Archive for January, 2007

British government created counterinsurgency murder gangs in Northern Ireland

Neil Mackay, in the Scottish Sunday Herald — How Britain created Ulster’s murder gangs — reports on Britain campaign of murder against Irish Republicans:

Since the Sunday Herald was founded in 1999, it has led the way in exposing the “dirty war” in Northern Ireland. Today, we report on the most shocking revelations to date. Our investigations show that far from merely “turning” terrorists to work for the state, British military intelligency actually created loyalist murder gangs to operate as proxy assassins. They even cleared areas in which the gangs were operating of police and army, to allow them to carry out their hits and escape.

Unfortunately, counterinsurgency campaigns inevitably turn dirty. The state uses whatever means are considered necessary to maintain power and control. While condeming the alleged crimes of their opponents, governments commit similar, often even more barbarous, crimes. After all, the state has vastly greater resources of terror than do the rebels being suppressed. This reality should be remembered by all viewing a supposedly “moral” counterinsurgency campaign. The reports that the United States created Iraqi death squads is another illustration of this reality.

Add comment January 31st, 2007

Prosepctive journalism: Excuses for war on Iran

Josh Marshall engages in “prospective journalism,” speculating on the nature of the “incident” which will be used as an excuse to launch war on Iran

Some key requirements occur to me.

1. Despite being fake, the incident must seem reasonably credible.

2. It must appear serious enough that discounting its importance or questioning its veracity appears the height of unseriousness.

3. It must place the majority of us in the odd and unexpected position of granting to President Bush the unfettered discretion to launch a war against Iran at the time and place of his choosing, despite our desire that he start it right now.

1 comment January 31st, 2007

Politics TV video of Saturday’s antiwar protest

“PoliticsTV filmed the Iraq War protest and march in Washington, DC on Saturday, January 27, 2007. Comments from Susan Sarandon, Tim Robbins, Sean Penn, Rep. Conyers, Rep. Nadler, Rep. Waters and Tom Andrews from Win Without War”:

Add comment January 30th, 2007

Guernica Iraq

The YouTube description:

“Guernica” was painted by Picasso in 1937. It depicts the senseless massacre by the Nazi Luftwaffe in the Basque city of Guernica, Spain. The attack was ordered at the behest of fascist Spanish General, Francisco Franco, during the Spanish Civil War. Guernica was a non-military target, the innocent people of the town were attacked in an attempt to psychologically break the will of those who opposed Franco’s fascistic nationalist pursuit.

Picasso captured an intense scene reflecting the deeply unjust suffering, agony and despair experienced by the people of Guernica. And in doing so he produced one of the most iconic, powerful and affecting pieces of anti-war artwork ever put to canvas. It is little surprise then that a reproduction of the painting, which hangs outside the entrance to the UN Security Council, was covered while Colin Powell was attempting to sell the Iraq War to the world.

The people of Iraq are suffering what amounts to the similar unjust brutality inflicted on the people of Guernica, except it’s practically on a daily basis. A more accurate comparison would be to imagine having the London Tube and Bus bombings everyday. And have them happen so often that they become a predictable daily occurrence and part of life.

2 comments January 30th, 2007

Torture-supporter CIA station chief in Baghdad

Ken Silverstein, at Harper’s online, reports that the new CIA station chief in Baghdad is someone implicated in the Extraordinary Rendition torture-by-proxy campaign:

[S]everal sources have informed me that the CIA has nominated a man who has been widely criticized within the agency and seen as a bad fit for the role. Furthermore, I’m told, the new station chief is closely associated with detainee abuses, especially those involving “extraordinary renditions”—the practice of covertly delivering terrorist suspects to foreign intelligence agencies to be interrogated….

James was a key advocate for the increased use of renditions after 9/11 and was a central figure in the rendering of Ibn al-Shaikh al-Libi, who was suspected of running a major Al Qaeda training camp. Al-Libi was picked up by Pakistani security forces in late 2001, following the fighting at Tora Bora in Afghanistan, and was turned over to the FBI for questioning. But James wanted the CIA to take charge of al-Libi, and so he pressed his case with then‒CIA director George Tenet, with Black at the CTC, and, through them, with the White House. Despite the strong objections of the head of Bagram Air base and FBI director Robert Mueller, James got his way, and the CIA soon took charge of al-Libi. (Newsweek has an account of the fight between FBI and CIA, which I have confirmed independently.)

“[James] thought al-Libi was being uncooperative and he saw the FBI as an impediment to getting the information he wanted,” said one person with direct knowledge of the affair. “He had a sympathetic audience at the CIA and [also at] the White House, which spearheaded the rendition. But al-Libi was already cooperating with the FBI, only the White House didn’t think [the Bureau] was being aggressive enough.”

The CIA transferred al-Libi to Egyptian intelligence, which is known for its “aggressive” tactics. The Egyptians got al-Libi to talk, but much of what he said, undoubtedly obtained under torture, was nonsense—including bogus information about collaboration between Al Qaeda and Saddam Hussein that soon found its way into then‒Secretary of State Colin Powell’s notorious address to the United Nations.

Was “James” appointed because of his lack of qualms at torture, as the U.S. revs up its efforts to quash the Iraqis into submission? Or, was he selected because he played a role in generating Powell’s silly UN testimony, thus securing support for the war, in other words, because of his willingness to lie to support the policies of those in power? Stay tuned. The bodies piling up in Iraq will tell us, if we care to listen.

Add comment January 29th, 2007

Fighting militarization of anthropology

The Chronicle of Higher Education has an article by anthropologist Roberto J. Gonzalez of San Jose State University that deals with the struggle against military dominance of that field. It shows how anthropologists are deeply troubled by the abusive roles of psychologists. Psychologists struggling to transform the American Psychological Association should join forces with these progressive anthropologists:

We Must Fight the Militarization of Anthropology

By ROBERTO J. GONZALEZ

When students take introductory courses in cultural anthropology, they learn the techniques necessary for understanding daily life in peasant villages or among bands of hunter-gatherers. Professors teach them about the importance of building rapport with informants, the insights gained from cultural immersion, and the benefits of linguistic fluency — while interacting with people in the Amazon Basin, the Kalahari Desert, or the Australian outback.

But students rarely learn that today a small but growing number of Central Intelligence Agency, Defense Department, and State Department officials and contractors are promoting militarized versions of the same techniques as key elements of the “war on terror.” Military and intelligence agents seem to be particularly interested in applying academic knowledge to interrogation and counterinsurgency efforts in the Middle East and Central Asia, and at the U.S. detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

Recent events have dramatically demonstrated that anthropological and other scholarly information is a potentially valuable intelligence tool. But history tells us that such information can easily be misused when put into the wrong hands. That is why we, as scholars, must make a continuing effort to speak out against the misappropriation of our work. Last summer the governing council of the American Psychological Association, under tremendous pressure from the rank and file, passed a resolution prohibiting members from engaging in torture or training others to use it — although the statement allowed members to assist in interrogations. In late fall, a colleague and I presented a resolution at the annual meeting of the American Anthropological Association unambiguously opposing torture and the use of anthropological knowledge as an element of torture. Those present at the business meeting unanimously passed the statement. Now we must find ways to promote a wider discussion of the issue.

Early evidence of using culture as a weapon came from the Abu Ghraib scandal revealed in 2004. That year the journalist Seymour M. Hersh reported in The New Yorker on the brutal practices of U.S. personnel at the Iraqi prison. Hersh included a quote from an unnamed academic who noted that the anthropologist Raphael Patai’s 1973 book The Arab Mind was “the bible of the neocons on Arab behavior.” Hersh implied that Patai’s depiction of “sex as a taboo vested with shame and repression” in Arab cultures provided U.S. interrogators with culturally specific material that could be used to recruit Iraqi informants — and, with or without official approval, to develop torture techniques tailor made for Iraqi prisoners. If true, that marked a new and dangerous phase in applied anthropology. (Ruth Benedict’s classic study of Japanese national character, The Chrysanthemum and the Sword: Patterns of Japanese Culture, published in 1946, had helped the U.S. military — to create a peaceful post-World War II occupation in Japan.)

Widespread concern erupted among anthropologists about how interrogators might use readily accessible ethnographic data for the abuse and torture of prisoners. Would the possibility lead anthropologists to censor themselves? Would they be recruited for interrogation or counterinsurgency work? Would collaboration with spy agencies or interrogation teams create global mistrust of scholars conducting research abroad? Those and many other questions arose in rapid succession.

In some cases, the answers appeared quickly. In October 2005, the anthropological association, the discipline’s largest professional organization, posted a CIA job announcement in several of its journals. The association accepted the advertisement without wide consultation of its members. Many anthropologists were outraged. (By this time, reports about the CIA’s extraordinary rendition program and its secret prison network had appeared.) The CIA’s covert dealings with anthropology-association officials during the cold war had set an ominous precedent, as had the involvement of social scientists in the ill-fated Project Camelot, a 1960s counterinsurgency-research project planned by the Pentagon for use in Latin America. The CIA’s job announcement was eventually retracted, and the anthropology association assembled a special committee to examine the roles played by anthropologists in military and intelligence work.

Other anthropologists were troubled by the findings of the historian Alfred W. McCoy, who has recently analyzed how interrogation techniques used by U.S. spy agencies have rapidly evolved over the last several years to incorporate behavioral-science research. His 2006 book, A Question of Torture: CIA Interrogation, From the Cold War to the War on Terror, examines how physically brutal torture methods were augmented by the work of American and Canadian psychologists in the 1950s and 1960s. Their research, with covert government financing, led to the discovery that sensory deprivation, disorientation, and self-inflicted pain could more effectively (and more rapidly) break down the human psyche than could physical assaults.

Such social scientists unwittingly paved the way for what McCoy calls a “distinctively American form of torture,” relying primarily on psychological assaults, which would be used extensively by the CIA and its proxies during the latter half of the 20th century. The techniques were codified in a 1963 counterintelligence manual, now declassified, which makes chilling reading even today.

The latest developments in the science of suffering have provided another component to the interrogator’s tool kit — cultural manipulation. Since 2002, U.S. interrogators have used Behavioral Science Consultation Teams (so-called Biscuit teams) of psychologists and other social scientists. According to McCoy, U.S. agents at Guantanamo Bay have created a “de facto behavioral-research laboratory” that goes beyond using psychological stressors by attacking “cultural sensitivity, particularly Arab male sensitivity to issues of gender and sexual identity.”

Last December even more news appeared regarding the use of social-science expertise by military and intelligence agencies when George Packer, a staff writer for The New Yorker, reported the emergence of anthropological counterinsurgency experts. His article profiles the Australian anthropologist David Kilcullen, who is under contract at the State Department’s counterterrorism office. Among other things, Kilcullen is in charge of writing a new counterinsurgency manual. In his work, Kilcullen refers to counterinsurgency as “armed social work” and maps out a range of extremists, providing a guide for military personnel in Iraq and Afghanistan. At times it reads like an anthropology fieldwork guide: “Know the people, the topography, economy, history, religion, and culture. Know every village, road, field, population group, tribal leader, and ancient grievance. Your task is to become the world expert on your district.” At other times, Kilcullen’s tone is brazenly militaristic: “Counterinsurgency is a squad and platoon leader’s war, and often a private soldier’s war. Battles are won or lost in moments: Whoever can bring combat power to bear in seconds, on a street corner, will win.”

Meanwhile at the Defense Department, a new office, the Cultural Operations Research Human Terrain, has been created to tap into social-science knowledge. Its director, Steve Fondacaro, is recruiting social scientists to join five-person teams in Iraq and Afghanistan as cultural advisers; pilot teams are scheduled to begin work in the spring. Fondacaro has at least one anthropologist on his staff.

The fact that Kilcullen and others are eager to commit social-science knowledge to goals established by the Defense Department and the CIA is indicative of a new anthropology of insurgency. Anthropology under these circumstances appears as just another weapon to be used on the battlefield — not as a tool for building bridges between peoples, much less as a mirror that we might use to reflect upon the nature of our own society.

Spurred by such revelations, Kanhong Lin, a graduate student at American University, and I crafted the resolution opposing torture and the use of anthropological knowledge as an element of torture that we brought to the anthropology association. At the group’s annual business meeting, nearly 300 anthropologists — the largest number in years — packed the conference auditorium and unanimously adopted the resolution.

The resolution is being submitted to the full membership by mail ballot this spring. It is important that all our members, particularly those who were not at the business meeting, know what led up to the meeting’s vote. It is important that scholars in other fields know, as well. At the anthropology conference, there was widespread discussion of whether the earlier resolution by psychologists — who condemned scholarly participation in torture, but not in all interrogations — had gone far enough. These are issues that scholars need to discuss widely.

Although academic resolutions are not likely to transform U.S. government policies, they do articulate a set of values and ethical concerns shared by many scholars. We who adopted them hope that the recent resolutions will extend and amplify dialogue among anthropologists — and others — around issues of torture, the “war on terror,” and the potential abuse of social-science knowledge. We also hope that they will prompt us to directly confront — and resist — the militarization of the social sciences at this critical juncture in the history of the American academy.

Roberto J. Gonzalez is an associate professor of anthropology at San Jose State University. He is most recently the editor of Anthropologists in the Public Sphere: Speaking Out on War, Peace, and American Power (University of Texas Press, 2004)

7 comments January 29th, 2007

Hagel on the war and his party

Chuck Hagel’s interview with GQ is very interesting. A few brief excerpts from a long interview, well worth reading to understand what’s going on in Congress and the few thoughtful Republicans:

What about civil liberties? Does it concern you that the administration has been searching bank records and personal mail, and listening to international phone calls, without warrants?
Very much. We have always been able to protect national security without sacrificing the liberties of the individual. Once you lose those rights, it’s very hard to get them back. There have been arguments made that if we just give up a few rights, it will be easier to preserve our national security. That should never, ever happen. When you take office, you take an oath to protect and defend the Constitution. That is your first responsibility.

Is it strange for you to be allied on these issues with the anti-war left, which is not exactly your constituency?
I think these issues are starting to redefine the political landscape. You are going to see alliances and relationships develop that are based on this war. You are going to see a reorientation of political parties.

How conservative are you really? Tell me the truth: You don’t care whether or not gay people get married, do you?
No. Personally, I think marriage is between a man and a woman, but that’s because I see it as a religious union. As a legal contract, marriage should be up to the states. If a state wants to change the rules, that’s up to them….

You don’t hear very many politicians say that both sides of an issue are reasonable these days.
We are living through one of the most transformative periods in history. If we are going to make it, we need a far greater appreciation and respect for others, or we’re going to blow up mankind. Look at what zealotry can do. Religious zealotry has been responsible for killing more people than any other thing. Look at the Middle East today. It’s all about religion. We need to move past those divisions and learn to be tolerant and respectful. If we go out there full of intolerance and hatred, we’ll never make it.

Add comment January 28th, 2007

New Pentagon–health professions PR offensive over Guantanamo

In November 2006 the Pentagon took the leadership of several health professional organizations to Guantanamo to show that the trains run all time and the detainees are being treated better than they deserve. On this trip were Gerald Koocher the outgoing President of the American Psychiatric Association and Pedro Ruiz the new President of the American Psychiatric Association.

After the strong, even inspiring, statements made by the previous APsychiatricA President Sharfstein on the involvement of psychiatrists in interrogations at Guantanamo, it was disappointing to see Ruiz play footsie with the Pentagon spin doctors:

From the President
Guantanamo Bay Visit Reveals Dedication of MH Personnel
Pedro Ruiz, M.D.

Last October I received an invitation from William Winkenwerder Jr., M.D., assistant secretar y of defense for health affairs, to visit the U.S. military base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba (GTMO), together with a group of senior military officers and representatives from the civilian health/mental health care system.

The purpose of the trip was to visit the detainee health facilities and review policies and practices pertinent to detainee care and management. Needless to say, I quickly accepted the invitation and soon was oriented, briefed, and assisted by Col. Robert Ireland, a psychiatrist and program director for mental health policy in the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs.

On November 13, 2006, after a night’s stay at Andrews Air Force Base, I boarded a 7 a.m. military plane. The visiting team consisted of about 20 persons, half of them senior officers from the Navy, Air Force, and Army. The others in the group were psychologists, psychiatrists, and physicians from specialties other than psychiatry. Among these health care leaders were Dr. Gerald Koocher, president of the American Psychological Association; Rebecca Patton, M.S.N., R.N., president of the American Nurses Association; Dr. Stephen Behnke, an attorney and psychologist who is in charge of ethics issues at the American Psychological Association; Dr. Eric Zillmer, the Carl R. Pacifico Professor of Neuropsychology at Drexel University; and Dr. Robert Frank, dean of the College of Public Health and Health Professions at the University of Florida.

After a three-hour flight, we landed at GTMO. While landing, I reflected on my being a U.S. psychiatrist born in Cuba and about to visit and review a military base located in Cuba. Upon landing, a bus took us to a nearby boat, and after a boat ride of about 20 minutes, we arrived at the other side of the military base. Another brief bus ride took us to the GTMO area where about 435 detainees from Iraq, Afghanistan, and other Middle Eastern countries were detained. On our way to Camp Delta, we toured the housing, schools, and sport facilities used by military personnel and their families.

During the orientation, briefing, and discussion period, we had an opportunity to become more familiar with the GTMO military base. For instance, the briefers told us that all detainees had been arrested while committing terrorist acts against the United States and that the detainees were accused of being terrorist trainers, bomb makers, Osama Bin Laden bodyguards, would-be suicide bombers, and terrorist financiers. Military briefers told us that two of the terrorism financiers contributed nearly $200 million to the preparation and execution of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Military officials also said that some of the detainees who were released from Camp Delta have returned to their terrorist activities.

I am not a lawyer, thus my focus was on whether the detainees were receiving appropriate health/mental health care as well as humane care. A few comments in this regard are appropriate. On the day of our visit, we had a lunch that consisted of pasta and chicken, a salad, an orange, two toasted bread portions, two glasses of grapefruit juice, a diet soda, a bottle of water, and two pieces of baklava. As we were having our lunch, we were told that this was the lunch that all detainees at GTMO had that day.

The detention facilities consisted of two main models, one with high emphasis on security and the other with a more relaxied atmosphere and more space for recreational activities. We were told that detainees can advance from one to the other depending on their conduct and behavior. All cells have hygienic facilities and common areas for baths and recreation. The less-restrictive facilities are where most of the disruptive behaviors were reported to have occurred, including suicides; fights; throwing urine, feces, and semen in the face of the military personnel; and crafting weapons from all possible materials. Opportunities for praying were available, as were translators in all Arabic languages and dialects.

We also had the opportunity to visit the hospital unit in which detainees needing medical care are treated. The hospital has 19 to 28 beds and is supplemented by outpatient clinics and a psychiatric/behavioral unit. Additionally, we were told that the detainees have access to the main naval base hospital when specialist care is needed.

I must acknowledge that a visit of a few hours does not permit me to judge the validity of the various press accounts of day-to-day life for the detainees during their time at GTMO. However, during my return flight that evening, I thought a lot about the complexity of the situation at GTMO and how to best recognize and pay respect to the military men and women assigned to GTMO. In my opinion, the health care personnel—psychiatrists, other physicians, nurses, psychologists, and others—stationed at GTMO are doing an outstanding job under difficult and trying circumstances for everyone at GTMO. This column was written with this message in mind.

Meanwhile, former President Koocher of the APsychologicalA, Guantanamo apologist extraordinaire, is speaking this Friday on what he learned from his trip with the Spin Doctors. In a nice touch, psychologists can even receive CEUs (Continuing Education Units) for listening to the spin:

MPA is pleased to announce the following event:

GERALD KOOCHER: OBSERVATIONS OF GUANTANAMO (2CE)
Friday, February 9th, 2007 from 9:00am - 11:00am
MPA Offices in Wellesley, MA
FREE for MPA Members, $30 for Non Members
Call 781-263-0080 ext 10 to register

**** YOU MUST PRE-REGISTER FOR THIS EVENT ****

Gerald P. Koocher, the immediate past-president of APA, visited the military detention center at Guantanamo, Cuba in November 2006. Dr. Koocher will describe what he observed at Guantanamo, including interactions with behavioral science professionals providing health and mental health care and others consulting to interrogators. He will also discuss ethical dilemmas associated with correctional and national intelligence functions.

Learning Objectives
1) Participants will understand the roles and functions of psychologists currently serving with the Department of Defense Joint Task Force, Guantanamo.
2) Participants will review and understand the complexities of ethical decision making in correctional and national security contexts.

*** YOU MUST PRE-REGISTER FOR THIS EVENT - CALL 781-263-0080 EXT 10 TO REGISTER***

Lynne Mortarelli
Membership Associate
Massachusetts Psychological Association
195 Worcester Street, Suite 303
Wellesley, MA 02481

Phone 781.263.0080 x.13
Fax 781.263.0086
www.masspsych.org

First we were supposed to “take pride in the work of the PENS task force” in which a (secret) majority (6 of 9 voting members) from the military and intelligence agencies decided that it was ethical for psychologists to collaborate with the military and intelligence establishments in consulting to interrogations. Now we’re supposed to listen to stories of “My fun with the brass in their fantastic-looking uniforms” as the final word on what goes on at Guantanamo.

The voices of the detainees quietly being driven insane, and of those heroic attorneys braving the full wrath of a vindictive government to try and obtain basic human rights for their detainee-clients (see, among innumerable accounts: Guantánamo’s lost souls and Trapped at Guantanamo) are, of course, completely absent from these stories.

2 comments January 28th, 2007

First video from DC protest

Courtesy AmericaBlog:

I’m sure there’ll be much more in the days to come.

Add comment January 27th, 2007

The sectarian Iraqi civil war on tape

British television station Channel four shows dramatic footage of Iraqi troops, Shias, beating Sunnis while US troops egging them on. “An AK butt to the back of the head! I like it!” says one American.

Back at base, the American commender was shocked, nit about the beating, but that the incident might have been filmed by journalists.

The killings are on all sides.

The video also shows the body of murdered Shia baker in a Sunni district, a murder that remains uninvestigated. It also shows a Sunni man, married to a Shia woman, who receives a death threat from Sunni militias.

There are no good guys here:

Watch also this CBS web-only report on the battle for Haifa Street.

UPDATE: Alternet brings us word that the reporter of the CBS segment is asking for help pressuring CBS to air the piece. Here is a text from her asking for help:

ext of the email from Lara Logan:

From: lara logan
Subject: help

The story below only appeared on our CBS website and was not aired on CBS. It is a story that is largely being ignored, even though this is taking place every single day in central Baghdad, two blocks from where our office is located.

Our crew had to be pulled out because we got a call saying they were about to be killed, and on their way out, a civilian man was shot dead in front of them as they ran.

I would be very grateful if any of you have a chance to watch this story and pass the link on to as many people you know as possible. It should be seen. And people should know about this.

If anyone has time to send a comment to CBS — about the story — not about my request, then that would help highlight that people are interested, and this is not too gruesome to air, but rather too important to ignore.

Many, many thanks.

Add comment January 26th, 2007

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