committed support of Bahrain's arch-rival, Qatar. The Bahraini majority underclass was solidly Shi'ite and hated Saddam for what he done to the Shi'ites of Iraq. Combined with the feeling that the US military presence was essential to the survival of the al-Khalifah family, this Shi'ite attitude propelled Bahrain to support the Americans, albeit with some superficial reservations.

The UAE saw supporting the Americans as unpopular, but at a level easily containable. Abu Dhabi did its utmost to mask the full extent of support for the Americans.

Qatar supported the United States as forthrightly as the Kuwaitis, but with a special twist. Qatar views a US presence as a necessary component of a national-security strategy. The Americans can deter any foreign enemy. The Qatari state also believes that it has managed to ensure domestic tranquility and popular support by encouraging modernization through political and social freedoms, combined with a clever diplomatic position that stakes out independence from the US. Qatar made its air, land and seas facilities fully available to the Americans, even to the point of hosting the US military's headquarters for the attack. At the same time, Qatari spokesmen took pains to offer public advice to the Americans on how misguided many of Washington's policies were. To its population, the government explained that Qatar's international obligations, especially to the United Nations, made its impossible for the state to do anything but support the Americans.

Transformation, what transformation?
What is wrong with this picture? The Americans saw the invasion of Iraq as a transcendental moment of transformation that would bring the region to democracy and free trade. The Gulf states saw the US action in what can be described as purely realpolitik terms. It is worth asking, however, where does the transformation of the Middle East stand today? The stated intent was simply to transform and reinvent Iraqi society so that it would serve as a shining beacon to the rest of the region and stand as a strong ally to a broader US plan to solve the problems of the entire region.

The planners expected that the Iraqi people would rally to the United States and deliver themselves into the caring US arms to await the transformation. They thought their anointed exile leader would quickly seize control and maintain order. Instead, the place fell apart so rapidly that the planners could not change their plans to accommodate the disaster.

Mobs looted the entire national infrastructure while US troops stood by haplessly, hobbled by the fact that their leadership had made no provision for a course of action that would change its troops from liberators to order-imposing occupiers. Having failed to catch the first clue that things were not as they had hoped them to be, they proceeded with their original plan to decapitate the military, political and economic structure of the country at the ankles.

Now they stand more or less in control of a country seething with resentment and on the verge of open insurrection, and still without a plan in sight. No wonder President Bush launched the Greater Middle East peace initiative as a separate action; achieving his long-term goals of democratizing the region would not happen from within Iraq.

The Gulf states are themselves in a state of shock at the way in which the operation in Iraq has gone bad. They did not necessarily believe in the high-minded and long-winded US plans to transform Iraqi society. They did expect that the United States would apply enough of its military, economic and diplomatic hyper-power to ensure that Iraq would stay quiescent. They were astounded at the series of mistakes the Americans made. New fissures are appearing in the US relationship with the Gulf. US leaders across the political spectrum continue to lambaste the Saudi regime as a breeder of terrorism. Bush cannot even impose his awesome political discipline on his own administration in this regard.

Qatar, which has openly offered to turn itself into the Americans' principal bastion in the region, finds itself on the receiving end of a vitriolic US attack on the basic institution of democracy: uncensored media. Despite the fact that Qatar today hosts enormous US military forces and has committed to financial and political support for US activities in Iraq, it has been given the diplomatic equivalent of the back of the American hand over Aljazeera satellite television. Exciting news, presented with the slant that satisfies the lowest common denominator in its audience and with a very loose hold on accuracy, has made Aljazeera the most popular Arabic medium on the globe. In the midst of a US campaign to foster democracy in the Middle East, it conveys to the world a message that Middle Eastern democracy need not include a free press.

The disenchantment with US policies is affecting its business relationships as well. Before September 11, the Saudis had decided to open their natural-gas fields to foreign development. US companies were at the front of a list of companies invited to participate. After the Iraqi invasion, work that had been suspended was reopened. Contracts were awarded to three companies, none of them American. Saudis have been boycotting US companies and their students have stopped registering in US universities. An important cultural bridge has been destroyed. Gulf businessmen are also afraid of visiting the United States, fearing the intrusive interrogations and resenting the humiliations to which they are exposed on entry. Instead of promoting a dialogue of civilizations, they have finally concretized the clash of civilizations. Wars started to end terror have, according to US intelligence officials, increased al-Qaeda recruitment tenfold.

Within Iraq, a population that was initially inclined to be patient and observe US intentions for it is increasingly joining a popular resistance. Sunnis and Shi'ites, once on the verge of civil war, are now united in their opposition to the occupation, and their militias cooperate with each other, sending supplies and words of encouragement. Fallujah became a rallying cry for Iraqis, the first victory against the occupation, the first liberated city. Posters on Iraqi walls announce that "Fallujah is the beginning of the end of the occupation". From a hotel room in Baghdad, waiting to hear the next explosion, one cannot help but wonder whether Iraq is the beginning of the end of the American empire.

(Copyright 2004 Asia Times Online Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact content@atimes.com for information on our sales and syndication policies.)

Wednesday, May 19, 2004

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OPINION
Bush's failed Mideast policy is creating more terrorism
By U.S. Senator Ernest F. Hollings

Originally published in the Charleston Post and Courier
May 6, 2004

With 760 dead in Iraq and over 3,000 maimed for life, home folks continue to argue why we are in Iraq -- and how to get out.

Now everyone knows what was not the cause. Even President Bush acknowledges that Saddam Hussein had nothing to do with 9/11. Listing the 45 countries where al-Qaida was operating on September 11 (70 cells in the U.S.), the State Department did not list Iraq. Richard Clarke, in "Against All Enemies," tells how the United States had not received any threat of terrorism for 10 years from Saddam at the time of our invasion.

On Page 231, John McLaughlin of the CIA verifies this to Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz. In 1993, President Clinton responded to Saddam's attempt on the life of President George H.W. Bush by putting a missile down on Saddam's intelligence headquarters in Baghdad. Not a big kill, but Saddam got the message -- monkey around with the United States and a missile lands on his head. Of course there were no weapons of mass destruction. Israel's intelligence, Mossad, knows what's going on in Iraq. They are the best. They have to know.

Israel's survival depends on knowing. Israel long since would have taken us to the weapons of mass destruction if there were any or if they had been removed. With Iraq no threat, why invade a sovereign country? The answer: President Bush's policy to secure Israel.

Led by Wolfowitz, Richard Perle and Charles Krauthammer, for years there has been a domino school of thought that the way to guarantee Israel's security is to spread democracy in the area. Wolfowitz wrote: "The United States may not be able to lead countries through the door of democracy, but where that door is locked shut by a totalitarian deadbolt, American power may be the only way to open it up." And on another occasion: Iraq as "the first Arab democracy ... would cast a very large shadow, starting with Syria and Iran but across the whole Arab world." Three weeks before the invasion, President Bush stated: "A new regime in Iraq would serve as a dramatic and inspiring example for freedom for other nations in the region."

Every president since 1947 has made a futile attempt to help Israel negotiate peace. But no leadership has surfaced amongst the Palestinians that can make a binding agreement. President Bush realized his chances at negotiation were no better. He came to office imbued with one thought -- re-election. Bush felt tax cuts would hold his crowd together and spreading democracy in the Mideast to secure Israel would take the Jewish vote from the Democrats. You don't come to town and announce your Israel policy is to invade Iraq. But George W. Bush, as stated by former Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill and others, started laying the groundwork to invade Iraq days after inauguration. And, without any Iraq connection to 9/11, within weeks he had the Pentagon outlining a plan to invade Iraq. He was determined.

President Bush thought taking Iraq would be easy. Wolfowitz said it would take only seven days. Vice President Cheney believed we would be greeted as liberators. But Cheney's man, Chalabi, made a mess of the de-Baathification of Iraq by dismissing Republican Guard leadership and Sunni leaders who soon joined with the insurgents. Worst of all, we tried to secure Iraq with too few troops.

In 1966 in South Vietnam, with a population of 16,543,000, Gen. William C. Westmoreland, with 535,000 U.S. troops was still asking for more. In Iraq with a population of 24,683,000, Gen. John Abizaid with only 135,000 troops can barely secure the troops much less the country. If the troops are there to fight, they are too few. If there to die, they are too many. To secure Iraq we need more troops -- at least 100,000 more. The only way to get the United Nations back in Iraq is to make the country secure. Once back, the French, Germans and others will join with the U.N. to take over.

With President Bush's domino policy in the Mideast gone awry, he keeps shouting, "Terrorism War." Terrorism is a method, not a war. We don't call the Crimean War with the Charge of the Light Brigade the Cavalry War. Or World War II the Blitzkrieg War. There is terrorism in Northern Ireland against the Brits. There is terrorism in India and in Pakistan. In the Mideast, terrorism is a separate problem to be defeated by diplomacy and negotiation, not militarily. Here, might does not make right -- right makes might. Acting militarily, we have created more terrorism than we have eliminated.


Saturday, May 15, 2004

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THE GRAY ZONE

by SEYMOUR M. HERSH
How a secret Pentagon program came to Abu Ghraib.
Issue of 2004-05-24
Posted 2004-05-15

The roots of the Abu Ghraib prison scandal lie not in the criminal inclinations of a few Army reservists but in a decision, approved last year by Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, to expand a highly secret operation, which had been focussed on the hunt for Al Qaeda, to the interrogation of prisoners in Iraq. Rumsfeld’s decision embittered the American intelligence community, damaged the effectiveness of élite combat units, and hurt America’s prospects in the war on terror.

According to interviews with several past and present American intelligence officials, the Pentagon’s operation, known inside the intelligence community by several code words, including Copper Green, encouraged physical coercion and sexual humiliation of Iraqi prisoners in an effort to generate more intelligence about the growing insurgency in Iraq. A senior C.I.A. official, in confirming the details of this account last week, said that the operation stemmed from Rumsfeld’s long-standing desire to wrest control of America’s clandestine and paramilitary operations from the C.I.A.

Rumsfeld, during appearances last week before Congress to testify about Abu Ghraib, was precluded by law from explicitly mentioning highly secret matters in an unclassified session. But he conveyed the message that he was telling the public all that he knew about the story. He said, “Any suggestion that there is not a full, deep awareness of what has happened, and the damage it has done, I think, would be a misunderstanding.” The senior C.I.A. official, asked about Rumsfeld’s testimony and that of Stephen Cambone, his Under-Secretary for Intelligence, said, “Some people think you can bullshit anyone.”

The Abu Ghraib story began, in a sense, just weeks after the September 11, 2001, attacks, with the American bombing of Afghanistan. Almost from the start, the Administration’s search for Al Qaeda members in the war zone, and its worldwide search for terrorists, came up against major command-and-control problems. For example, combat forces that had Al Qaeda targets in sight had to obtain legal clearance before firing on them. On October 7th, the night the bombing began, an unmanned Predator aircraft tracked an automobile convoy that, American intelligence believed, contained Mullah Muhammad Omar, the Taliban leader. A lawyer on duty at the United States Central Command headquarters, in Tampa, Florida, refused to authorize a strike. By the time an attack was approved, the target was out of reach. Rumsfeld was apoplectic over what he saw as a self-defeating hesitation to attack that was due to political correctness. One officer described him to me that fall as “kicking a lot of glass and breaking doors.” In November, the Washington Post reported that, as many as ten times since early October, Air Force pilots believed they’d had senior Al Qaeda and Taliban members in their sights but had been unable to act in time because of legalistic hurdles. There were similar problems throughout the world, as American Special Forces units seeking to move quickly against suspected terrorist cells were compelled to get prior approval from local American ambassadors and brief their superiors in the chain of command.

Rumsfeld reacted in his usual direct fashion: he authorized the establishment of a highly secret program that was given blanket advance approval to kill or capture and, if possible, interrogate “high value” targets in the Bush Administration’s war on terror. A special-access program, or sap—subject to the Defense Department’s most stringent level of security—was set up, with an office in a secure area of the Pentagon. The program would recruit operatives and acquire the necessary equipment, including aircraft, and would keep its activities under wraps. America’s most successful intelligence operations during the Cold War had been saps, including the Navy’s submarine penetration of underwater cables used by the Soviet high command and construction of the Air Force’s stealth bomber. All the so-called “black” programs had one element in common: the Secretary of Defense, or his deputy, had to conclude that the normal military classification restraints did not provide enough security.

“Rumsfeld’s goal was to get a capability in place to take on a high-value target—a standup group to hit quickly,” a former high-level intelligence official told me. “He got all the agencies together—the C.I.A. and the N.S.A.—to get pre-approval in place. Just say the code word and go.” The operation had across-the-board approval from Rumsfeld and from Condoleezza Rice, the national-security adviser. President Bush was informed of the existence of the program, the former intelligence official said.



The people assigned to the program worked by the book, the former intelligence official told me. They created code words, and recruited, after careful screening, highly trained commandos and operatives from America’s élite forces—Navy seals, the Army’s Delta Force, and the C.I.A.’s paramilitary experts. They also asked some basic questions: “Do the people working the problem have to use aliases? Yes. Do we need dead drops for the mail? Yes. No traceability and no budget. And some special-access programs are never fully briefed to Congress.”

In theory, the operation enabled the Bush Administration to respond immediately to time-sensitive intelligence: commandos crossed borders without visas and could interrogate terrorism suspects deemed too important for transfer to the military’s facilities at Guantánamo, Cuba. They carried out instant interrogations—using force if necessary—at secret C.I.A. detention centers scattered around the world. The intelligence would be relayed to the sap command center in the Pentagon in real time, and sifted for those pieces of information critical to the “white,” or overt, world.

Fewer than two hundred operatives and officials, including Rumsfeld and General Richard Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, were “completely read into the program,” the former intelligence official said. The goal was to keep the operation protected. “We’re not going to read more people than necessary into our heart of darkness,” he said. “The rules are ‘Grab whom you must. Do what you want.’”

One Pentagon official who was deeply involved in the program was Stephen Cambone, who was named Under-Secretary of Defense for Intelligence in March, 2003. The office was new; it was created as part of Rumsfeld’s reorganization of the Pentagon. Cambone was unpopular among military and civilian intelligence bureaucrats in the Pentagon, essentially because he had little experience in running intelligence programs, though in 1998 he had served as staff director for a committee, headed by Rumsfeld, that warned of an emerging ballistic-missile threat to the United States. He was known instead for his closeness to Rumsfeld. “Remember Henry II—‘Who will rid me of this meddlesome priest?’” the senior C.I.A. official said to me, with a laugh, last week. “Whatever Rumsfeld whimsically says, Cambone will do ten times that much.”

Cambone was a strong advocate for war against Iraq. He shared Rumsfeld’s disdain for the analysis and assessments proffered by the C.I.A., viewing them as too cautious, and chafed, as did Rumsfeld, at the C.I.A.’s inability, before the Iraq war, to state conclusively that Saddam Hussein harbored weapons of mass destruction. Cambone’s military assistant, Army Lieutenant General William G. (Jerry) Boykin, was also controversial. Last fall, he generated unwanted headlines after it was reported that, in a speech at an Oregon church, he equated the Muslim world with Satan.

Early in his tenure, Cambone provoked a bureaucratic battle within the Pentagon by insisting that he be given control of all special-access programs that were relevant to the war on terror. Those programs, which had been viewed by many in the Pentagon as sacrosanct, were monitored by Kenneth deGraffenreid, who had experience in counter-intelligence programs. Cambone got control, and deGraffenreid subsequently left the Pentagon. Asked for comment on this story, a Pentagon spokesman said, “I will not discuss any covert programs; however, Dr. Cambone did not assume his position as the Under-Secretary of Defense for Intelligence until March 7, 2003, and had no involvement in the decision-making process regarding interrogation procedures in Iraq or anywhere else.”

In mid-2003, the special-access program was regarded in the Pentagon as one of the success stories of the war on terror. “It was an active program,” the former intelligence official told me. “It’s been the most important capability we have for dealing with an imminent threat. If we discover where Osama bin Laden is, we can get him. And we can remove an existing threat with a real capability to hit the United States—and do so without visibility.” Some of its methods were troubling and could not bear close scrutiny, however.

By then, the war in Iraq had begun. The sap was involved in some assignments in Iraq, the former official said. C.I.A. and other American Special Forces operatives secretly teamed up to hunt for Saddam Hussein and—without success—for Iraqi weapons of mass destruction. But they weren’t able to stop the evolving insurgency.



In the first months after the fall of Baghdad, Rumsfeld and his aides still had a limited view of the insurgency, seeing it as little more than the work of Baathist “dead-enders,” criminal gangs, and foreign terrorists who were Al Qaeda followers. The Administration measured its success in the war by how many of those on its list of the fifty-five most wanted members of the old regime—reproduced on playing cards—had been captured. Then, in August, 2003, terror bombings in Baghdad hit the Jordanian Embassy, killing nineteen people, and the United Nations headquarters, killing twenty-three people, including Sergio Vieira de Mello, the head of the U.N. mission. On August 25th, less than a week after the U.N. bombing, Rumsfeld acknowledged, in a talk before the Veterans of Foreign Wars, that “the dead-enders are still with us.” He went on, “There are some today who are surprised that there are still pockets of resistance in Iraq, and they suggest that this represents some sort of failure on the part of the Coalition. But this is not the case.” Rumsfeld compared the insurgents with those true believers who “fought on during and after the defeat of the Nazi regime in Germany.” A few weeks later—and five months after the fall of Baghdad—the Defense Secretary declared,“It is, in my view, better to be dealing with terrorists in Iraq than in the United States.”

Inside the Pentagon, there was a growing realization that the war was going badly. The increasingly beleaguered and baffled Army leadership was telling reporters that the insurgents consisted of five thousand Baathists loyal to Saddam Hussein. “When you understand that they’re organized in a cellular structure,” General John Abizaid, the head of the Central Command, declared, “that . . . they have access to a lot of money and a lot of ammunition, you’ll understand how dangerous they are.”

The American military and intelligence communities were having little success in penetrating the insurgency. One internal report prepared for the U.S. military, made available to me, concluded that the insurgents’“strategic and operational intelligence has proven to be quite good.” According to the study:

Their ability to attack convoys, other vulnerable targets and particular individuals has been the result of painstaking surveillance and reconnaissance. Inside information has been passed on to insurgent cells about convoy/troop movements and daily habits of Iraqis working with coalition from within the Iraqi security services, primarily the Iraqi Police force which is rife with sympathy for the insurgents, Iraqi ministries and from within pro-insurgent individuals working with the CPA’s so-called Green Zone.


The study concluded, “Politically, the U.S. has failed to date. Insurgencies can be fixed or ameliorated by dealing with what caused them in the first place. The disaster that is the reconstruction of Iraq has been the key cause of the insurgency. There is no legitimate government, and it behooves the Coalition Provisional Authority to absorb the sad but unvarnished fact that most Iraqis do not see the Governing Council”—the Iraqi body appointed by the C.P.A.—“as the legitimate authority. Indeed, they know that the true power is the CPA.”

By the fall, a military analyst told me, the extent of the Pentagon’s political and military misjudgments was clear. Donald Rumsfeld’s “dead-enders” now included not only Baathists but many marginal figures as well—thugs and criminals who were among the tens of thousands of prisoners freed the previous fall by Saddam as part of a prewar general amnesty. Their desperation was not driving the insurgency; it simply made them easy recruits for those who were. The analyst said, “We’d killed and captured guys who had been given two or three hundred dollars to ‘pray and spray’”—that is, shoot randomly and hope for the best. “They weren’t really insurgents but down-and-outers who were paid by wealthy individuals sympathetic to the insurgency.” In many cases, the paymasters were Sunnis who had been members of the Baath Party. The analyst said that the insurgents “spent three or four months figuring out how we operated and developing their own countermeasures. If that meant putting up a hapless guy to go and attack a convoy and see how the American troops responded, they’d do it.” Then, the analyst said, “the clever ones began to get in on the action.”

By contrast, according to the military report, the American and Coalition forces knew little about the insurgency: “Human intelligence is poor or lacking . . . due to the dearth of competence and expertise. . . . The intelligence effort is not coördinated since either too many groups are involved in gathering intelligence or the final product does not get to the troops in the field in a timely manner.” The success of the war was at risk; something had to be done to change the dynamic.



The solution, endorsed by Rumsfeld and carried out by Stephen Cambone, was to get tough with those Iraqis in the Army prison system who were suspected of being insurgents. A key player was Major General Geoffrey Miller, the commander of the detention and interrogation center at Guantánamo, who had been summoned to Baghdad in late August to review prison interrogation procedures. The internal Army report on the abuse charges, written by Major General Antonio Taguba in February, revealed that Miller urged that the commanders in Baghdad change policy and place military intelligence in charge of the prison. The report quoted Miller as recommending that “detention operations must act as an enabler for interrogation.”

Miller’s concept, as it emerged in recent Senate hearings, was to “Gitmoize” the prison system in Iraq—to make it more focussed on interrogation. He also briefed military commanders in Iraq on the interrogation methods used in Cuba—methods that could, with special approval, include sleep deprivation, exposure to extremes of cold and heat, and placing prisoners in “stress positions” for agonizing lengths of time. (The Bush Administration had unilaterally declared Al Qaeda and other captured members of international terrorist networks to be illegal combatants, and not eligible for the protection of the Geneva Conventions.)

Rumsfeld and Cambone went a step further, however: they expanded the scope of the sap, bringing its unconventional methods to Abu Ghraib. The commandos were to operate in Iraq as they had in Afghanistan. The male prisoners could be treated roughly, and exposed to sexual humiliation.

“They weren’t getting anything substantive from the detainees in Iraq,” the former intelligence official told me. “No names. Nothing that they could hang their hat on. Cambone says, I’ve got to crack this thing and I’m tired of working through the normal chain of command. I’ve got this apparatus set up—the black special-access program—and I’m going in hot. So he pulls the switch, and the electricity begins flowing last summer. And it’s working. We’re getting a picture of the insurgency in Iraq and the intelligence is flowing into the white world. We’re getting good stuff. But we’ve got more targets”—prisoners in Iraqi jails—“than people who can handle them.”

Cambone then made another crucial decision, the former intelligence official told me: not only would he bring the sap’s rules into the prisons; he would bring some of the Army military-intelligence officers working inside the Iraqi prisons under the sap’sauspices. “So here are fundamentally good soldiers—military-intelligence guys—being told that no rules apply,” the former official, who has extensive knowledge of the special-access programs, added. “And, as far as they’re concerned, this is a covert operation, and it’s to be kept within Defense Department channels.”

The military-police prison guards, the former official said, included “recycled hillbillies from Cumberland, Maryland.” He was referring to members of the 372nd Military Police Company. Seven members of the company are now facing charges for their role in the abuse at Abu Ghraib. “How are these guys from Cumberland going to know anything? The Army Reserve doesn’t know what it’s doing.”

Who was in charge of Abu Ghraib—whether military police or military intelligence—was no longer the only question that mattered. Hard-core special operatives, some of them with aliases, were working in the prison. The military police assigned to guard the prisoners wore uniforms, but many others—military intelligence officers, contract interpreters, C.I.A. officers, and the men from the special-access program—wore civilian clothes. It was not clear who was who, even to Brigadier General Janis Karpinski, then the commander of the 800th Military Police Brigade, and the officer ostensibly in charge. “I thought most of the civilians there were interpreters, but there were some civilians that I didn’t know,” Karpinski told me. “I called them the disappearing ghosts. I’d seen them once in a while at Abu Ghraib and then I’d see them months later. They were nice—they’d always call out to me and say, ‘Hey, remember me? How are you doing?’” The mysterious civilians, she said, were “always bringing in somebody for interrogation or waiting to collect somebody going out.” Karpinski added that she had no idea who was operating in her prison system. (General Taguba found that Karpinski’s leadership failures contributed to the abuses.)

By fall, according to the former intelligence official, the senior leadership of the C.I.A. had had enough. “They said, ‘No way. We signed up for the core program in Afghanistan—pre-approved for operations against high-value terrorist targets—and now you want to use it for cabdrivers, brothers-in-law, and people pulled off the streets’”—the sort of prisoners who populate the Iraqi jails. “The C.I.A.’s legal people objected,” and the agency ended its sap involvement in Abu Ghraib, the former official said.

The C.I.A.’s complaints were echoed throughout the intelligence community. There was fear that the situation at Abu Ghraib would lead to the exposure of the secret sap, and thereby bring an end to what had been, before Iraq, a valuable cover operation. “This was stupidity,” a government consultant told me. “You’re taking a program that was operating in the chaos of Afghanistan against Al Qaeda, a stateless terror group, and bringing it into a structured, traditional war zone. Sooner or later, the commandos would bump into the legal and moral procedures of a conventional war with an Army of a hundred and thirty-five thousand soldiers.”

The former senior intelligence official blamed hubris for the Abu Ghraib disaster. “There’s nothing more exhilarating for a pissant Pentagon civilian than dealing with an important national security issue without dealing with military planners, who are always worried about risk,” he told me. “What could be more boring than needing the coöperation of logistical planners?” The only difficulty, the former official added, is that, “as soon as you enlarge the secret program beyond the oversight capability of experienced people, you lose control. We’ve never had a case where a special-access program went sour—and this goes back to the Cold War.”

In a separate interview, a Pentagon consultant, who spent much of his career directly involved with special-access programs, spread the blame. “The White House subcontracted this to the Pentagon, and the Pentagon subcontracted it to Cambone,” he said. “This is Cambone’s deal, but Rumsfeld and Myers approved the program.” When it came to the interrogation operation at Abu Ghraib, he said, Rumsfeld left the details to Cambone. Rumsfeld may not be personally culpable, the consultant added, “but he’s responsible for the checks and balances. The issue is that, since 9/11, we’ve changed the rules on how we deal with terrorism, and created conditions where the ends justify the means.”



Last week, statements made by one of the seven accused M.P.s, Specialist Jeremy Sivits, who is expected to plead guilty, were released. In them, he claimed that senior commanders in his unit would have stopped the abuse had they witnessed it. One of the questions that will be explored at any trial, however, is why a group of Army Reserve military policemen, most of them from small towns, tormented their prisoners as they did, in a manner that was especially humiliating for Iraqi men.

The notion that Arabs are particularly vulnerable to sexual humiliation became a talking point among pro-war Washington conservatives in the months before the March, 2003, invasion of Iraq. One book that was frequently cited was “The Arab Mind,” a study of Arab culture and psychology, first published in 1973, by Raphael Patai, a cultural anthropologist who taught at, among other universities, Columbia and Princeton, and who died in 1996. The book includes a twenty-five-page chapter on Arabs and sex, depicting sex as a taboo vested with shame and repression. “The segregation of the sexes, the veiling of the women . . . and all the other minute rules that govern and restrict contact between men and women, have the effect of making sex a prime mental preoccupation in the Arab world,” Patai wrote. Homosexual activity, “or any indication of homosexual leanings, as with all other expressions of sexuality, is never given any publicity. These are private affairs and remain in private.” The Patai book, an academic told me, was “the bible of the neocons on Arab behavior.” In their discussions, he said, two themes emerged—“one, that Arabs only understand force and, two, that the biggest weakness of Arabs is shame and humiliation.”

The government consultant said that there may have been a serious goal, in the beginning, behind the sexual humiliation and the posed photographs. It was thought that some prisoners would do anything—including spying on their associates—to avoid dissemination of the shameful photos to family and friends. The government consultant said, “I was told that the purpose of the photographs was to create an army of informants, people you could insert back in the population.” The idea was that they would be motivated by fear of exposure, and gather information about pending insurgency action, the consultant said. If so, it wasn’t effective; the insurgency continued to grow.

“This shit has been brewing for months,” the Pentagon consultant who has dealt with saps told me. “You don’t keep prisoners naked in their cell and then let them get bitten by dogs. This is sick.” The consultant explained that he and his colleagues, all of whom had served for years on active duty in the military, had been appalled by the misuse of Army guard dogs inside Abu Ghraib. “We don’t raise kids to do things like that. When you go after Mullah Omar, that’s one thing. But when you give the authority to kids who don’t know the rules, that’s another.”

In 2003, Rumsfeld’s apparent disregard for the requirements of the Geneva Conventions while carrying out the war on terror had led a group of senior military legal officers from the Judge Advocate General’s (jag) Corps to pay two surprise visits within five months to Scott Horton, who was then chairman of the New York City Bar Association’s Committee on International Human Rights. “They wanted us to challenge the Bush Administration about its standards for detentions and interrogation,” Horton told me. “They were urging us to get involved and speak in a very loud voice. It came pretty much out of the blue. The message was that conditions are ripe for abuse, and it’s going to occur.” The military officials were most alarmed about the growing use of civilian contractors in the interrogation process, Horton recalled. “They said there was an atmosphere of legal ambiguity being created as a result of a policy decision at the highest levels in the Pentagon. The jag officers were being cut out of the policy formulation process.” They told him that, with the war on terror, a fifty-year history of exemplary application of the Geneva Conventions had come to an end.



The abuses at Abu Ghraib were exposed on January 13th, when Joseph Darby, a young military policeman assigned to Abu Ghraib, reported the wrongdoing to the Army’s Criminal Investigations Division. He also turned over a CD full of photographs. Within three days, a report made its way to Donald Rumsfeld, who informed President Bush.

The inquiry presented a dilemma for the Pentagon. The C.I.D. had to be allowed to continue, the former intelligence official said. “You can’t cover it up. You have to prosecute these guys for being off the reservation. But how do you prosecute them when they were covered by the special-access program? So you hope that maybe it’ll go away.” The Pentagon’s attitude last January, he said, was “Somebody got caught with some photos. What’s the big deal? Take care of it.” Rumsfeld’s explanation to the White House, the official added, was reassuring: “‘We’ve got a glitch in the program. We’ll prosecute it.’ The cover story was that some kids got out of control.”

In their testimony before Congress last week, Rumsfeld and Cambone struggled to convince the legislators that Miller’s visit to Baghdad in late August had nothing to do with the subsequent abuse. Cambone sought to assure the Senate Armed Services Committee that the interplay between Miller and Lieutenant General Ricardo Sanchez, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, had only a casual connection to his office. Miller’s recommendations, Cambone said, were made to Sanchez. His own role, he said, was mainly to insure that the “flow of intelligence back to the commands” was “efficient and effective.” He added that Miller’s goal was “to provide a safe, secure and humane environment that supports the expeditious collection of intelligence.”

It was a hard sell. Senator Hillary Clinton, Democrat of New York, posed the essential question facing the senators:

If, indeed, General Miller was sent from Guantánamo to Iraq for the purpose of acquiring more actionable intelligence from detainees, then it is fair to conclude that the actions that are at point here in your report [on abuses at Abu Ghraib] are in some way connected to General Miller’s arrival and his specific orders, however they were interpreted, by those MPs and the military intelligence that were involved.. . .Therefore, I for one don’t believe I yet have adequate information from Mr. Cambone and the Defense Department as to exactly what General Miller’s orders were . . . how he carried out those orders, and the connection between his arrival in the fall of ’03 and the intensity of the abuses that occurred afterward.


Sometime before the Abu Ghraib abuses became public, the former intelligence official told me, Miller was “read in”—that is, briefed—on the special-access operation. In April, Miller returned to Baghdad to assume control of the Iraqi prisons; once the scandal hit, with its glaring headlines, General Sanchez presented him to the American and international media as the general who would clean up the Iraqi prison system and instill respect for the Geneva Conventions. “His job is to save what he can,” the former official said. “He’s there to protect the program while limiting any loss of core capability.” As for Antonio Taguba, the former intelligence official added, “He goes into it not knowing shit. And then: ‘Holy cow! What’s going on?’”

If General Miller had been summoned by Congress to testify, he, like Rumsfeld and Cambone, would not have been able to mention the special-access program. “If you give away the fact that a special-access program exists,”the former intelligence official told me, “you blow the whole quick-reaction program.”

One puzzling aspect of Rumsfeld’s account of his initial reaction to news of the Abu Ghraib investigation was his lack of alarm and lack of curiosity. One factor may have been recent history: there had been many previous complaints of prisoner abuse from organization like Human Rights Watch and the International Red Cross, and the Pentagon had weathered them with ease. Rumsfeld told the Senate Armed Services Committee that he had not been provided with details of alleged abuses until late March, when he read the specific charges. “You read it, as I say, it’s one thing. You see these photographs and it’s just unbelievable. . . . It wasn’t three-dimensional. It wasn’t video. It wasn’t color. It was quite a different thing.” The former intelligence official said that, in his view, Rumsfeld and other senior Pentagon officials had not studied the photographs because “they thought what was in there was permitted under the rules of engagement,” as applied to the sap. “The photos,” he added, “turned out to be the result of the program run amok.”

The former intelligence official made it clear that he was not alleging that Rumsfeld or General Myers knew that atrocities were committed. But, he said, “it was their permission granted to do the sap, generically, and there was enough ambiguity, which permitted the abuses.”

This official went on, “The black guys”—those in the Pentagon’s secret program—“say we’ve got to accept the prosecution. They’re vaccinated from the reality.” The sap is still active, and “the United States is picking up guys for interrogation. The question is, how do they protect the quick-reaction force without blowing its cover?” The program was protected by the fact that no one on the outside was allowed to know of its existence. “If you even give a hint that you’re aware of a black program that you’re not read into, you lose your clearances,” the former official said. “Nobody will talk. So the only people left to prosecute are those who are undefended—the poor kids at the end of the food chain.”

The most vulnerable senior official is Cambone. “The Pentagon is trying now to protect Cambone, and doesn’t know how to do it,” the former intelligence official said.



Last week, the government consultant, who has close ties to many conservatives, defended the Administration’s continued secrecy about the special-access program in Abu Ghraib. “Why keep it black?” the consultant asked. “Because the process is unpleasant. It’s like making sausage—you like the result but you don’t want to know how it was made. Also, you don’t want the Iraqi public, and the Arab world, to know. Remember, we went to Iraq to democratize the Middle East. The last thing you want to do is let the Arab world know how you treat Arab males in prison.”

The former intelligence official told me he feared that one of the disastrous effects of the prison-abuse scandal would be the undermining of legitimate operations in the war on terror, which had already suffered from the draining of resources into Iraq. He portrayed Abu Ghraib as “a tumor” on the war on terror. He said, “As long as it’s benign and contained, the Pentagon can deal with the photo crisis without jeopardizing the secret program. As soon as it begins to grow, with nobody to diagnose it—it becomes a malignant tumor.”

The Pentagon consultant made a similar point. Cambone and his superiors, the consultant said, “created the conditions that allowed transgressions to take place. And now we’re going to end up with another Church Commission”—the 1975 Senate committee on intelligence, headed by Senator Frank Church, of Idaho, which investigated C.I.A. abuses during the previous two decades. Abu Ghraib had sent the message that the Pentagon leadership was unable to handle its discretionary power. “When the shit hits the fan, as it did on 9/11, how do you push the pedal?” the consultant asked. “You do it selectively and with intelligence.”

“Congress is going to get to the bottom of this,” the Pentagon consultant said. “You have to demonstrate that there are checks and balances in the system.” He added, “When you live in a world of gray zones, you have to have very clear red lines.”

Senator John McCain, of Arizona, said, “If this is true, it certainly increases the dimension of this issue and deserves significant scrutiny. I will do all possible to get to the bottom of this, and all other allegations.”

“In an odd way,” Kenneth Roth, the executive director of Human Rights Watch, said, “the sexual abuses at Abu Ghraib have become a diversion for the prisoner abuse and the violation of the Geneva Conventions that is authorized.” Since September 11th, Roth added, the military has systematically used third-degree techniques around the world on detainees. “Some jags hate this and are horrified that the tolerance of mistreatment will come back and haunt us in the next war,” Roth told me. “We’re giving the world a ready-made excuse to ignore the Geneva Conventions. Rumsfeld has lowered the bar.”

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Who has a right to your property?

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Posted: May 15, 2004
1:00 a.m. Eastern


© 2004 WorldNetDaily.com

In response to a recent column, a reader asked:


I couldn't tell how you view land ownership in terms of property right. Is the earth the birthright of all, with title to parts of it to be determined by payment to the community of its annual rental value, or does the purchase of a parcel by one person from another satisfy the right of all other people to enjoy the earth?


This question reveals a generation of environmental education in this country that is devoid of understanding the fundamental principle of property ownership and of the relationship between property ownership and freedom.

The reader assumes that property rights attached to ownership arise from the "payment to the community of its annual rental value."

Property rights do not arise from the "community" or from the government. The right to hold and use property is endowed by the Creator. Every member of every species has the right to claim, hold and use any land – until a more powerful competitor takes it. This is the undeniable law of nature.

For centuries, humans claimed, held and used land like all other animals – until a more powerful competitor took it. Over time, people devised ways to claim, hold and convey land without bloodshed. In most of the world, the patriarch, and later the king, was accepted as the owner of the land and entitled to dictate how it would be used and by whom.

This view of land ownership was embraced by philosophers such as Thomas Hobbes and Jean Jacques Rousseau, who believed that the king should own all the resources in order to assure appropriate distribution of the land's resources to the people. This is the philosophy from which modern socialism emerged.

John Locke rejected this view and taught that land belonged to its first possessor, who confirmed his ownership by mixing his own labor with the land and its resources to sustain his own life. This is the philosophy from which modern capitalism emerged.

In the early days of America, land ownership was sacred. Once owned, no person or government could take the owned land without just compensation. Over time, the sanctity of land ownership has been compromised by policies based on the socialist philosophy – as reflected in the reader's question. That all people have some claim to the land and its resources is a socialist belief that now permeates all U.S. land policy.

This belief is articulated in the U.N.'s policy on land use, established by the U.N. Conference on Human Settlements in 1976. It is at the core of Agenda 21 and the policy recommendations of the President's Council on Sustainable Development. It is the basis for the rash of "visioning" projects undertaken in communities across the nation, and it is at the heart of virtually all of the state and local "comprehensive planning" initiatives.

The idea that a land owner is, in fact, only empowered to use some part of the land by virtue of the "annual rent paid to the community," while all other people retain some interest and claim to the non-rented portions of the land, is abhorrent to the philosophy of John Locke, to capitalism and to freedom.

Still, in every community, comprehensive plans are being adopted that take the fundamental right to use privately owned land away from the owner and vest the authority to use private property in the hands of community "stakeholders." In policies that flow from laws such as the Endangered Species Act and many other environmental laws, agencies of the federal government assume the power to dictate how private landowners may use their own land.

The right of a private owner to use land and its resources is being systematically stripped from the American system of government. In its place has grown a socialist system of "community" control of private property, enforced by government. This transformation has already had severe social and economic consequences and has placed America on a course that will inevitably follow the failed Soviet experience.

Despite the howls and screams of environmental organizations, American lawmakers -- at every level of government -- should reject comprehensive plans and land-management policies that replace private ownership with public control of land use. Private ownership of land is meaningless without the authority to use it. The definition of ownership, after all, is the "power to control use." Power to control the use of property is freedom to control. There can be no freedom when the community or government has the power to control use of private property.

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Henry Lamb is the executive vice president of the Environmental Conservation Organization and chairman of Sovereignty International.

Tuesday, May 11, 2004

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Introductory Comments on Conspiracy From STRATEGIC RELOCATION

(Government Threat Section)



THE “GOOD OLD’ BOYS” NETWORK

This is an amplification of the workings of Group Four--the corrupt law enforcement boys that do the dirty work for the controllers. They constitute what are referred to as the “black” sectors of our own government, and are linked to a larger sector of the organized criminal world. This is one reason why the FBI maintains so many underworld contacts. It’s not just for utilitarian purposes of tracking the underworld. They assist each other in numerous covert activities.



Each of the Federal Services (FBI, CIA, ATF, INS, Secret Service, etc. ) have many good and patriotic people working for them. The good guys are the regular, naive, “want to serve my country” types who are assigned the legitimate tasks of government enforcement. Virtually every agency head knows about the black side of his organization. No one is allowed to run these agencies unless he can be trusted to execute the special orders that come down via discrete private channels. Upper level managers who are part of the conspiracy are always watching and judging both the above ground side and the covert “black” side to see who can be trusted to do corrupt work or who has to be removed.



They look for signs of unprincipled behavior in those they invite to do the “dirty tricks” stuff. These guys carouse, they cheat regularly on their wives, and in short, don’t have any scruples about doing any job for money or future advancement. These are carefully cultivated and tested with a variety of semi-legal activities to make sure they don’t have much of a conscience. Once they enter the “black” underground, they enter the world of covert operations--but not just ordinary covert operations (because there are both legitimate and criminal types of operations performed by the same agency). I do not have the space in this book to detail all the evidence for this, but I will tell you this:

1. The CIA runs a worldwide drug distribution net, to finance this black underground series of operations. Kun San, the infamous drug warlord of the Iron triangle testified of this openly--that his major client was the CIA and he could name names. Barry Seal was killed after revealing his involvement in flying cargo planes loaded with drugs for the CIA into the famous Mena Arkansas 10,000 foot rural runway (during Governor Clinton’s term).

2. The FBI regularly assists and covers up for numerous illicit government operations. Occasionally, critical evidence is falsified in their now discredited forensics labs in order to alter the outcomes of certain investigations. The FBI played a major role in the cover-up of the JFK assassination, the Waco attack, the Oklahoma City Bombing, and the Vince Foster murder.

3. CIA and Secret Service agents who were part of the “black” underground side, pulled off the assassination of John F. Kennedy, Bobby Kennedy and Martin Luther King, to make them martyrs for a much larger political purpose. The killers may not have known the purpose, but those who gave the orders did.


John F. Kennedy was, in my opinion, the first president to be elected who actually knew that he was put into power by this powerful underground group. He was only a second level person himself however, and quite disposable, as we later found out. JFK was taken out by the very same leaders who put him in. The job was carried out by a select group of dirty tricks boys from the CIA, Secret Service, and FBI. This was the world’s first good look at the workings of the conspiracy. They made a lot of sloppy mistakes, and got away with it for only one reason--they had enough control over the media, members of the Supreme Court, Congress, and a host of others that they could cover up almost anything. Their errors were huge and needed multiple cover-ups. Watching how they did it told me a lot about how extensive their powers are. Before I go into some details, let me backtrack and show how this gang of government hit-men operates in various parts of the federal security forces.


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World Affairs Brief, February 13, 2004 Copyright Joel Skousen. Partial quotations with attribution permitted. Cite source as Joel Skousen’s World Affairs Brief (http://www.JoelSkousen.com).

HOW TO ANALYZE THE NEWS AND WHAT GOES ON AROUND YOU

Critical analysis of current events is a complex process that is not systematized or rigid. All the information you see or gather is, generally, a combination of truth, half-truths, and error. Filtering out the truth begins with finding reliable sources, as well as critically scrutinizing sources that are known to have a specific bias.

Reliable Sources: No journalist or historian bases his writings on original material, except when relating what he or she personally experiences. This world is much too big with much too much going on for anyone to directly witness anything but a small fraction of life’s happenings. Thus, we all have to rely on sources of information. As all of my readers know, most of the world has become heavily reliant upon the establishment media. People are busy, with little time to study and analyze current events. So they scan the front page each day, or watch the TV evening news, relying on these easy, quick sound bites to "inform" them about the world.

Almost everyone who gets this minimum dose of daily news thinks that they know what is going on in the world. This is not so, even though the media rarely tells an outright lie. What writers and editors do is purposefully omit key pieces of information that would significantly change people’s opinion about what is being presented. This brings up the first rule in finding reliable sources. Search for someone who is skeptical of the official version, and who searches out key information that has been withheld by establishment sources.

It is fascinating to see how uniform the evening news is. No matter which channel you turn to, the same stories appear with the same general emphasis, even with regard to local stories. A common illusion today is that Fox News is significantly more conservative than the other big three networks. Not so. Fox is merely playing the role of the pro-government cheerleader, just like CNN did during the Gulf War, when it came out of obscurity to become an instant major player. That never happens without government ties. Meanwhile, the other three majors are doing their part. They criticize the current administration mildly, enough to satisfy the liberal opposition. In reality, however, they are part of the same machine designed to protect any insider administration, whether Democratic or Republican, from its strongest critics on the constitutional right. They make sure they keep the most damaging evidences of conspiracy out of the public eye.

Virtually every major metropolitan area in the US has a major liberal, establishment newspaper which promotes this hidden agenda. In turn, every state of the Union is more or less controlled by the concentration of voters in those liberal metro areas. Even though most states have a sizeable body of rural conservatives, their voice is rarely heard at the polls.

The one thing you can learn from the liberal and controlled media, including arch liberal newspapers like the Washington Post, NY Times, and LA Times, is the direction in which the conspiracy against liberty is going. I spend about a third of my time watching what the opposition does. When they start uniformly promoting certain issues in all the liberal journals (global warming, smart growth, gun control, etc.), it is obvious that there is some coordination going on. But remember, you can only learn to see through the selectively filtered news dispensed by the establishment media if you have other sources that feed you the missing pieces.

So where do you look for good alternative news sources? First off, don’t believe everything on the Internet. Just because an alternative news source appears anti-establishment does not mean it is honest or a true advocate for liberty. In fact, many of the most well known and well funded alternative news media outlets are leftist. Oddly enough, this does not mean that these sites are the most dangerous opponents to liberty. Even though I reject their big government socialism, many have recently become allies in the fight to ferret out useful information on the betrayal of US interests by the Bush administration (which the left believes has a "right wing" agenda).

The most dangerous sites are those supposedly on the "right" (posing as conservative), but which are actually shilling for the Bush administration. Some of them are sincere but blind, while others are manipulated by their hidden funding sources. Newsmax.com, for example, is funded in part by establishment insiders like Richard Mellon Scaife, and is predictably and unabashedly uncritical of nearly everything Bush does. Chris Ruddy, who runs Newsmax, should know better after publishing a book on the evidence surrounding the Vince Foster murder. But he is strangely silent about evils and deceptions of the Bush administration. WorldNetDaily.com is much better, but it still puts out occasion garbage. NewsWithViews.com is the site I think shows the best judgment about a broad range of issues.

The Washington Times, owned by the Mooneys, is pro-Bush to a fault, and never even allows a hint of conspiracy issues or evidence to surface in its articles. Its sister publication, Insight Magazine, seems to be a bit more independent and rigorous. Insight does some first class investigative reporting, but still holds back on criticizing Bush. I’ve always suspected that the Mooneys, with their seemingly bottomless pit of money, are fronting for a government organization, perhaps the CIA. The dark side of the US government is expert in funding both sides of the political spectrum, thus controlling both sides.

The establishment has also secretly funded or taken over most conservative talk radio stations. Rush Limbaugh was "turned" early on. He was rewarded with millions in salary increases. I knew when it happened. He suddenly switched from open discussion of conspiracy issues to deriding and denigrating anyone who called in expressing thoughts on conspiracy. Now, there are very few truly independent, conservative voices on talk radio left. Almost all radio stations in the country are owned by one of the four or five major broadcast companies like Clear Channel, Citadel, Cumulous, and Intercom. Slowly, the most hard-hitting and independent conservative talk show hosts are being pushed out or fired. Even Christian radio stations are letting go of hosts who dare challenge President Bush.

To me, the Bush betrayal of liberty and constitutional principles has become so open and blatant, that anyone claiming to be a champion of liberty can no longer stand with Bush, at least unconditionally. This is a key litmus test of whether or not you can trust sources who claim to be conservative. All of the major Christian leaders who support Bush unconditionally are either willfully blind or sold out to the lure of popular appeal. They know that to criticize Bush is to court financial disaster. Still, there are a few on the Christian right who have the courage to criticize the Bush administration. Gary Bauer for a time was caught up in the pro-Bush euphoria, but has now retreated. The most consistently insightful Christian critic of the Bush administration is Chuck Baldwin. He is worth listening to on www.chuckbaldwinlive.com.

On the left, the CIA directly cultivates journalists who can be relied on to publish key leaks and slanted information—a practice that is illegal but done anyway. Some journalists, I am told, are even on secret monthly retainers. One thing you can count on. There isn’t a single investigative journalist who regularly comes out with blockbuster revelations from inside government, who isn’t on the receiving end of regular, purposeful, government leaks. There are even a few on the right that receive leaks from sources in government claiming to be patriotic. However, these sources only leak information confirming and supporting the Bush justifications for war and intervention. It is strange that we rarely see any whistleblowers emerge from the CIA anymore. The dark side has apparently eliminated all opposition within that agency. The FBI still has a few that break ranks, but since the Justice Department refuses to give them a hearing, I think any others contemplating blowing the whistle will decide instead to remain silent or resign.

This much is for sure. No truly patriotic CIA agent or FBI agent is allowed to leak critical information about illegal government activities or conspiracy for long. They are hunted down and rousted out of the government, and are often prosecuted like criminals by federal agencies eager to discredit and silence them. Dozens of whistleblowing agents from all federal agencies are languishing in US federal prisons on trumped up charges.

In a similar vein, watch out for the many up-and-coming "private" intelligence sources, like Stratfor.com, Debka.com or Geostrategy-Direct. When organizations with a world-wide intelligence reach suddenly appear out of nowhere, with no substantial traceable sources of funding, you can be assured they are almost always tapping into government sources. Stratfor was started by a college professor, and almost at its inception had an instant worldwide presence of top notch economic and geo-political intelligence. The analyses on that site are suspiciously skewed along lines that would mask the real motives behind world events. Debka.com is run by an Israeli business journalist who openly admitted to me that his sources are all government insiders. The trouble with that kind of arrangement is that a one or two man shop, even if sincere, can’t possible check up on whether they are being fed disinformation or not. Sometimes they can tell, but usually they cannot.

Another example is the Northeast Intelligence Network (NEIN), which also claims to know too much for a group that is truly private—especially one that claims to be on the right side of the political spectrum (which is specifically excluded from true insider information). In making warnings about terrorism, this outfit claims to have analyzed thousands of telephone intercepts. No private source has access to this kind of information. Either they are making it up or they are tapping into government intelligence directly, which makes them no more private than government covert mercenary corporations like DynCorp, MPRI, and Vinelli. Yes, NEIN may have a few military types who feed them information. I too have a few who occasionally let me in on what they observe, none of which is specifically classified or illegal to disclose. However, no one in the military leaking the kind of info NEIN publishes can do so regularly without being caught—especially when NEIN has an internet presence that openly publishes these claims. In like manner, watch out for Al Martin and Sherman Skolnick. They both claim more than they can know without having government sources feeding them.

Insider connected corporations and wealthy individuals also control think tanks on both the right and the left. The Hoover Institution, American Enterprise Institute, and National Review, even though they have done good research in the past, have become shills for neo-conservative globalist intervention. The Heritage Foundation used to be really conservative and hard hitting until it started to receive funding from establishment sources. Now it is relatively benign. Rarely does it criticize the Bush administration. The only exception to the corruption by funding trend has been the libertarian Cato Institute. Despite receiving major funding from establishment sources, it still resists control, and has not strayed far from its libertarian roots - except that it will never accuse the government of conspiracy. That seems to be the universal requirement for keeping an organization free from establishment attacks. No one is allowed to play with the majors if they present evidence of conspiracy.

On the left, we still have with us organizations that grew out of Communist or Marxist influence within tax exempt foundations. Early on, the left targeted and gained control of the Carnegie, Brookings, and Ford Foundations. Even younger foundations like the Wallace, MacArthur, and Pew Charitable Trust are run with a liberal agenda. Some, like the Rand Corporation, Wackenhut Corrections and BCCI, are suspected of being outright government operations, dressed in civilian garb.

Then there are the traditional globalist organizations like the CFR, Trilateral Commission and Aspen Institute. Although each of these organizations takes great pains to include in their membership up and coming middle-of-the-roaders, along with a few unthinking conservatives, to mask their hidden agenda, it is my opinion that these organizations are where the really dangerous people, who actively work toward the subversion of American constitutional sovereignty, congregate. Keep an eye on the top leaders of these organizations. I have noted that since the Iraq war, the media has been calling upon spokesmen from the CFR much more frequently than in prior years. I suspect the media is trying to bring the CFR into the mainstream consciousness of Americans in a subtle, positive way.

Education and Experience: I don’t accept anything in the news at face value without comparing it to what I already know is true. The greater the body of true knowledge that you possess, the easier it is to see fallacies and falsehoods. The more shallow your store of "facts" and true experiences, the harder it is to scrutinize new information, especially when it falls outside your limited area of expertise or experience. Those who come from a home where learning is a continuing affair enriched by good books and alternative news, and not confined to television and establishment schools exclusively, have a head start in this process. In public schools students develop a body of "knowledge" in the social sciences and historical areas that is politically skewed and largely distorted. Because these "truths" are repeated by everyone and assumed true, even good people can sometimes become resistant to changing their minds. All of you who have tried to introduce others to evidence of conspiracy and corruption in government know what I mean.

Regardless of your background, the best way to become a critical thinker is to start reading argument-oriented commentaries on various subjects. The best source of such commentaries is transcripts of debates where contrasting presentations are given on two opposing issues, followed by a counter to each view and lastly a counter to the counter. That’s what it takes to really see error. States that publish voter pamphlets often use this format for initiatives. Also, the Foundation for Economic Education (FEE) each month publishes "Ideas on Liberty," a collection of confrontational essays directly countering bad ideas in economics, law and politics. It makes for stimulating reading, and is not difficult to understand. See www.fee.org on the web.

Personal experience in various aspects of life can also be an analytical tool. Often, my ability to see something false in a statement by government is due to my understanding of how government works, not only because of my political science training, but also due to my experience working in Washington, DC and in the military. The most valuable type of experience is not obvious, however. Sometimes it’s more important to be able to figure out what CAN’T be known so that you can detect sources that are lying. Having had a "top secret" clearance myself, and having also done FOIA searches to try to penetrate the wall of government secrecy (often used improperly to cover for illegal acts), I have a pretty good idea of what secrets one can and cannot get access to, without being a "deep cover" disinformation agent. This kind of experiential knowledge is especially useful in identifying gaps and falsehoods in alternative news and private intelligence analysis.

Common knowledge about how life works is also essential to see through pie-in-the-sky and too-good-to-be-true claims and schemes. One of the best ways to gain this kind of experience is to be determined to become well rounded in life, both in skills and in knowledge. You have to go out of your way to do so, as the world demands ever more specialization. Yes, everyone has to specialize in something to set themselves somewhat apart from others in the job market, but that shouldn’t stop you from using your spare time to learn a little about a lot of other things. Self learning through books is the most economical way to do this. Even if your children don’t go to college, make sure they learn enough about practical physics, electricity, chemistry, and other fields so they can make intelligent choices in life.

For example, I took several shop classes in high school as electives, and found that I thoroughly enjoyed building things and working with my hands. I knew I should pursue a different field in order to make a living, but I intuitively knew these skills were also essential in life, especially for a family man. Later, in college, I continued to expand my skills in the manual trades with classes on welding, construction, and machining. I also tried to become well-rounded in technical and professional knowledge. I studied economics, law, political science, social science, psychology and philosophy—the good and the bad in each field. The bad was what college provided; the good had to be ferreted out on my own. Most everything I learned in the social sciences in college was junk. However, being confronted with falsehoods and having to search for truth (on my own time) was invaluable.

If you have gained a broad generalist background in the sciences, and know how the natural world works, you can often spot flaws in the growing number of phony scientific claims that abound on the internet. Even if you can’t see through a particular suspicious claim, at least you can seek help from others more knowledgeable and usually understand their response. We are constantly bombarded by people pushing get-rich-quick schemes, free energy schemes, and bizarre scientific claims about doomsday scenarios. Recent threats about giant asteroids (Planet X) colliding with earth, or claims about the earth’s poles shifting on a certain date due to astronomical alignment of planets (causing the flooding of half the US continent) have all turned out to be bogus. What was paraded on the internet as "scientific" opinion backing up these claims turned out to be merely New Age visionaries and a few pseudo scientists who were tapping into spiritualist sources. Thousands of people get caught up in these frenzies of fear. We have enough real threats from globalist domination without getting stressed out over bogus claims. Educating yourself in all aspects of life is the best way to prepare yourself to distinguish the fraudulent from the real.

Using logic: It is not enough, however, to merely accumulate knowledge and facts like so many books on a shelf. You must also learn how to filter that information and assemble it into a realistic view of the world. Most people know how to draw a simple conclusion from a logical proposal: A = B and B = C. Therefore A must equal C. This is deductive reasoning. However, in a complex world filled with multiple layers of deception and sophisticated lies, it is inductive reasoning that you must master in order to analyze the news and put together a coherent view of modern history.

Inductive reasoning is much more difficult to master. It involves taking a wide sampling of seemingly random information or observations and picking out patterns of truth, sufficient to derive broader conclusions. There are several reasons why most people do so poorly at inductive reasoning. For one thing, few have access to a wide range of details to analyze in the first place. Much of the blame for this lies with the media and the school system, on which the vast majority of people are reliant for their information, and which systematically omits critical details. Even when more information and evidence is available, however, few people have the patience to remember the details, much less to sort through the conflicts and contradictions found in the details long enough to derive conclusions or see the patterns. Inductive reasoning takes a good memory and a lot of mental processing.

This is the essential art of thinking that allows a few to discover hidden conspiracies, especially when there is a lack of defectors from the higher echelons that could reveal the degree of collusion that may exist. People have little trouble seeing small conspiracies, which abound in criminal events, mafia activities, and drug dealings. But they have trouble seeing the larger hidden hand of control that links many of these groups together, if only peripherally. It is this larger element of control that is the key indicator of an over-arching conspiracy working against the interests of sovereignty and the Constitution to destroy liberty.

Here is some of the basic inductive evidence or patterns of details that should lead someone to suspect that a larger conspiracy exists:

1) With few exceptions, almost never do the "big boys" get caught or prosecuted for major crimes (Allied war crimes of WWII, Enron, WorldCom scandals, etc.). This trend indicates that higher authority protects these powerful people. When judges consistently deny the introduction of evidence that points to government collusion, we can also rightly suspect that judges are involved in this collusion.

2) Powerful interests in the West have consistently funded Communism, protected it from public exposure, defended Stalin by denying his atrocities, and given Pulitzer and Nobel Prizes to the worst perpetrators of violence and deception. One could hypothesize that this was due to the stupidly and ignorance of our leaders, if this pattern only rarely occurred. But after 50 years of aiding Communist revolutions, shipping atomic bomb plans and materials to Russia and allowing spies to roam the halls of government at will, one can rightly suspect these Harvard and Yale grads can’t be doing this out of mere ignorance.

Those who back the stupidity theory or the theory that the perpetrators are merely naïve liberals are of course partially correct. Many are. But stupidity theorists fail to acknowledge the experience of multiple anti-communist voices of reason, who confronted these leaders with their "naiveté and stupidity," protesting each and every one of these sellouts of liberty as they were occurring. They bear testimony to the hostile reaction they received after confronting our leaders with this evidence of betrayal. We can track the efforts of leaders to fire the critics, bury the evidence, and in other ways protect the guilty.

When this pattern is repeated decade after decade, despite mounting evidence of the disastrous policies that were being promulgated, it becomes increasingly more difficult for the rational mind to believe that all this is merely because of stupidity and sociological predilections (at least at the highest levels).

3) Historically, there emerges over time increasing evidence of past conspiracies for control and power. As time has passed since the killing of JFK, for example, more government whistleblowers have surfaced to tell of more official government involvement, including threats if they ever reveal what they know. This is true regarding other far-reaching conspiracies as well. Whether the subject is government collusion with the Mafia, covering for Russian and Chinese rearmament, running drugs to fund black ops in the CIA, or the purposeful allowing of illegal immigration, we see a widening picture of collusion and conspiracy at the highest levels. In reaction to the charges that do surface, government leaders uniformly blame every evil on individual rogue elements in police, or law enforcement. Yet the evidence from whistleblowers is consistent: that cover-ups and suppression of dissent increases the higher they go in the appeals process. Again, this is evidence of over-arching, top-down control in conspiracy—not simply covering up to protect the boss.

The evidence for these kinds of patterns can only be found in watching and analyzing details of events stretching over years and decades of history, then forming them into a cohesive, consistent whole. The resulting picture of the world can be described, but only superficially. Those who master the skill of inductive reasoning have the ability to form their own world view, and constantly check it against the assertions of others to filter truth from deception. Those who don’t are relegated to a dependency on others for in-depth analysis, a position fraught with risk as lies become ever more sophisticated and complex.

A Correct World View: We cannot understand how this world operates if we hold to a purely secular, evolutionary, or humanistic view. Even though the spiritual spectrum is mostly hidden to man on earth, its workings can be detected if one is sensitive to truth, and if one avoids offending the source of all truth by chronic violations of conscience. You cannot, for example, really understand the following conundrums about conspiracy without contemplating the possibility of Satanic control:

· The fact that people involved in the conspiracy for global control already have more money and power than any man can use. Why should these continue to push for global control?

· The generational affect. The conspiracy doesn’t fade or alter course after the death of key people. If the driving force were only an individual or a small group of megalomaniacs, they would be incapable of controlling the direction others would take after they are gone.

· The fact that the globalists, in prepping the world for WWIII and encouraging a Russian/Chinese nuclear preemptive strike on the West, would also destroy the wealth and power of these same powerful conspirators. Why would anyone do this?

These aspects of the conspiracy cannot be explained by conventional leftist anti-capitalist jargon about greed, power and class struggle—even though these do play a significant role. The thirst for control of oil is also part of the picture, but it doesn’t explain the globalists’ plan to risk partial destruction of the West in an effort to create a Hegelian conflict out of which people can be induced to give up national sovereignty and join in a NWO.

My only theory of explanation rests upon my belief that systematic evil really does exist in the universe and is in opposition to what God is trying to do. The head of evil spiritual forces (called Satan) is actively working to destroy God’s purposes here on earth. Only Satan has the will and the motive to do as much destruction on a global scale as we have seen in the past and are destined to experience in the future. His ability to pull other men into this greater evil agenda is based, I believe, on the fact that all evil men, even when they possess wealth and power, need protection from the looming threat of God’s judgment as well as immunity from earthly prosecution.

Satan has a pretty good track record of protecting his own on earth. Even in WWII, when major conspirators allowed some of their wealth in Europe to be destroyed, it was restored to them during the Lend Lease rebuilding process. In Iraq, corporations in collusion with the globalist government agenda are also being enriched in the corrupt process of reconstruction.

None of this is meant to say that a large number of people have direct knowledge of or knowingly participate in the Satanic aspects of this conspiracy. Only the few at the top need to know, although anyone who operates within the inner levels surely knows that there is some form of hidden power structure that controls all major government moves. The lower echelon participants are manipulated through a variety of garden variety inducements like promises of future position, power and fame. Threats are used only when necessary. Liberal intellectuals are easily induced to work for the New World Order because their academic training induces them to believe they are part of an elite corps capable of bringing order and "fairness" to a greed filled competitive world. They are blind to the hidden victims of "compassionate liberalism." Likewise, there is a growing body of conservative socialists who fail to comprehend the inherent evil behind their new-found ideas about "compassionate conservatism," which is nothing more than socialism in another clever disguise. Perhaps the most disingenuous crowd of all are the journalists, who live in the fairly tale world of assertions that: 1) they are unbiased and neutral in their work; 2) they are free from the concerns of "greedy capitalism;" and 3) they have journalistic freedom within their news rooms. The latter is only true if they are predictable liberals. All true conservatives find themselves eventually driven out or forced to toe the official line.

The biggest fools in this world are those who view themselves as the brightest—those highly educated and smart people who proudly assert that there could never be an over-arching conspiracy because there would be too many people in the know, and that the secret would slip out. Aside from those who are actually and knowingly fronting for the conspiracy, most of these naive pundits are simply showing their lack of experience in dealing with this level of sophistication and deception. Sometimes insiders do see too much and talk, but these are quickly silenced in any number of ways ranging from subtle threats to outright elimination. The higher up in the conspiracy you go, the tighter the control system is. With a lack of direct evidence and first-hand accounts of the ongoing conspiracy, we must rely on our own abilities to gather and analyze information to formulate a reliable picture of what’s going on in the world. The more accurate that picture is, the better prepared we will be to protect ourselves from the real threats that all of us will have to face.