Apr 122010
 
robertBlakeUSambKyrgyztan

The turmoil in a small Central Asian country speaks volumes about US ‘democratisation’ efforts in the region

 

robertBlakeUSambKyrgyztan

Top diplomat Robert Blake is being sent to Kyrgyzstan to "evaluate" the situation after last week's uprising which ousted the president of the strategically important central Asian nation. Tsk, tsk...More headaches for the Empire's managers.

The timing of this week’s revolt in Kyrgyzstan, making headlines around the world, is telling. On Thursday the son and heir apparent of ousted president Kurmanbek Bakiyev, Maksim, was scheduled to speak at an economic forum in Washington. The meeting has been postponed indefinitely, and something tells me it may not be re-scheduled any time soon. As the Guardian reported today, interim opposition spokesperson and former Kyrgyz ambassador the United States, Roza Otunbayeva, said of the outgoing president: “His business is finished in Kyrgyzstan … in essence people were simply fed up with the previous regime, and with its repressive, tyrannical and abusive behaviour. They want to build democracy here.”

It is a curious picture – a nation literally at the crossroads of the US “democratisation” project in Afghanistan violently erupting to eject a government that had benefited handsomely from US aid and lucrative insider contracts – despite a drumbeat of reports over the last few years of the ruling party’s increasingly anti-democratic nature. But the American government’s laissez-faire attitude towards the human rights situation in Kyrgyzstan isn’t very hard to fathom. The strategic location of the country is a lynchpin in the US armed forces’ movement of troops and supplies in and out of Afghanistan, via the massive American military air base just outside of the capital city of Bishkek. In fact when the government threatened to cancel the lease to the base last summer, the Obama administration wooed the president with a private letter, and eventually agreed to triple rent payments on the lease. In the meantime most people in Kyrgyzstan saw little benefit from this “strategic relationship.”

“The human rights situation has deteriorated in the last two to three years, and especially in the last six months,” Dr Andrea Berg tells me, a Berlin-based Central Asia researcher with Human Rights Watch. “There have been physical attacks and murders of journalists, closures of newspapers, trials against high-ranking opposition members. I think the last straw was the socio-economic problems, increase of the prices for energy, and on cell phone fees. The US has criticised certain developments in Kyrgyzstan, but in general the main concern was about stability. Human rights came second.”

Realpolitik can and often does have unintended consequences; the bloody revolt in Kyrgyzstan is just the latest example. Interestingly the protests, in which at least 70 were shot dead by security forces before the opposition stormed the parliament and wrested power, bear an uncanny resemblance to another popular revolt of the past decade half a world away. In 2003 the US-supported government of Bolivia was toppled amid state repression and violence after long simmering anger over resource nationalisations and utility hikes in the desperately poor Andean nation. That bloody episode led to the election of the first indigenous president in the hemisphere, Evo Morales, and a government decidedly at odds with US geopolitical interests in Latin America. The deposed president, Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada, now lives in exile in the United States – where he has been charged in two civil suits for crimes against humanity and extrajudicial killings during the protests that precipitated his resignation.
Kyrgyzstan, like Bolivia at one time, is hardly the only such small, democracy-deficient, country with some manner of “strategic relationship” that fits in to larger US geopolitical concerns – in fact it may be the rule. But the unexpected swiftness with which an unpopular regime was swept aside, and the potentially seismic impact it has on the US war effort in Afghanistan – is a good reminder of the inevitable breaking point produced by a US foreign policy semantically dedicated to human rights – that looks the other way while “strategic allies” loot their countries’ assets, murder their journalists, and send troops out to gun people down in the streets.

In central Asia this groaning contradiction is louder than usual. While the war and occupation in Afghanistan was framed by President Obama recently as an effort at protecting “America’s vital interests” in the region, there is at least periodic lip service paid to democracy enhancement and institution building in that country. But when democratic norms are trampled left and right in a neighbouring country, and the US looks the other way because it happens to be sitting on some prime real estate, we shouldn’t be too surprised when things blow up and “strategic allies” fall before a storm of popular outrage. Given the evidence of business as usual, perhaps a foreign policy that prioritises the defence of human rights and discourages official corruption is actually the most realpolitik of them all.

huffhannonJosephJoseph Huff-Hannon is a Brooklyn, NY-based independent writer and producer, a 2008 finalist in the Livingston award for young journalists, and a recipient of a James Aronson award for social justice journalism. See more of his work at josephhuffhannon.com

  • guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media Limited 2010
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Apr 122010
 
ritaKatzSITES2

Is Israel Controlling Phony Terror News? The authors pose important questions which, of course, are not being asked by the mainstream media

By Gordon Duff and Brian Jobert  [print_link]

W H O  SAYS Al Qaeda takes credit for a bombing? Rita Katz. Who gets us bin Laden tapes? Rita Katz. Who gets us pretty much all information telling us Muslims are bad? Rita Katz? Rita Katz is the Director of Site Intelligence, primary source for intelligence used by news services, Homeland Security, the FBI and CIA. What is her qualification? She served in the Israeli Defense Forces. She has a college degree and most investigative journalists believe the Mossad “helps” her with her information. We find no evidence of any qualification whatsoever of any kind. A bartender has more intelligence gathering experience.

Rita Katz at the lectern.

Do we know if the information reported comes from a teenager in Seattle or a terror cell in Jakarta? No, of course not, we don’t have a clue. Can you imagine buying information on Islamic terrorism from an Israeli whose father was executed as a spy by Arabs (see below)?

It is quite likely that everything you think you know about terror attacks such as the one in Detroit or whether Osama bin Laden is alive or dead comes from Rita Katz. Does she make it all up? We don’t know, nobody knows, nobody checks, they simply buy it, print it, say it comes from SITE Intelligence and simply forget to tell us that this is, not only a highly biased organization but also an extremely amateur one also.

Is any of this her fault, Rita’s? No. She is herself, selling her work. The blame is not SITE Intelligence, it is the people who pass on the information under misleading circumstances.

Imagine if a paper carried a story like this:

“Reports that Al Qaeda was responsible for bombing the mosque and train station were given to us by an Israeli woman who says she found it on the internet…”

MIDEAST-DIPLOMACY-US-OBAMA-QAEDAThis is fair. Everyone should be able to earn a living and information that comes from Israel could be without bias but the chances aren’t very good. In fact, any news organization, and most use this service, that fails to indicate that the sources they use are “rumored” to be a foreign intelligence service with a long history of lying beyond human measure, is not to be taken seriously.

Can we prove that SITE Intelligence is the Mossad? No. Would a reasonable person assume it is? Yes.

Would a reasonable person believe anything from this source involving Islam or the Middle East? No, they would not.

SITE’s primary claim to fame other than bin Laden videos with odd technical faults is their close relationship with Blackwater. Blackwater has found site useful. Blackwater no longer exists as they had to change their name because of utter lack of credibility.

What can be learned by examining where our news comes from?  Perhaps we could start being realistic and begin seeing much of our own news and the childish propaganda it really is.

Propaganda does two things:

1.  It makes up phony reasons to justify acts of barbaric cruelty or insane greed.

2.  It blames people for things they didn’t do because the people doing the blaming really did it themselves.  We call these things “false flag/USS Liberty” incidents.

Next time you see dancing Palestinians and someone tells you they are celebrating a terror attack, it is more likely they are attending a birthday party. This is what we have learned, perhaps this is what we had best remember.

FOX news video broadcast on 9/11 purported to show Palestinians celebrating the WTC “terrorist attack,” but the video was really taken back in 1991 and had nothing to do with terrorism.

From an AFP article on Site Intelligence:

Rita Katz and S.I.T.E. are set to release yet another “Al-Qaeda” tape

Despite a massive manhunt by the world’s intelligence agencies, BL seems to evade their combined efforts, staying on the run. But he still has time to drop into his recording studio and cook up a fresh tape for the likes of Rita Katz and her outfit called S.I.T.E. SITE is staffed by TWO people, Katz and a Josh Devon.

WASHINGTON (AFP) The head of the Al-Qaeda network Osama bin Laden is expected to release a taped message on Iraq, a group monitoring extremist online forums said Thursday. The 56-minute tape by the hunted militant is addressed to Iraq and an extremist organization based there, the Islamic State of Iraq, said the US-based SITE monitoring institute, citing announcements on “jihadist forums.”

It said the release was “impending” but did not say whether the message was an audio or video tape. Despite a massive manhunt and a 25-million-dollar bounty on his head, he has evaded capture and has regularly taunted the United States and its allies through warnings issued on video and audio cassettes.

Source: ME Times

Yes, despite a massive manhunt by the world’s intelligence agencies, BL seems to evade their combined efforts, staying on the run. But he still has time to drop into his recording studio and cook up a fresh tape for the likes of Rita Katz and her outfit called S.I.T.E. SITE is staffed by TWO people, Katz and a Josh Devon.

Yet these two individuals manage to do what the ENTIRE combined assets of the world’s Western intelligence can’t:

Be the first to obtain fresh video and audio tapes from aL-Qaeda with Bin Laden making threats and issuing various other comments. If BL appears a bit “stiff” in the latest release, that’s because he is real stiff, as in dead.

How is it that a Jewish-owned group like S.I.T.E. can outperform the world’s best and brightest in the intelligence field and be the first to know that a group like al-Qaeda is getting ready to release another tape?

How is it possible that Rita Katz and S.I.T.E. can work this magic? Maybe looking at Katz’s background will help:

Rita Katz is Director and co-founder of the SITE Institute. Born in Iraq, her father was tried and executed as an Israeli spy, whereupon her family moved to Israel [the move has been described as both an escape and an emigration in different sources]. She received a degree from the Middle Eastern Studies program at Tel Aviv University, and is fluent in Hebrew and Arabic. She emigrated to the US in 1997.

Katz was called as a witness in the trial, but the government didn’t claim she was a terrorism expert. During the trial it was discovered that Katz herself had worked in violation of her visa agreement when she first arrived inAmerica in 1997.

She also admitted to receiving more than $130,000 for her work as an FBI consultant on the case.

SOURCE WATCH

More details about Katz and SITE’s activities can be obtained from SOURCE WATCH’s page on the group:

http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=SITE_Institute

Source Watch notes that, “Listed under “Security for the Professional”, sponsored by Blackwater Security Consultants, Blackwater USA cites SITE Institute as “An Invaluable Resource” in its May 9, 2005,Blackwater Tactical Weekly newsletter.[13]

Article from: VETERANS TODAY NETWORK

Gordon Duff is a Marine Vietnam veteran, grunt and 100% disabled vet. He has been a featured commentator on TV and radio including Al Jazeera and his articles have been carried by news services around the world. He has been a UN Diplomat, defense contractor and is a widely published expert on military and defense issues.

ADDITIONAL MATERIAL

From the WikiPedia:

Katz, a fluent Arabic speaker, was born in Basra in Southern Iraq in 1963 to a well-to-do Iraqi Jewish family.[1][4]After the Six Day War and shortly after Saddam Hussein‘s Ba’ath Party seized power in Iraq in 1968, her father was arrested on charges of spying for Israel.[4] The family’s property was confiscated by the state, and the rest of the family put under house arrest in a stone hut.[4][1] The following year, after having been tortured, Katz’s father was convicted and executed in a public hanging in the central square of Baghdad to the roaring applause of more than half a million Iraqis; the government offered free transportation to people from the provinces, and belly dancers performed for the crowd.[4][1][5] Katz’s mother managed to escape on foot with her three small children to Iran, and from there they made their way to Israel.[4]

The family settled in the seaside town of Bat Yam.[4] While in Israel, Katz served in the Israeli Defense Forces and studied politics, history, and Middle Eastern studies at Tel Aviv University.[4] She later married a medical student, and in 1997 came to the United States with her husband, who received a National Institutes of Health fellowship, and their three children.[4]

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Apr 122010
 
CUBA--gloriaEstefanLeadsmarch

Putin and Hu visit Hugo Chavez; Barack Obama to visit Gloria Estefan

By Charles Hardy in Caracas / April 12th 2010  [print_link]

Note: THIS A DISPATCH FACILITATED BY WILLIAMS CAMACARO, TO WHOM WE EXPRESS OUR GRATITUDE

 

CUBA--gloriaEstefanLeadsmarch

Multimillionaire Cuban-born singer Gloria Estefan and her husband, Emilio, will host Obama at their Miami Beach home April 15 for a Democratic National Committee fundraiser. The $30,400-a-couple cocktail reception is the Estefans' first political fundraiser, said Democratic consultant Freddy Balsera, who advised Obama's campaign on Hispanic issues and is close to the couple. The Estefans orchestrated a massive march through Miami's Little Havana in support of Cuba's Damas de Blanco, or Ladies in White, a group of dissidents supported by American agencies, including the CIA. Though they've kept a low political profile, the Estefans are no strangers to the White House. Gloria performed at the inaugural festivities for President George W. Bush in 2005, following Bush's 2002 appointment of Emilio to the President's Committee on the Arts and Humanities and the President's Advisory Committee on the Arts.

When President Obama met with the other American presidents in Trinidad last year, I was filled with hope for a new relation between the United States and Latin America. But as President Chávez of Venezuela has pointed out, the Barack Obama of Trinidad is not the Barack Obama of today.

The position of the United States in the Honduran conflict was abominable.  The opening of new U.S. military bases in Colombia has been simply provocative.  The threat of opening more such bases brings to mind the Monroe doctrine of the nineteenth century.  In terms of this new century, the presidency of Barack Obama in relation to Latin America has been worse than that of President George W. Bush.

As I write this, the Prime Minister of Russia, Vladimir Putin just completed a visit to Venezuela.  Russia and Venezuela entered into new agreements on multiple levels.  Although the international press will focus on military equipment that Venezuela has purchased and will purchase from Russia, 31 agreements were signed in a variety of areas.  These include automobiles, an airplane that carries water to fight forest fires, and new ships that will carry petroleum from Venezuela to other parts of the world.

It would be nice if the United States would be involved in such negotiations.  It could help its economy.  Why isn’t it?  One reason is because Venezuela bought F-16 fighter jets from the U.S. many years ago. Now, however, the U.S. won’t sell replacement parts for them.  Who would want to stay involved in negotiations with that kind of partner relationship!

In their longstanding allegiance and love for the United States, the Venezuelan opposition likes to talk about how Venezuela is isolating itself from the international community.  What is really happening is that the United States is trying to isolate it.  Its media success in the U.S., Western Europe, Colombia, and a few other countries has to be recognized.  But the reality is that the United States is gradually isolating itself from most of the rest of the world.

In the next few weeks, the president of the immense country of China, Hu Jintao, will be coming to Venezuela to meet with President Chávez.  Before that, the president of the small country of Uruguay, Jose Mujica, will be coming here.

But in the United States, on April 15, President Barack Obama will be going to what appears to be the new sovereign country of Florida to have cocktails with Gloria Estefan in her Miami Beach home.  Gloria was born in Cuba and has an insatiable hatred for the government of that tiny Caribbean island.  As reported by the Miami Herald, she and her husband are going to host a cocktail reception for President Obama.  The cost?  Only $30,400 per couple.

While many see the U.S. Empire starting to crumble, President Obama is going to meet with Gloria.  What’s behind this friendship with Gloria and her husband?  Apparently, it seems that Obama likes her singing as well as Estefan’s song about Cuba.  She has already performed at the White House and he had no problem meeting with her husband there.  He even granted Gloria the right to an interview on a Hispanic television station in the United States, Univision.

 

 

Putin and Chavez, during recent talks.

Putin and Chavez, during recent talks.

 

Thus, while 187 nations voted in the United Nations in October against the U.S. blockade of Cuba (only the U.S., Israel, and Palau voted for continuing it), President Obama courts the friendship of the ex-Cuban wealthy in Miami.  Meanwhile world leaders such as Putin, Hu, Mujica, and others visit Hugo Chávez, who speaks for the non-wealthy in Latin America.

I don’t know if Ms. Estefan and President Obama refer to each other as “Gloria” and “Barack,” but I did hear Prime Minister Putin and President Chávez refer to each other as “Vladimir” and “Hugo.”  It would be nice to hear someday on Venezuelan television, “Barack” and “Hugo.”  But I am losing hope.  The President Obama of Trinidad just doesn’t seem to be the President Obama of today.

In February, presidents of Latin American countries met in Cancun, Mexico, and decided to form a new Latin American and Caribbean organization without the United States and Canada as members.  I wonder if Gloria Estefan and President Obama will decide to form a new North American organization without the Latin American and Caribbean countries.  It could be composed of only three nations:  the United States, Canada, and Florida.

By Charles Hardy ©

Charles Hardy is author of ­Cowboy in Caracas:  A North American’s Memoir of Venezuela’s Democratic Revolution,  published by Curbstone Press.

 

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