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Foreign Intelligence or Intelligence? Print
Friday, 07 February 2014 15:13

Stevenson writes: "The debate over the National Security Agency's cyber surveillance and collection of telephone records should lead to a better balance between rights of privacy and requirements of foreign intelligence."

Wasatch Range in Bluffdale, Utah. (photo: Jesse Lenz)
Wasatch Range in Bluffdale, Utah. (photo: Jesse Lenz)


Foreign Intelligence or Intelligence?

By Adlai E. Stevenson III, Reader Supported News

07 February 14

 

he debate over the National Security Agency's cyber surveillance and collection of telephone records should lead to a better balance between rights of privacy and requirements of foreign intelligence. But whatever the outcome of that debate, it has failed to acknowledge inherent deficiencies and risks in "foreign intelligence" and the transcendent role of foreign policy in the defense of our national interests. Important fundamentals that shape our national security policy will be unaddressed and unchanged.

Based on my years of experience as a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee and Chairman of its Subcommittee on the Collection and Production of Intelligence, I can say that effective congressional oversight and control of the military intelligence complex is something of an oxymoron. NSA and CIA directors reported to me in secret. Members of Congress don't know what they don't know, they don't know what to ask, and they can't disclose what they are told in secret. Although the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court may now have a Privacy and Civil Liberties Advocate, a potentially sound reform, that Advocate will be similarly handicapped.

Meanwhile, as a result of current policies, U.S. technology companies are damaged and forced to move operations out of the United States while indignant foreign governments take counter-measures against them. The financial costs of the military intelligence complex, including its tens if not hundreds of thousands of private contractors, are now estimated to exceed $70 billion annually. A new international commission is being organized to give the protection of privacy a multi-national dimension.

But I detect in this ferment little attention to the role and function of foreign intelligence, its inherent limitations, and the need for intelligence of a cerebral sort. Faulty intelligence contributed to the U.S. decision to invade Iraq and to Colin Powell's embarrassing defense of that invasion before the UN Security Council. A rudimentary familiarity with Iraq and its region should have been enough to foretell the consequences of our invasion.

Predictions of "spectacular acts of destruction and disruption" and proposals for preventing terrorism go back to my own introduction of the Comprehensive Counter Terrorism Act of 1979, following a year-long study by the Subcommittee on the Collection and Production of Intelligence. The study was prompted by the election of the Likkud to power in Israel, its repudiation of "autonomy" for Palestinians, and the effective neutralization of Egypt at Camp David. Trailing Israeli troops into the West Bank and Golan Heights in 1967, seeing and hearing evidence of what would later become known as "ethnic cleansing" produced real intelligence for me. Some 500,000 Israeli settlers now occupy East Jerusalem and the West Bank in defiance of the 4th Geneva Convention, with even more in the Golan Heights of Syria. As long as the U.S. subsidized Israel and indirectly its settlements policy in East Jerusalem and the West Bank, Americans would, I feared, be vulnerable to terrorism. That risk grew with the first Gulf War and with the stationing of U.S. troops -- viewed as infidels -- in Kuwait and Saudi Arabia which became principal sources of militant jihadists. Predictions of terrorism and measures to avoid it required no foreign intelligence. What they required was intelligence of a more cerebral sort.

Foreign intelligence tends to support the foreign policies of those who seek the intelligence, as illustrated in Colin Powell's position on the invasion of Iraq. Carl Von Clausewitz, the Prussian General, said intelligence was a "lie." Intelligence collection priorities are often determined by policy makers -- the "consumers." Often, foreign intelligence is tailored to fit the pre-conceptions of policy makers. Intelligence is often flawed. Leaks are endemic; those which compromise "sources and methods" can be fatal. The agencies of the intelligence community (including the FBI) have conflicting and overlapping missions, lack effective "central" responsibility, and are overwhelmed by masses of intelligence, much of it technical, which requires "production" and assessment, often without the necessary regional specialists and linguists.

When I was leading the investigation of the intelligence failure in Iran in the late 70's, I was told by the CIA director that the Agency had no Farsi-speaking analysts, and I learned, visiting CIA Station Chiefs in the Middle East and Eastern Europe, that their operating directives were focused on the Soviet Union -- the preoccupation of the consumers. The Shah of Iran assured me that the unrest in Iran was owing to Communists instigated by the Soviet Union. The U.S. relied on the Shah's agency, Savak, for intelligence on Iran. Foreign agencies focus on the priorities of their consumers. Our brave station chiefs were forced to neglect tremors beneath their feet.

My official report to the Senate in 1978 foresaw the fall of the Shah of Iran and the fall of President Sadat in Egypt -- the CIA did not. The U.S. relied on Mossad, the Israeli intelligence agency, for intelligence on Iran and Iraq. We received faulty intelligence -- or was it faulty? These agencies may have achieved their purpose, drawing the U.S. into Iran and Iraq -- quick sands of a post-World War I construct of feuding tribes, sects, ethnicities, and foreign interests carved by Europeans from the carcass of the Ottoman Empire.

Our foreign policy failures and dilemmas reflect failures of a cerebral sort of intelligence, including a lack of experience in the real world away from Washington, its arm chair polemicists, its ideological think thanks, and too little experience in military ground forces where you learn to expect the unexpected. Policy has been driven by ideologues, militarists, and amateurs, including Members of Congress who are little noted nowadays for real world experience.

Terrorism is not a phenomenon of recent origin. Gavrilo Princip, the Serb nationalist who assassinated the Austro-Hungarian Archduke in 1914, did not expect to bring down the Empire. But the Empire foolishly responded with an ultimatum to Serbia which triggered World War I and, eventually, the Empire's demise. Nineteen men armed with box cutters did not expect to bring America down. Only America can do that. Attacking America was a tactic for Osama Bin Laden. The U.S. reacted by attacking Afghanistan and Bin Laden's enemy, the secular Baathist regime of Saddam Hussein, the same regime that the U.S. had aided when it was using chemical weapons against Iran.

Cyber surveillance and meta data collection are part of the continuing reaction to 9/11, with few if any terrorists to show for it and near universal condemnation. The U.S. is widely perceived as waging war against Islam, against Shias as well as Sunnis, on the ground, with drones, and by proxy in Palestine, from the Persian Gulf to Central Asia. Germany and Brazil resent our intrusions, and what have they wrought?

The current debate will lead to much-needed reforms, but it will not change the limited and often obscuring nature of what we call foreign intelligence. There is no substitute for the pragmatic, cerebral intelligence of policy makers derived from an understanding of history and from experience in the real world -- and the courage to act on it. Foreign intelligence is no substitute for foreign policy.

The hour is late in Palestine, Pakistan, Syria and Afghanistan. The Taliban may be resurgent as the Americans and allies retreat in Afghanistan. In Syria, Palestine and Iran, the Obama Administration, led by Secretary of State John Kerry, is trying to give diplomacy a chance. It may not be too late. Talks with Iran on its nuclear program are proceeding. It has a new and seemingly pragmatic president. Israel and militants in Syria handicap the Geneva talks on Syria by preventing Iran's participation. But Secretary Kerry and Lakhdar Brahimi, the UN envoy, are trying there also to give diplomacy a chance. Pressures mount on Israel as it isolates itself in the world. Secretary Kerry doesn't need foreign intelligence. He needs support.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.


CORRECTION: A previous version of this post incorrectly stated that the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand took place in 1918. The assassination occurred in 1914. The post also incorrectly referred to the assassin as Gavril Princip. The assassin's name was Gavrilo Princip. The post has been updated to correct these errors.

SEE ALSO Get Ready: The Day We Fight Back Against Mass Surveillance Is Coming

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Stand With the Girl Scouts Print
Friday, 07 February 2014 14:58

Nichols writes: "The Girl Scouts don't make political endorsements or take a position on abortion rights debates in the United States. And they are no more left-wing than most organizations that highlight the fact of Nancy Reagan's former membership."

Girl Scouts. (photo: GirlScouts.org)
Girl Scouts. (photo: GirlScouts.org)


Stand With the Girl Scouts

By John Nichols, The Nation

07 February 14

 

t says something about the state of the debate these days that Americans now must decide whether they are with the Girl Scouts or against them.

As for me, I'm with the Girl Scouts.

In the face of the "CookieCott"-not a boycott, mind you-promoted by anti-choice groups that want people to turn away Girl Scouts selling cookies, I will buy Thin Mints and Trefoils and Tagalongs.

Continue Reading: Stand With the Girl Scouts

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No Wonder the World Is Terrified of America - We're the Biggest Threat Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=7646"><span class="small">Noam Chomsky, AlterNet</span></a>   
Thursday, 06 February 2014 15:25

Chomsky writes: "Can the United States be contained and other nations secured in the face of the U.S. threat?"

Author, historian and political commentator Noam Chomsky. (photo: Ben Rusk/flickr)
Author, historian and political commentator Noam Chomsky. (photo: Ben Rusk/flickr)


No Wonder the World Is Terrified of America - We're the Biggest Threat

By Noam Chomsky, AlterNet

06 February 14

 

s the year 2013 drew to an end, the BBC reported on the results of the WIN/Gallup International poll on the question: "Which country do you think is the greatest threat to peace in the world today?"

The United States was the champion by a substantial margin, winning three times the votes of second-place Pakistan.

By contrast, the debate in American scholarly and media circles is about whether Iran can be contained, and whether the huge NSA surveillance system is needed to protect U.S. security.

In view of the poll, it would seem that there are more pertinent questions: Can the United States be contained and other nations secured in the face of the U.S. threat? In some parts of the world the United States ranks even higher as a perceived menace to world peace, notably in the Middle East, where overwhelming majorities regard the U.S. and its close ally Israel as the major threats they face, not the U.S.-Israeli favorite: Iran.

Few Latin Americans are likely to question the judgment of Cuban nationalist hero José Martí, who wrote in 1894 that "The further they draw away from the United States, the freer and more prosperous the [Latin] American people will be."

Martí's judgment has been confirmed in recent years, once again by an analysis of poverty by the U.N. Economic Commission for Latin American and the Caribbean, released last month.

The U.N. report shows that far-reaching reforms have sharply reduced poverty in Brazil, Uruguay, Venezuela and some other countries where U.S. influence is slight, but that it remains abysmal in others - namely, those that have long been under U.S. domination, like Guatemala and Honduras. Even in relatively wealthy Mexico, under the umbrella of the North American Free Trade Agreement, poverty is severe, with 1 million added to the numbers of the poor in 2013.

Sometimes the reasons for the world's concerns are obliquely recognized in the United States, as when former CIA director Michael Hayden, discussing Obama's drone murder campaign, conceded that "Right now, there isn't a government on the planet that agrees with our legal rationale for these operations, except for Afghanistan and maybe Israel."

A normal country would be concerned by how it is viewed in the world. Certainly that would be true of a country committed to "a decent respect to the opinions of mankind," to quote the Founding Fathers. But the United States is far from a normal country. It has had the most powerful economy in the world for a century, and has had no real challenge to its global hegemony since World War II, despite some decline, partly self-administered.

The U.S., conscious of "soft power," undertakes major campaigns of "public diplomacy" (aka propaganda) to create a favorable image, sometimes accompanied by worthwhile policies that are welcomed. But when the world persists in believing that the United States is by far the greatest threat to peace, the American press scarcely reports the fact.

The ability to ignore unwanted facts is one of the prerogatives of unchallenged power. Closely related is the right to radically revise history.

A current example can be seen in the laments about the escalating Sunni-Shiite conflict that is tearing apart the Middle East, particularly in Iraq and Syria. The prevailing theme of U.S. commentary is that this strife is a terrible consequence of the withdrawal of American force from the region - a lesson in the dangers of "isolationism." The opposite is more nearly correct. The roots of the conflict within Islam are many and varied, but it cannot be seriously denied that the split was significantly exacerbated by the American- and British-led invasion of Iraq. And it cannot be too often repeated that aggression was defined at the Nuremberg Trials as "the supreme international crime," differing from others in that it encompasses all the evil that follows, including the current catastrophe.

A remarkable illustration of this rapid inversion of history is the American reaction to the current atrocities in Fallujah. The dominant theme is the pain about the sacrifices, in vain, of the American soldiers who fought and died to liberate Fallujah. A look at the news reports of the U.S. assaults on Fallujah in 2004 quickly reveals that these were among the most vicious and disgraceful war crimes of the aggression.

The death of Nelson Mandela provides another occasion for reflection on the remarkable impact of what has been called "historical engineering": reshaping the facts of history to serve the needs of power.

When Mandela at last obtained his freedom, he declared that "During all my years in prison, Cuba was an inspiration and Fidel Castro a tower of strength. . [Cuban victories] destroyed the myth of the invincibility of the white oppressor [and] inspired the fighting masses of South Africa . a turning point for the liberation of our continent - and of my people - from the scourge of apartheid. . What other country can point to a record of greater selflessness than Cuba has displayed in its relations to Africa?"

Today the names of Cubans who died defending Angola from U.S.-backed South African aggression, defying American demands that they leave the country, are inscribed on the "Wall of Names" in Pretoria's Freedom Park. And the thousands of Cuban aid workers who sustained Angola, largely at Cuban expense, are also not forgotten.

The U.S.-approved version is quite different. From the first days after South Africa agreed to withdraw from illegally occupied Namibia in 1988, paving the way for the end of apartheid, the outcome was hailed by The Wall Street Journal as a "splendid achievement" of American diplomacy, "one of the most significant foreign policy achievements of the Reagan administration."

The reasons why Mandela and South Africans perceive a radically different picture are spelled out in Piero Gleijeses' masterful scholarly inquiry "Visions of Freedom: Havana, Washington, Pretoria, and the Struggle for Southern Africa, 1976-1991."

As Gleijeses convincingly demonstrates, South Africa's aggression and terrorism in Angola and its occupation of Namibia were ended by "Cuban military might" accompanied by "fierce black resistance" within South Africa and the courage of Namibian guerrillas. The Namibian liberation forces easily won fair elections as soon as these were possible. Similarly, in elections in Angola, the Cuban-backed government prevailed - while the United States continued to support vicious opposition terrorists there even after South Africa was compelled to back away.

To the end, the Reaganites remained virtually alone in their strong support for the apartheid regime and its murderous depredations in neighboring countries. Though these shameful episodes may be wiped out of internal U.S. history, others are likely to understand Mandela's words.

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The Sochi Olympics, From Putin and the Plutocrats to Pussy Riot Print
Thursday, 06 February 2014 15:12

Goodman writes: "The Sochi Olympic Games are rightly highlighting the constellation of abuses that have become standard in Russia under Vladimir Putin. Most notably is intense, often violent homophobia."

A gay rights activist shows a photo of Russia's President Vladimir Putin depicted as a devil, as protesters gather at a square in Brussels. (photo: Yves Logghe/AP)
A gay rights activist shows a photo of Russia's President Vladimir Putin depicted as a devil, as protesters gather at a square in Brussels. (photo: Yves Logghe/AP)


The Sochi Olympics, From Putin and the Plutocrats to Pussy Riot

By Amy Goodman, Truthdig

06 February 14

 

he Sochi Olympic Games are rightly highlighting the constellation of abuses that have become standard in Russia under Vladimir Putin. Most notably is intense, often violent homophobia, tacitly endorsed by the government with the recent passage of the law against "gay propaganda." While Sochi shines a light on Russian human-rights violations, it affords an opportunity to expose the rampant corruption and abuse that accompanies the International Olympic Committee (IOC).

I first personally experienced the corrupting influence of the Olympics when attempting a routine entry into Canada, to give a talk at the Vancouver Public Library in November 2009. Two colleagues and I were ordered out of our car by the Canadian border guards. I was interrogated at length, as other guards busily rifled our car. They wanted to know the topics of my talk. I told them I would talk about the importance of an independent media, about the Obama administration's war in Afghanistan, its efforts to derail to the U.N. climate negotiations and more.

"Are you planning on speaking about the upcoming Winter Games in Vancouver?" The thought hadn't entered my mind, at least until the interrogation. My detention became a national story across Canada. In order to host the Olympics, cities have to buckle under the IOC's strict rules, and governments have to provide enormous public subsidies, primarily for sports stadiums and other construction projects that are paid for but often unwanted by the local citizens. To force this boondoggle on the public, the IOC and host governments crack down on dissent.

Continue Reading: The Sochi Olympics, From Putin and the Plutocrats to Pussy Riot

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Republicans Poised to Take Senate, Americans Reject Their Platform Print
Thursday, 06 February 2014 15:08

Cole writes: "A lot of political analysts think it is entirely possible that the Republicans will take the senate next November. This development won't change much, in all likelihood, if it does occur."

Juan Cole. (photo: Informed Comment)
Juan Cole. (photo: Informed Comment)


Republicans Poised to Take Senate, Americans Reject Their Platform

By Juan Cole, Informed Comment

06 February 14

 

lot of political analysts think it is entirely possible that the Republicans will take the senate next November. This development won't change much, in all likelihood, if it does occur. The Republican majority in the House of Representatives can already block most legislation, and in 2013 it dedicated itself the the proposition that the country must be punished for re-electing Barack Obama, by being denied virtually any new needed legislation at all. The Republicans won't have a two-thirds majority in the Senate, and so won't be able to over-rule an Obama veto.

What is odd, and damning of the current American political system, is that the Republican Party's major platform positions are roundly rejected by the American people. That is, they are ideologically a minority party. And yet they manage to win elections.

The Republican Party stands against gay marriage. But some 55% of Americans have begun saying they support it.

The Republican Party wants to overturn Roe v. Wade and outlaw abortion. But a majority of Americans say they support abortion in some or all cases, and only about a fourth want to forbid it altogether.

The Republican Party, with the exception of a libertarian minority, wants more interventionism abroad. Republican leaders denounce President Obama for getting out of Iraq, denounce him for being willing to get out of Afghanistan, denounce him for not getting involved in Syria and for not launching a war on Iran.

But 51 percent of Americans think the country is already too extended abroad. 52% say that the US should "mind its own business" abroad, and only 38% disagree.

The Republican Party officials stance is not worried about income inequality. But that view represents only 40% of the Republican Party rank and file. Moderate Republicans and all Democrats think that economic inequality is increasing, that it is a problem, and that the government should do something about it.

The Republican Party stands against marijuana legalization. 55% of Americans support it.

Republicans blame Hillary Clinton for the Benghazi tragedy, where an ambassador and other Americans were killed by extremists at the consulate there on September 11, 2012. But substantially more Americans trust Hillary Clinton on Benghazi than they do congressional Republicans.

The Republican Party has a problem with immigration reform and can't get an act together on the Hill. In polling, a majority of Americans identify with Democratic Party stances on immigration reform, rather than with Republican Party ones.

If the US were ruled by referendum, it would have Democratic Party policies. That so many US policies are set by Republicans, and by the most conservative Republicans in the party, is a betrayal of the general will of the American people, who want an entirely different set of policies. The Republican Party advantage, as the party of Big Business, in campaign funding probably accounts for some of this disparity. Small numbers of billionaires like the Koch Brothers are extraordinarily powerful in the United States, which is obviously undemocratic and more like feudalism. The backward custom of letting partisan state legislatures gerrymander districts is also partially to blame.

Whatever the reasons, the American public is not getting the government policies it says it wants. Republicans are always slamming me as "far left." But the opinion polling shows that my positions are solidly in the American mainstream. We are a center-left country and the majority of Americans takes the same stance as I on most controversial issues. It is the House of Representatives that is extreme, far more right wing than the country it says it represents. And now it seems likely that the Senate will go in the same direction.

The system is obviously broken. Cutting down the role of big money in our politics, and reforming our districting processes, is key to fixing it. Until then, our politics will continue to lurch to the right even as the public is left of center, and that is a recipe for trouble down the road.

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