Outlaw Nation,

Watching You,

News Fakers

excerpted from the book

Static

Government Liars, Media Cheerleaders and the People Who Fight Back

by Amy Goodman and David Goodman

Hyperion, 2006, hardcover

 

Introduction

p1
President George W. Bush, September 20, 2001

Either you are with us or you are with the terrorists.

p6
President George W. Bush

See, in my line of work you got to keep repeating things over and over and over again for the truth to sink in, to kind of catapult the propaganda.

 

Outlaw Nation

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The United States is an outlaw nation.

The laws that used to govern the behavior of American leaders evolved from basic codes of conduct for civilized nations. In 1215, the Magna Carta asserted that no one, not even a king, was above the rule of law, and it established the concept of habeas corpus-a prisoner's right to challenge his or her detention in a public court of law. Kidnapping, murder, and rape, all nations agree, are crimes. The four Geneva Conventions, the first of which was adopted in 1864, established that even in wars, civilians and combatants have rights. The conventions prohibit murder, torture, hostage-taking, and extrajudicial sentencing and executions.

These have long been the publicly proclaimed ideals of Western nations. In private, they have been routinely violated. From the Native American conquest, to slavery, to Vietnam, where torture and extrajudicial killing were staples of the CIA's Phoenix program, to Latin America, where US.-backed death squads rained terror on civilians throughout the 1970s and '80s, to the U.S. Army School of the Americas, which counts among its graduates a who's who of Latin American dictators and human rights abusers, the United States has been secretly involved in the torture business for years.

p18
Bush reportedly told Palestinian Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas

"God told me to strike at al Queda and I struck them, and then he instructed me to strike at Saddam.

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In the Outlaw Nation that has risen up where the United States once stood, holding humans in offshore cages and denying them fair trials is fine. Kidnapping has become an essential tool of foreign policy. The vice president personally lobbies the Senate to legalize torture, while the secretary of defense decides which medieval torments are acceptable (drowning and freezing are in; disemboweling is out). The secretary of state trots around the globe to forcefully and unequivocally reassure squeamish allies on whose soil the kidnappings and torture occur-that what they know is happening (and secretly assisted) is not really happening. The US. media speaks politely about possible "abuse" and refers delicately to things like "stress positions."

Torturing its enemies in secret is not new for the United States. But the open - even proud - embrace of it is unprecedented.

p24
... what the US. government calls "extraordinary rendition"-sending suspects to foreign countries to be harshly interrogated. The program began in 1995, under the Clinton administration, when the CIA undertook a series of kidnappings of suspected terrorists in Europe. Suspects were shipped to Egypt, where some were tortured and others were killed.

p26
Human rights groups estimate that over one hundred people have been rendered to countries well known for torturing prisoners. In the case of Syria, the Bush administration could be confident that Arar and the other prisoners it sent there would be savaged. According to the US. State Department 2001 Human Rights Report, published seven months before Arar was sent to Syria:

Former prisoners and detainees [in Syria] report that torture methods include administering electrical shocks; puffing out fingernails; forcing objects into the rectum; beating, sometimes while the victim is suspended from the ceiling; hyperextending the spine; and using a chair that bends backwards to asphyxiate the victim or fracture the victim's spine.

p28
Maher Arar, a Syrian-born Canadian citizen, kidnapped at New York's JFK airport in 2002. The U.S. said he had links to al Queda. In what the U.S. government calls "extraordinary rendition", he was secretly flown to Syria where he was tortured. He was finally released one year later without being charged as a terrorist. Arar was found innocent of all crimes by a Canadian court in 2005.

Arar told the Toronto Star, "If the courts will not stop this evil act, who is going to stop this administration? Where do we go? The United Nations? We-me and others who have been subjected to this-are normal citizens who have done no wrong. They have destroyed my life. They have destroyed other lives. But the court system does not listen to us. When a court will not act because of 'national security;' there is no longer any difference between the West and the Third World."

p30
The US. State Department 2002 Human Rights Report ... said this about Egypt:

There were numerous, credible reports that security forces tortured and mistreated citizens .... Principal methods of torture reportedly employed by the police included: Being stripped and blindfolded; suspended from a ceiling or doorframe with feet just touching the floor; beaten with fists, whips, metal rods, or other objects; subjected to electrical shocks; and doused with cold water. Victims frequently reported being subjected to threats and forced to sign blank papers to be used against the victim or the victim's family in the future should the victim complain of abuse. Some victims, including male and female detainees, reported that they were sexually assaulted or threatened with the rape of themselves or family members."

Notwithstanding President Bush's absurd claim in 2005 that "we do not render to countries that torture," he and his administration have found Egypt's abysmal human rights record to be irresistible. Egyptian Prime Minister Ahmed Nazif told the Chicago Tribune that the CIA had handed over to Egypt between sixty and seventy terrorism suspects captured from around the world. Indeed, Egypt has become a destination of choice for governments wishing to outsource torture: Human Rights Watch estimated that between 2001 and 2005, Egypt worked with other countries to arrest more than sixty Islamic militants living abroad and return them to Egypt .

Former CIA agent Robert Baer explained the cold logic behind where the United States chooses to outsource torture: "If you want a serious interrogation, you send a prisoner to Jordan. If you want them to be tortured, you send them to Syria. If you want someone to disappear-never to see them again-you send them to Egypt.

p38
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice declared in Europe in December 2005
"The United States does not transport and has not transported detainees from one country to another for the purpose of interrogations using torture .

But just four months later, investigators for the European Parliament revealed that the CIA had flown one thousand secret flights over Europe since 2001, sometimes ferrying terrorism suspects to countries that torture.

p44
New York Times, May 1961 in an editorial titled "The Right Not to Be Lied To":

"A democracy-our democracy-cannot be lied to .... The basic principle involved is that of confidence. A dictatorship can get along without an informed public opinion. A democracy cannot. "

 

Watching You

p46
White House spokesman An Fleischer, September 26, 2001

"Americans ... need to watch what they say, watch what they do.

p46
The year was 1971. The president: Richard Nixon. Concerned citizens in a suburb of Philadelphia decided something had to be done. They were about to change the course of history.

On March 8, 1971, anonymous activists used a crowbar to force their way into the two-man office of the FBI in Media, Pennsylvania, in the middle of the night. FBI agents arriving at work in the morning found only empty file cabinets; more than a thousand documents had been taken. The Citizens' Commission to Investigate the FBI, as the activists dubbed themselves, had pulled off its first and only action. The impact of that break-in is still being felt today.

p47
Buried in the stolen documents was a new term: COINTELPRO. It stood for the FBI's "counterintelligence program." The documents revealed that the super-secret program began in 1956, "in part because of frustration with Supreme Court rulings limiting the Government's power to proceed overtly against dissident groups," according to the Church Committee reports issued later. As one stolen memo put it, the FBI used COINTELPRO to "enhance the paranoia endemic in these circles to get the point across there is an FBI agent behind every mailbox."'

The stolen documents and subsequent revelations shined a light on one of America's darkest chapters. The FBI was not simply gathering intelligence. COINTELPRO was a program aimed at aggressively destabilizing, provoking, smearing, and destroying organizations and individuals, many of whom were doing nothing more than exercising their free speech rights. Often, the only transgression of these groups and individuals was that FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover disagreed with them. The groups that were targeted included the Black Panthers, the American Indian Movement, Students for a Democratic Society; and many antiwar, civil rights, and religious groups. Students, celebrities, professors, and concerned citizens were all targeted in the FBI's covert program. One stolen memo captured the vicious mentality of COINTELPRO: "Neutralize them in the same manner they are trying to destroy and neutralize the US."'

COINTELPRO operations often took a devastating toll. As Allan Jalon recounted in the Los Angeles Times, agents tried to blackmail Martin Luther King Jr. into killing himself. Actress Jean Seberg was targeted for having made a donation to the Black Panther Party; she ended up committing suicide after spurious gossip about her, based on an FBI wiretap, was leaked and published in the Los Angeles Times.

No one has ever claimed responsibility for the 1971 break-in in Pennsylvania. The FBI concluded a six-year, 33,000-page investigation, but couldn't solve the "crime."

The explosive contents of the COINTELPRO memos shocked the nation. Congress members were outraged at having been in the dark about the FBI's rogue operations. The exposés led to hearings by Sen. Frank Church of Idaho on abuses by the intelligence agencies. The torrent of government abuse was slowly stemmed but only temporarily.

 

They're back. Three decades after the FBI COINTELPRO program was exposed and supposedly dismantled, the federal government is once again spying on Americans. The targets of this illegal spying usually share one thing in common: They are innocent Americans who are exercising their right to speak freely.

Sarah Bardwell, an intern at the American Friends Service Committee in Denver, discovered that the Bush administration has another name for free speech: terrorism. She learned this when heavily armed police dressed in SWAT gear showed up at her door in July 2004.

... Bardwell ... was one of numerous activists being targeted by the FBI in a nationwide campaign of spying and political intimidation. See, in the aftermath of being attacked by Saudi-born terrorists, the Bush administration vowed to make us safer... by illegally spying on critics at home.

p50
Mark Silverstein, legal director of the ACLU of Colorado, to Democracy Now

"The FBI is unjustifiably regarding demonstrations and public dissent as potential terrorism... if you participate in actions critical of the government or government policies, you might wind up with an FBI file. The danger, of course, is that these kinds of actions on the part of the FBI could deter people from joining a protest, from signing a petition, from writing a letter to the editor if they feel that that's going to prompt FBI scrutiny and maybe an FBI file."

p52
The Joint Terrorism Task Forces are on the front lines of domestic spying. The JTTFs are teams of state, local, and federal agents that are led by the FBI. There are currently sixty-six JTTFs around the country, according to the ACLU." Among the institutions that work closely with the JTTFs are "just about every university in the country," says the FBI. Many of the JTTFs have campus police officers assigned full-time to the FBI, funneling information about students and campus organizations to the Bureau. When reporter John Friedman of The Nation cold-called a number of universities to inquire whether they had officers assigned to the FBI, about one-third confirmed that they did, including the University of Illinois, Champaign /Urbana; the University of Texas, Austin; the University of Massachusetts, Amherst; the University of Florida, Gainesville; Michigan State; and Yale.

With campus police now serving as the eyes and ears of the federal government, it's little wonder that students feel an icy wind blowing through their dorms. At North Carolina State University, the FBI went door-knocking and interrogating students following a protest at a nearby Republican headquarters shortly after the 2004 election. Campus police also increased their presence at campus antiwar protests.

p54
In 1972, the Thomas Merton Center was founded in Pittsburgh to "find common ground in the nonviolent struggle to bring about a more peaceful and just society."

In 2002, a year after George W. Bush became president, the Center's activities made it a target of an international terrorism investigation.

According to secret FBI files obtained by the ACLU in March 2006, the Pittsburgh JTTF conducted a secret investigation into the activities of the Thomas Merton Center beginning as early as November 2002 because of its opposition to the war in Iraq. The ACLU said that these documents were the first to show conclusively that the rationale for FBI targeting was a group's opposition to the war.

p56
... in December 2005 ... NBC News and journalist William Arkin exposed the existence of a secret Pentagon database to track intelligence gathered inside the United States. The database included information on dozens of antiwar protests and rallies, particularly actions targeting military recruiting.

The Department of Defense has strict guidelines, established in 1982, that restrict the information it is allowed to collect and retain on US. citizens. These guidelines may now be being either bent or violated. The Pentagon database obtained by NBC included 1,519 "threats" that were reported between July 2004 and May 2005, including:

* Countermilitary recruiting meetings held at the Quaker Meeting House in Lake Worth, Florida

* Antinuclear protests staged in Nebraska on the anniversary of the US. atomic bombing of Nagasaki

* An antiwar protest organized by military families outside Fort Bragg in North Carolina

* A rally in San Diego to support war resister Pablo Paredes

In all, the Pentagon "threat" list included four dozen antiwar meetings, including some that took place far from any military facility or recruitment office." All were entirely legal gatherings.

p57
The Pentagon's domestic intelligence gathering has been done through a secretive program that allows military bases and other defense installations to file Threat and Local Observation Notices (TALON) of suspicious activity into a consolidated database. The program, established in 2003 by then deputy secretary of defense Paul Wolfowitz, is so secret that even the number of reports in the database is classified. Also classified is the size and budget of the new agency overseeing the database, Counter-Intelligence Field Activity (CIFA).

p57
Bill Dobbs, a spokesperson for United for Peace and Justice, a coalition of some fifteen hundred groups that has sponsored national antiwar demonstrations, observed on Democracy Now!, "The crackdowns on dissent come in many different forms. What's alarming about the surveillance, of course, is that we don't know what sort of infiltration is going on, what sort of covert action may be taking place, and we may never know"

p58
The most breathtaking and far-reaching of all the Bush administration spy programs that have been revealed so far has been the warrantless eavesdropping by the National Security Agency. The program was first exposed in an article in the New York Times in December 2005-after the story was withheld by Times editors for over a year at the request of the White House (see Introduction

The Times revealed that President Bush had authorized the NSA to eavesdrop-without warrants-on calls and e-mails of people suspected of having links to terrorists. Then, in May 2006, USA Today exposed how the National Security Agency has been secretly collecting the phone call records of millions of Americans with the help of AT&T, Verizon, and BellSouth (the latter two companies have denied the charge). One source told the paper that the NSA is attempting to create the world's largest database-big enough to include "every call ever made" within the United States. An AT&T whistle-blower, Mark Klein, has revealed that the telecom company has built secret eavesdropping rooms in their main switching centers where calls are monitored. The Electronic Frontier Foundation filed suit against AT&T in January 2006, demanding that the company stop illegally spying on its customers.

Soon after the Times exposed the existence of the program, an NSA whistle-blower, Russell Tice, spoke about it on Democracy Now! "I believe I have seen some things that are illegal," he began. "This is probably the number one commandment of the Ten Commandments as a SIGINT [signals intelligence] officer: You will not spy on Americans .... Apparently the leaders of NSA have decided ( that they were just going to go against the tenets of something that's a gospel."

p60
Russell Tice, a lifelong Republican who voted for George W. Bush, said in a letter to Congress

"The freedom of the American people cannot be protected when our constitutional liberties are ignored and our nation has decayed into a police state."

p60
retired Supreme Court justice Sandra Day O'Connor in March 2006\
"It takes a lot of degeneration before a country falls into dictatorship, but we should avoid these ends by avoiding these beginnings.

 

News Fakers

p62
Since coming to power, the Bush administration has engaged in a systematic campaign of covert propaganda aimed at subverting both domestic and foreign media. The Government Accountability Office estimates that between 2003 and 2005, the administration spent $1.6 billion on advertising and public relations to promote its policies.

... good news started to appear in Iraqi newspapers in mid-2005. MORE MONEY GOES TO IRAQ'S DEVELOPMENT, blared one headline. THE SANDS ARE BLOWING TOWARD A DEMOCRATIC IRAQ, gushed another. One article reported cheerily, "As the people and the [Iraqi security forces] work together, Iraq will finally drive terrorism out of Iraq for good."'

The stories, made to appear as if they were written by independent Iraqi journalists, were in fact written by American "information operations" troops as part of a multimillion-dollar covert Pentagon operation to plant propaganda in the Iraqi media. Cash-strapped Iraqi newspapers were paid from $50 to $2,000 to run a story. In addition, Iraqi journalists were paid stipends of up to $500 per month, depending on how many pro-American pieces they published.'

This secret program is run by a relatively unknown defense contractor called the Lincoln Group, which in 2005 landed a multiyear $100 million contract to produce pro-American, anti-insurgent TV, radio, and print messages.

 

... December 2005, the Lincoln Group had placed over one thousand articles in fifteen to seventeen Iraqi and Arab newspapers. It also paid Islamic clerics for advice on how to persuade Sunnis to participate in elections and oppose the Iraqi insurgency. The Lincoln Group also proposed an Arab sitcom based on the Three Stooges, featuring bumbling terrorists as the main characters; the Pentagon rejected the idea.

p65
The Pentagon propaganda campaign is being waged as the State Department is offering programs in basic journalism skills and media ethics to Iraqi journalists. One workshop was titled "The Role of Press in a Democratic Society.""

"Here we are trying to create the principles of democracy in Iraq," said a senior Pentagon official who opposes planting stories in the Iraqi media. 'Every speech we give in that country is about democracy. And we're breaking all the first principles of democracy when we're doing it."


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