Study exposes discrimination against Muslim prisoners

April 16, 2007

Prison bars.jpg

The Prison Service’s attempts to curb the growth of radical Islam in jails in the U.S.A. by restricting communal prayers and reading of the Qur’an during work breaks are exacerbating the problem, according to the first in-depth study of Muslim prisoners. The research, based on interviews with 170 current and former Muslim prisoners, also reveals that bans on access to certain TV programmes and newspapers in high-security prisons have also backfired.

The four-year research project by Aberdeen University anthropologist Gabriele Marranci also finds that a small minority of former young Muslim offenders are vulnerable to recruitment by militant organisations as a result of their prison experiences. “I found no evidence to suggest that the Muslim chaplains are behaving or preaching in a way that facilitates radicalisation,” said Dr Marranci. “On the contrary, my findings suggest that they are extremely important in preventing dangerous forms of extremism. However, the distrust that they face, both internally and externally, is jeopardising their important function.”

The research shows that Muslim prisoners were subject to stricter surveillance than other inmates, especially when they adopted religious symbols such as beards, veils and caps: “Growing a beard is, in almost all establishments I visited, interpreted as ‘radicalisation’ of the individual,” said Dr Marranci, a lecturer in the anthropology of religion. He warns that the continuing atmosphere of suspicion surrounding Muslim prisoners increases a sense of frustration and depression which a strong view of Islam can help to overcome.

Guardian, 13 April 2007

Source: Islamophobia Watch


Cheney says US can win in Iraq for ‘worthy cause’

April 16, 2007

Translation: US troops have to stay long enough to secure the oil, and that might take a short a time as forever.

AFP
Published: Sunday April 15, 2007

Vice President Dick Cheney said on Sunday the United States can win in Iraq and accused Democrats pushing for a US troop withdrawal of being “irresponsible.”

In an interview on US television, Cheney said he believed US forces in Iraq were making progress despite continuing violence and it was vital to support the establishment of a democratic government that could “defend itself.”

“I do believe we can win in Iraq. I think it is a worthy cause. I think it’s absolutely essential that we prevail,” Cheney told CBS’s “Face the Nation.”

“I don’t want to underestimate the difficulty of the task,” said Cheney. “But just because it’s hard doesn’t mean we shouldn’t do it.

Cheney spoke as more deadly bombing attacks were reported in Iraq, killing 35 people in Shiite shopping areas of Baghdad.

Asked about opinion polls showing a majority of Americans supporting a withdrawal of US troops, Cheney said: “Well, you also get a majority who, I think, would prefer to have us win.”

Cheney repeated criticism of Democratic leaders in Congress for tying funding for the war to a timetable for the withdrawal of US troops.

“I do believe that the positions that the Democratic leaders have taken … are irresponsible,” the vice president said.

He demanded the Democrats support an emergency funding request without conditions and reiterated threats President George W. Bush would veto any bill with a deadline for a US pullout.

“There’s a fundamental debate going on here, in terms of whether or not our objective in Iraq is to, quote, ‘withdraw,’ or whether our objective in Iraq is to complete the mission,” Cheney said.

“And I think a majority of Americans would prefer the latter, if we can get it done.”

But Democratic Senator Carl Levin said Cheney’s words carried no weight given his previous predictions on Iraq.

“He has no credibility. He’s been wrong consistently on Iraq. He has misled the people consistently on Iraq. He has misstated. He has exaggerated,” Levin told Fox News on Sunday.

“And I don’t think he has any credibility left with the American people.

Levin said that while the Democrats wanted to send a message on troop withdrawal they would not withhold funding for US troops deployed in Iraq.

Cheney also said he expected the Democratic majority would in the end support the funding request without any timetable.

“I don’t think that a majority of the Democrats in the Congress want to leave America’s fighting forces in harm’s way without the resources they need to defend themselves,” he said.

Cheney, echoing earlier statements from the White House, said it was crucial president’s emergency funding request be approved quickly or else risk inflicting damage on the US military’s “training and readiness.”

Failure to secure the funding “begins to have a significant impact in a relatively short period of time, on the forces,” he said.

“What happens is you have to pull money out of other accounts in order to fund the forces in combat,” he said.

“It affects our work of our depots that are heavily involved in refurbishing equipment that’s been heavily used and needs to be refurbished before it can be used again,” Cheney said.

The vice-president said the United States was “perfectly capable” of winning in Iraq, and said a bombing attack on the Iraqi parliament last week was likely the work of Al-Qaeda.

“These kinds of attacks in the past have been attributed to Al-Qaeda in Iraq,” he said.


Torture, Secrecy, and the Bush Administration

April 16, 2007

Scott Horton

I want to give a bit of pre-constitutional history, and share with you the story of John Lilburne, an Englishman born in the early 1600s because his story—the story of an agitator who directly challenged the English legal system—has a great deal to tell us about the issues we’re facing today. Lilburne’s story explains why these matters—torture and secrecy—were not issues to the Founding Fathers, and it helps us understand the true nature of a government which, like the current administration, thrives in that matrix of torture and secrecy.

So much of what has happened over the last six years seems a repetition of events drawn from English history, from the turbulent years from the Civil War to the Glorious Revolution—this could be said of the struggle over habeas corpus, which was right at the center of the conflict between Parliament and king, as seen in the Five Knights case of 1627 or the Shipmaster’s tax case of 1637. But the notion of secret legal proceedings, closed courts and the use of secret evidence also characterize that period of history. Before the English Civil War, court proceedings were frequently closed, and one of the principles of fair process introduced in the Commonwealth—it seems to have been an initiative of the solicitor general, John Cooke—was the notion that no court should conduct its hearings behind closed doors, and neither should any evidence be taken which could not be shared with the public and presented to the defendant and the jury.

The key case for this notion involved a man commonly called “Freeborn John,” or John Lilburne. He was a person of little formal education who became a firebrand pamphleteer among the Puritans in the years of the Civil War. He had republican sentiments, but more to the point he was a sharp critic of the king’s justice—writing constantly of the aspects which were, well, unjust. He was particularly outraged by the use of the king’s courts to persecute dissenters, as the Anglicans called them—though at the time this would be a changing blend of Puritans, Calvinists, Baptists and Quakers; not to mention the “terrorists” of the day, the Catholics. Lilburne had been convicted in the Star Chamber in 1638 on a charge of importation and dissemination of unregistered religious tracts. He wrote a compelling account of his treatment—he had been imprisoned for refusing to answer questions and then flogged, pilloried and gagged—but he also described the use of coercive interrogation techniques to extract a confession, the denial of rights of confrontation, the fact that his judges were all political figures placed there to do their king’s bidding—the Star Chamber, you see, was to Lilburne’s age what the Military Commission is to ours.

His account was an instant bestseller and provided much of the impetus for the abolition of the Star Chamber by the Long Parliament in 1641. As Uncle Tom’s Cabin was to abolition, Liburne’s book was to habeas corpus and the Star Chamber. Lilburne served with distinction as an officer during the Civil War, and afterwards his advocacy of Republican virtues caused Oliver Cromwell a bit of discomfort, and at length Cromwell decided to silence Lilburne by charging him with treason. The trial convened in October 1649, which is to say just months after the second Civil War had been successfully concluded for the Parliamentary forces.

This was in effect the second significant trial for the Commonwealth after the trial of King Charles himself in January. Lilburne was a popular figure in London and was well aware of that fact. When the court proceedings commenced behind closed doors in the Painted Chamber of Westminster, Lilburne opened his answer to the charges read in court with these famous words: “The first fundamental liberty of an Englishman is that all courts of justice always ought to be free and open for all sorts of peaceable people to see, behold and hear, and have free access unto; and no man whatsoever ought to be tried in holes or corners, or in any place where the gates are shut and barred.” Lilburne was raising a direct challenge to the reputation of the Commonwealth courts—asking whether one of the most abusive of the practices of justice under the Stuart monarchs would be continued. The court fully understood this and directed that the doors be opened, in order that “all the world may know with what candour and justice the court does proceed against you.”

In the balance of that remarkable case, Lilburne established a number of other principles. The prisoner in the dock was to be treated with dignity and respect, not dragged before the court in manacles and an orange jumpsuit. There were to be no ex parte communications between the counsel and the court. He was to have a right to confront all evidence against him (that is, there could be no secret evidence), and the public also was to be allowed to hear it, to form its own opinion of the quality of justice dispensed by the court. He was guaranteed the right of counsel, and for the first time, counsel were permitted to participate in the presentation of evidence for the defense as well.

The fairness of the proceedings had its limit. The judge charged the jury that they must convict, saying “never was the like treason hatched in England.” But the vigor of Lilburne’s defense was impressive and the jury returned a verdict of acquittal. (To this day, some attribute the acquittal to Judge Keble’s refusal of the jurors’ request of a “butt of sack,” which is to say, a very large quantity of fortified wine, as a pre-deliberation refreshment).

The Lilburne case sums up the most significant of what may be called the “Commonwealth reforms” of criminal procedure—one of the few legacies of the revolution to survive the restoration of the monarchy.

Secrecy was what the Roundheads found most odious about the Stuart monarchs’ justice. Certainly unjust practices accompanied some of our Puritan forefathers to this country; we can’t forget the Salem witch trials, for instance. But so too, did a healthy contempt for the abuses practiced by the Stuart monarchs, starting with the notions of torture and secret courts with secret evidence. The contempt was reciprocal of course—they say that King Charles’ lip would curl at the very mention of the word “Massachusetts,” and seven of the ten members of the first graduating class of Harvard—the class of 1642—returned to England to enlist in the Model Army and fight against the King. The practice of secret courts. The use of torture to secure confessions. The receipt of secret evidence. The exclusion of the public from proceedings. The offering of evidence in the form of summaries delivered to the judges, without the defendant being able to confront the evidence or conduct a cross-examination. These practices were the definition of tyrannical injustice to the Puritan fathers and the Founding Fathers. We thought them long-banished a hundred years and more before our own revolution. And now suddenly here they are again.

Secrecy has reemerged just as torture has made its comeback, being justified on the public stage, by government officials for the first time since the famous gathering at the Inns of Court in 1629 at which the judges declared “upon their and their nation’s honor” that torture was not permitted by the common law.

The two fit together, hand in glove: torture and secrecy. Torture and secrecy. Where one is used, the other is indispensable.

Torture is no longer a tool of statecraft. Today it is a tool of criminals, though sometimes of criminals purporting to conduct the affairs of state. Having resorted to these “dark arts,” to quote Dick Cheney, the torturers now have the dilemma faced so frequently by criminals. They seek to cover it up. And so the path flows from torture to secrecy, the twin dark stars of the tyrannical state.

If we look quickly at the proceedings that held the world’s attention down in Gitmo over the last two weeks, we see what the secrecy is all about.

When the Combat Status Review Tribunal process commenced, the Pentagon told us that the proceedings would not be open to the public. Instead, it said, a transcript would be offered up to the public a few days later, giving the Pentagon an opportunity to redact “classified national security” information from the transcripts. Pete Yost of the Associated Press gave me a ring just as this came out and asked: what do you suppose they think is going to require censoring? I said the answer is clear based on submissions the Department of Justice has made in four or five cases: they will take the position that any evidence of torture must be censored or expunged, because the testimony would disclose the specific torture techniques which have been applied, and that would divulge highly classified national security data. Why do you think the DVDs of the treatment of Jose Padilla, all two dozen copies, mysteriously disappeared? Why, as Colonel Couch recently told the Wall Street Journal’s Jess Bravin, did the recording devices inexplicably malfunction whenever torture incidents occurred? Yes. Why indeed. Of course, I was relying not only on what was said and done in Padilla, El-Masri, Arar and other cases, but also on Terry Gilliam’s movie, “Brazil,” in which all of this morally deviant thinking is taken to its logical conclusion. What the Bush Administration has created in Gitmo is “Brazil,” minus, of course, any pretense of humor.

Now we have the first two transcripts, and the results are exactly that. The torture is cut out. The case of al-Nashiri is particularly striking:

PRESIDENT (of the tribunal): Please describe the methods that were used.

DETAINEE: (CENSORED) What else do I want to say? (CENSORED) There were doing so many things. What else did they did? (CENSORED) After that another method of torture began. (CENSORED) They used to ask me questions and the investigator after that used to laugh. And, I used to answer the answer that I knew. And if I didn’t replay what I heard, he used to (CENSORED).

Now let’s consider—would there be any need to censor the allegations unless they are true? No. Indeed, the fact that they are censored should be taken as an admission. No meaningful effort is made to refute any of the detainee’s contentions. No records are spread out showing that he was not tortured. Why might that be?

And the second case for secrecy we see in the trial of David Hicks, which follows a pattern established with the John Walker Lindh case. It came to a plea bargain in the end, and a strong focus on silencing the witness. In particular, he was to be gagged as to everything that was done to him while he was in U.S. custody for a period of one year, which is to say, until the Australian elections are past. The plea bargain, it appears, was negotiated by Susan J. Crawford, a protégée of Vice President Cheney, and Cheney had only six weeks earlier visited Australian Prime Minister John Howard downunder. According to accounts of their meeting published at the time in the Australian press, at the top of Howard’s agenda was an urgent plea to bring the Hicks case to a speedy conclusion that would allow him to serve a brief sentence in Australia. Crawford delivered exactly what was requested.

There is a common theme to these cases. Secrecy is not invoked to protect military or legitimate state security confidences. It is invoked for nakedly political reasons, or darker and still more likely, to obscure crimes and avoid the creation of court records which would document them.

On April 27, 1961, John F. Kennedy gave a speech in the Waldorf-Astoria to the American Newspaper Association. “The very word ’secrecy’ is repugnant in a free and open society;” Kennedy said “and we are as a people inherently and historically opposed to secret societies, to secret oaths and to secret proceedings. We decided long ago that the dangers of excessive and unwarranted concealment of pertinent facts far outweighed the dangers which are cited to justify it. Even today, there is little value in opposing the threat of a closed society by imitating its arbitrary restrictions. Even today, there is little value in insuring the survival of our nation if our traditions do not survive with it. And there is very grave danger that an announced need for increased security will be seized upon by those anxious to expand its meaning to the very limits of official censorship and concealment. That I do not intend to permit to the extent that it is in my control.”

I believe that the moment—the day of “official censorship and concealment”—that Kennedy foresaw is drawing near, if it is not already upon us in America today. The moment has crept upon us by stealth, as a result of decisions taken at the highest level in government. These decisions have been made behind closed doors, with no public discussion—and indeed with a concerted effort to misdirect the public as to the gravity of the changes in policy which have been undertaken. They have led to a dramatic expansion of Government action without oversight, which is to say on the basis of a decision by the President unchecked by courts and Congress, and to a shrinkage of individual freedom.

We have a duty to posterity, and that is to bear witness to these events. We must document them carefully. We must act to avoid the destruction of valuable evidence—and recognize, as we have already seen, that it is in the character of those who commit crimes to destroy the evidence of their misdeeds. In this way we lay the path for the justice which will in good time be meted out to those who betrayed a nation’s trust. For I believe, like the Puritans, in the certainty that justice will triumph and that wrongdoers will be held to account, though I am not so foolish as to think that this will happen soon. Still, the time is coming, as John Milton wrote,

that sun part the clouds which tyrants muster,
that good men may enjoy the freedom which they merit,
and the bad the curb which they need.

Source: Harper`s Magazine


India, Pakistan Defy United States Over Iran Gas Pipeline

April 16, 2007

The more I read stories like this, the clearer it becomes that the rapidly growing economic centres of the world – China, Russia, India – are leaving the United States behind, as they push forward in setting the scene for how most of the world’s key energy supplies – natural gas and oil – will be transported across the globe in the coming decades.

China,
India,
Iran,
Russia, no longer appear to wilt before US economic and trade threats, or promises of denial of key energy technologies or arms sales, if they don’t comply with the wishes of the fading superpower.A remarkable story from ‘The Australian‘ details how
India and
Pakistan are only days away from settling terms on a 2600km long natural gas pipeline that will stretch from
Iran, through
Pakistan territory, all the way to
India.
Pakistan will access some of the gas, and will be paid by
India for ‘hosting’ the pipeline. This deal, long in the making, pleases
China and
Russia. They view the rise of
India as a future superpower as a major positive, and they see few negatives in growing ties between
Iran and
Pakistan. The only long face in the international is that of the
United States‘.At the same time,
Pakistan is pushing back against growing criticism from the
United States and
Australia that it isn’t doing enough to stop Al Qaeda and Taliban fighters entering
Afghanistan from
Pakistan territory, or its border regions.
Pakistan’s President Musharraf has already threatened to quit the international ‘War on Terror’ if the pressure doesn’t ease. And Musharraf has made it vividly clear to the United States that Pakistan will play no part whatsoever in any attacks launched against Iran, nor will he allow any flyovers of Pakistan territory by US bombers. The United States is now trying to claim that doing a deal with
Iran over the pipeline will help it in its alleged ambitions to gain nuclear weapons. It’s a pathetic, and stupid, claim to lay on
India and
Pakistan, who are clearly wanting the pipeline so as to wean themselves off their own imported oil addictions, as
US President Bush continually warns Americans they must do as well. Should the US try to air its claim that the pipeline will help
Iran with its nuclear ambitions in the United Nations Security Council, many will have a hard time trying not to laugh out loud.

Iran is doing deals for its natural gas and oil worth hundreds of billions of dollars (over the next two decades) with
China,
Russia,
India and
Pakistan.
Pakistan is about to begin construction on a port and another pipeline that will give
China a gateway to Gulf oil. Included in all these deals will be the weapons systems and arms sales needed to secure the sea transit lanes to deliver oil to
China, for example, and to keep safe key energy pipelines, like the one that will stretch from
Iran to
India. But where is the United States in all this action? Standing on the sidelines, trying to order the new power players around and shouting for attention. It’s a sad fact of the changing international order that mega-states like
China,
Russia and
India appear to be less interested in listening to what the
United States has to say. From ‘The Australian’ :Dispute between Washington and its two major South Asian allies is intensifying as
India and
Pakistan dig in their heels over building a highly strategic, $10 billion gas pipeline stretching 2600km from
Iran.Despite pressure from the
US, which has linked the pipeline to
Iran’s nuclear ambitions,
New Delhi and
Islamabad are thumbing their noses at
Washington. Together, they are about to put the finishing touches to their deal with
Tehran, with potentially far-reaching political and security implications. Many South Asian analysts see this as a telling comment on
Washington’s failure to line up enthusiasm outside the industrialised and developed world for its attempts to isolate
Iran. Though
India has voted against
Iran’s nuclear plans in global meetings, South Asian nations have generally paid little heed to calls for the country’s isolation. Tehran won a significant victory at this month’s eight-nation South Asia Association for Regional Co-operation summit in New Delhi when, despite strenuous US lobbying, it was recommended for observer status within the organisation as a forerunner to full membership in the future. Indian and Pakistani officials have been meeting to finalise the Iran-Pakistan-Indian pipeline (IPI) deal, with final approval expected within weeks and construction to start almost immediately. This is despite the
US dropping all pretence at politeness in its efforts to dissuade
India from building the pipeline, with Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman, on a visit to
New Delhi, insisting that the plans amount to
New Delhi helping
Iran’s nuclear program. “We believe that
Iran is seeking to develop nuclear weapons and anything that will support that endeavour (such as the IPI) is something that we oppose,” Mr Bodman said. He reminded the Indian Government of its need for
US co-operation in developing a civilian nuclear energy industry. Yet within days Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and his Pakistani counterpart, Shaukat Aziz, had pledged to “sincerely and seriously pursue the project to its successful completion”. Officials in energy-starved
India, which produces only half of the natural gas it needs to serve its population of more than 1.3 billion, and whose requirements will double over the next 15 years, are adamant they will go ahead with the IPI project.

This story is important, and included on this blog, because it clearly sets the scene for growing tensions in the new international order, and possible military, or covert, action by the

United States in the future to stop the pipeline from becoming a reality.

Go Here To Read The Full Story

Source: The Fourth World War


Afghanistan Fight Will Only Get Tougher

April 16, 2007

by Eric Margolis

The death last Sunday of six Canadian soldiers in southern Afghanistan reminds us of Santayana’s famous maxim that those who fail to study history are doomed to repeat it.

The soldiers were killed near Maiwand, a name meaning nothing to most Westerners. But there, on July 27, 1880, during the bloody Second Anglo-Afghan War, the British Empire suffered one of the worst defeats in its colonial history.

Two years earlier the Raj (Britain’s Indian Empire) had invaded Afghanistan for a second time. The British put Afghan puppet rulers into power in Kabul and Kandahar.

Ayub Khan, son of Afghanistan’s former emir, rallied 12,000 Pashtun (or Pathan) tribal warriors to fight an advancing British force whose mission was, in London’s words, to “liberate” Afghan tribes and bring them “the light of Christian civilization.” Today, the slogan is “promoting democracy.” The fierce Afghan tribal warriors routed the imperial force, composed of British regulars, including the vaunted Grenadier Guards, and Indian Sepoy troops, after a ferocious battle. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle used a British army doctor who fought at Maiwand as his model for Sherlock Holmes’ companion, Dr. Watson.

I recall this epic Afghan victory against British colonialism because understanding today’s war in Afghanistan requires proper historical context. A century and a quarter after Maiwand, Pashtun warriors of southern Afghanistan continue to resist another mighty world power and its allies, who have been faithfully following the imperial strategy of the old British Raj.

The invasion of Afghanistan was marketed to Americans as an “anti-terrorist” mission and an effort to implant democracy. It was sold to Canadians as a noble campaign of “nation-building, reconstruction, and defending women’s rights.” All nice-sounding, but mostly untrue.

What we are really seeing is a war by Western powers seeking to dominate the strategic oil corridor of Afghanistan, directed against the Pashtun people who comprise half that nation’s population. Another 15 million live just across the border in Pakistan. What we call the “Taliban” is actually a loose alliance of Pashtun tribes and clans, joined by nationalist forces and former mujahedin from the 1980s anti-Soviet struggle.

ROSY REPORTS CONTRADICTED

Last year, a leading authority on Afghanistan, the Brussels-based Senlis Council, found the Taliban and its allies control or influence half of the nation — roughly equivalent to Pashtun tribal territory. Its study flatly contradicted rosy reports of military success and “nation-building” from Washington and NATO HQ.

This week, the same think tank issued a shocking new survey based on 17,000 interviews. “Afghanis in southern Afghanistan are increasingly prepared to admit their support for Taliban, and belief that the government and international community will not be able to defeat the Taliban is widespread.” Senlis’ study concurs with my own findings in South Asia that Pakistan and India have independently concluded NATO will eventually be defeated in Afghanistan and withdraw. The U.S., however, may stay on and reinforce its 30,000 troops there because it cannot admit a second defeat after the Iraq debacle.

The U.S. and NATO are not fighting “terrorists” in Afghanistan and they are certainly not winning hearts and minds. They are fighting the world’s largest tribal people. The longer the Westerners stay and bomb villages, the more resistance will grow. Such is the inevitable pattern of every guerrilla war I have ever covered.

Western troops stuck in this nasty, $2-billion daily guerrilla conflict will become increasingly brutalized, demoralized and violent. This is precisely what happened to Afghanistan’s second to latest invader, the Soviet Union.

Afghanistan’s figurehead Hamid Karzai regime controls only the capitol. The rest of the country is under the Taliban, or warlords who run the surging narcotics trade that has made NATO the main defender of the world’s leading narco state.

If 160,000 Soviet troops and 240,000 Afghan Communist soldiers could not defeat the Pashtuns in ten years, how can 50,000 U.S. and NATO troops do better?

Those generals and politicians who claim this war will be won in a few short years ought to study Maiwand.

Source: CommonDreams.org