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FOCUS: The White House's Leak Hunt Is Battling the Wrong Enemy With the Wrong Weapons Print
Wednesday, 15 November 2017 11:49

Bamford writes: "The Trump administration has declared all-out war on leakers, and Attorney General Jeff Sessions is focusing on individuals who have given the news media comparatively small amounts of White House information."

Attorney General Jeff Sessions. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty)
Attorney General Jeff Sessions. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty)


The White House's Leak Hunt Is Battling the Wrong Enemy With the Wrong Weapons

By James Bamford, NBC News

15 November 17


Trump should fire the NSA officials in charge when hacking tools go missing.

he Trump administration has declared all-out war on leakers, and Attorney General Jeff Sessions is focusing on individuals who have given the news media comparatively small amounts of White House information. But the administration is battling the wrong enemy with the wrong weapons.

Digital secrets stolen from the National Security Agency represent the real — and critical — security problem. More than half a billion pages have been swiped, most of it above top secret, with the most recent theft reported in October alone.

Those NSA leaks can be used to attack the U.S. government or threaten the lives of millions of Americans. Yet the administration appears to be ignoring these grave thefts.

Allegedly leaked or stolen NSA cyber weapons have already been used to shut down hospitals around the world and forced millions of people to pay ransoms or face losing all the data on their computers. The weapons could potentially kill thousands of people by being used to sabotage everything from large urban transportation systems to massive dams.

Late last year, both Defense Secretary Ashton B. Carter and National Intelligence Director James R. Clapper Jr. recommended to President Barack Obama that he fire the NSA director, Admiral Michael S. Rogers, according to The Washington Post.

That never happened. Now it should.

Unknown to the public, the NSA has for years been negligent in protecting its top-secret material.

The stolen data includes some of the NSA’s most prized cyber weapons. Most were created by the agency’s own hacker team, the Tailored Access Operations (TAO) unit. Like bank robbers examining the walls of a vault, looking for a way to get in, government hackers search for ways to crack into widely used computer operating systems, such as Microsoft Windows.

When they discover a way in — a crack in a vault’s wall so to speak — rather than notify the companies that their products are dangerously flawed, the NSA often secretly stores these vulnerabilities and later converts them into powerful cyber weapons, known as “exploits.” Like burglar’s tools, the exploits can secretly open a crack in a system, such as Windows, and insert an “implant” containing NSA malware — enabling the agency to take control of any computer using that Windows program.

Among the cyber weapons the NSA developed is an exploit called EternalBlue, which allowed the agency access to Windows computers, and an implant known as DoublePulsar, malware designed to take over the computers entirely.

Unknown to the public, the NSA has for years been negligent in protecting its top-secret material, including these cyber weapons. In 2013, for example, Edward Snowden, an NSA contract employee, walked out with at least hundreds of thousands — the NSA claims nearly two million — pages of documents. He had been stealing data for months, smuggling it out on flash drives.

Yet the agency had no knowledge of this enormous theft until Snowden announced it after he fled to Hong Kong.

Then, in 2015, according to a recent Wall Street Journal report, an NSA contract employee took highly secret materials home with him. The contractor put them on a home computer, where they were reportedly stolen by Russian intelligence hackers.

Next, in August 2016, another NSA contractor, Harold T. Martin, was arrested and charged with stealing more than 50 terabytes of data over many years. Like Snowden and the other unnamed contractor, Martin relied largely on flash drives to swipe upwards of three-quarters of a billion pages of top-secret information. His take allegedly included more than 75?percent of TAO’s entire collection of hacking tools, according to The Washington Post, among them the EternalBlue “exploit” and DoublePulsar “implant.”

Rather than protecting the American public from Russia and North Korea, the NSA has been inadvertently providing them with its cyber weapons.

A group calling itself the Shadow Brokers surfaced around the same time. It began auctioning off what it said was a “full state-sponsored toolset” of “cyber weapons” stolen from the NSA.

“How much you pay for enemies cyber weapons?” the group announced. To prove it had the authentic cyber weapons, the Shadow Brokers made some public, and promised a virtual arsenal of far more destructive programs to the highest bidder.

Ex-NSA officials have confirmed the authenticity of the hacked weapons. Yet prosecutors were never able to show a link between the Shadow Brokers and either Martin or the other contractor — meaning all three may have independently stolen these cyber weapons.

The auction turned out to be a bust, but a number of “free” cyber weapons became public. Hackers were able to convert the NSA’s EternalBlue exploit and DoublePulsar implant into a vicious computer worm they called WannaCry. It was designed to take over computers and lock out owners until they paid a ransom to get the digital key to unlock their data.

On May 12, what Europol called the largest ransomware attack in history began: In Spain, at the start of the work day, large red banners began filling computer screens across the nation, demanding money to unscramble suddenly encrypted data. In England, hospitals and clinics began reporting problems as well.

Within hours, the WannaCry computer worm spread across borders, continents and oceans, locking up nearly a quarter of a million computer systems in 150 countries until ransoms were paid.

In central London, at Bartholomew’s Hospital, Patrick Ward, a salesman, was about to have open-heart surgery when all the computers turned into bricks. Ambulances were diverted and appointments were cancelled, as access was denied to medical histories, X-rays, and blood tests. Doctors frantically ordered computers shut down as the entire National Healthcare System, country-wide, went into crisis mode.

Despite the NSA’s horrendous security record, the agency has never been held accountable.

It was the same across Europe and Russia; In China, computers at more than 29,000 organizations were infected.

Cybersecurity experts say North Korea likely orchestrated the WannaCry attacks, using the stolen NSA cyber weapons released by the Shadow Brokers.

Moscow is also implicated in using stolen NSA weapons to launch attacks. In September, a group nicknamed Fancy Bear, believed to be controlled by Russia, began using the EternalBlue exploit in cyber assaults against hotels throughout Europe. They were apparently searching for personal information of all government officials and business people who had checked in.

Thus, rather than protecting the American public from Russia and North Korea, the NSA has been inadvertently providing them with its cyber weapons — perhaps even the ones used to penetrate the Democratic Party during the election. (Granted, this was through incompetence rather than wittingly.)

Following the WannaCry attack, the Shadow Brokers announced it would soon launch “TheShadowBrokers Data Dump of the Month Service,” offering its large collection of stolen NSA cyber weapons through a subscription service. It was similar, they said, to a wine of the month club. In August, the group sought to double its profits by offering new weapons twice a month.

Free of charge, they also made public another NSA cyber weapon, UnitedRake — like EternalBlue, designed to attack Microsoft Window’s machines. It came complete with the agency’s top-secret instruction manual outlining how to use it. At Microsoft, company president Brad Smith compared the NSA theft to the theft of Tomahawk missiles from the Pentagon.

Despite the NSA’s horrendous security record, however, the agency has never been held truly accountable.

Meanwhile, the Trump administration continues searching for someone who passed a few tidbits about White House bickering to a reporter, rather than focus on the NSA losing potentially deadly cyber weapons to U.S. adversaries and criminals worldwide.

The NSA also needs to find a better way to prevent thousands of megabytes and gigabytes of data — including cyber weapons — from walking out the door. In past, the agency’s focus seems to have been on trying to get into employees' minds and their computers by relying on polygraph machines and electronic surveillance to determine who might be a current or potential thief. But neither have worked.

The NSA also needs to find a better way to prevent thousands of megabytes and gigabytes of data from walking out the door.

Indeed, there are numerous examples of spies successfully passing polygraph machines, as Martin did. Nor is it practical to monitor every employee’s electronics 24/7.

So, rather than trying to figure out what’s in an employee’s mind, the agency should try focusing on what’s in their pockets.

Like Snowden, Martin and the other contractor, people usually steal digital data, including cyber weapons, by smuggling small flash drives out of buildings. Yet a department store may have more security at the exit than an NSA or contractor facility; at least department stores have electronic devises to catch shoplifters.

The NSA should adopt the same full-body imaging millimeter wave technology now familiar to anyone who’s recently boarded a plane. The technology that looks for weapons at airports can look for flash drives containing cyber weapons.

It likely won’t stop someone from passing a reporter details about a presidential lie or cover-up. But at least it could help deter someone from walking out with the digital equivalent of a loose nuke.


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John Kerry's Deadly Embrace of Saudi Arabia Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=36478"><span class="small">John Kiriakou, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Wednesday, 15 November 2017 09:43

Kiriakou writes: "Former secretary of state John Kerry waded into the controversy between Saudi Arabia and Qatar during a speech last week at the UK's Chatham House, coming down solidly on the side of the Saudis."

Former U.S. secretary of state John Kerry chats with the Crown Prince and future king of Saudi Arabia, Mohammad bin Salman. (photo: Getty)
Former U.S. secretary of state John Kerry chats with the Crown Prince and future king of Saudi Arabia, Mohammad bin Salman. (photo: Getty)


John Kerry's Deadly Embrace of Saudi Arabia

By John Kiriakou, Reader Supported News

15 November 17

 

ormer secretary of state John Kerry waded into the controversy between Saudi Arabia and Qatar during a speech last week at the UK’s Chatham House, coming down solidly on the side of the Saudis. Saudi Crown Prince Muhammad bin Salman has led a blockade of Qatar for the past several months, accusing his neighbor of supporting terrorist movements around the country and seeking to improve relations with Iran, a move that is somehow considered to be “dangerous” by the heavily-armed and well-trained Saudi military. Kerry’s comments were supposed to show support for Saudi political reform. Instead, he embarrassed himself by endorsing authoritarianism and showing an utter lack of understanding of Middle Eastern politics.

Kerry told his audience, “I have great respect, frankly, for what the crown prince of Saudi Arabia and King Salman are trying to do to move Saudi Arabia into modernity. It’s a huge lift, folks, a huge challenge to try to change those societies. Together with the Emiratis and others, they are taking a very firm stand against extremism that in its duplicitous form has been allowed to play a game out there.” He added, “That’s part of what this challenge with Qatar is about. It’s not just about two nations in the region squabbling. It’s about this bigger vision of where we are going and whether we are going to stop extremism.” He made no mention whatsoever of the fact that 15 of the 19 September 11 hijackers were Saudis, nor did he discuss the fact that the Saudis have long supported Sunni extremist groups around the world.

Kerry’s comments could not have been any more misguided. First, Saudi Arabia’s fight with Qatar goes back decades, ever since former Qatari amir Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani decided to bring his tiny peninsular nation into the 21st century, and it has nothing to do with stopping extremism. Hamad decided that Qatar would be better off making its own way internationally. He began spending Qatar’s vast natural gas wealth to develop the country, making it an economic competitor with Dubai and Abu Dhabi, and to chart an independent foreign policy. Qatar would no longer tow the Saudi line, especially on Iran. Hamad thought it better to negotiate with the Iranians, to trade with them, and to open diplomatic relations. The Saudis did not approve. The Qatari establishment of the Aljazeera television news network, which routinely criticizes Saudi Arabia, ensured a generation of poor relations with Riyadh.

Kerry isn’t wrong solely for pandering to the Saudis. His comments instead show two things: a fundamental misunderstanding of Saudi Arabia, its policies, and its internal politics; and a knee-jerk neoliberalism. Kerry is the same person who voted, when he was a US senator, for the war against Iraq, the same person who supported a never-ending war in Afghanistan, and the same person who voted consistently for what has become a permanent US military and intelligence presence in Pakistan. This “great thinker” of US foreign policy doesn’t understand foreign policy at all.

What we’re seeing in Saudi Arabia today is not an attempt to bring the country into modernity, nor is it enactment of a new anti-corruption policy, as the Saudis have claimed. Instead, it’s a coup. Muhammad bin Salman, the king’s son, deposed his cousin, Muhammad bin Nayif, and immediately began to put his personal imprimatur on the kingdom. He has overseen Saudi Arabia’s war against Yemen, a conflict that has resulted in what just about anybody would call genocide. He has disrupted Lebanese politics by apparently luring that country’s prime minister to Riyadh and having him resign on Saudi television. He has supported Sunni extremist groups fighting against the Assad government in Syria. And he has rounded up and placed under house arrest as many as 2,000 of his subjects, including senior Saudi princes, current and former cabinet ministers, and leading businessmen — essentially anybody who might oppose him in the future. (The rumor here in Washington is that King Salman will abdicate in Muhammad’s favor soon after the new year.)

Oh, and Muhammad announced that next year women will be allowed to drive, the “modernization” that apparently attracted the attention and support of John Kerry.

I worked for John Kerry on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee for two-and-a-half years. He was absolutely obsessed with his legacy. Once, during a committee hearing, he turned in his chair and handed me a note saying, “Can you get me a map of Somalia?” I went into the anteroom and got him his map. I then tossed the note in a nearby trash can. Two hours later I received a call from his personal office. “What did you do with the senator’s note?” “What note?” I asked. “He handed you a note during the hearing. What did you do with it?” “I threw it in the trash,” I responded. “He just asked me for a map of Somalia.” “Well,” the aide said, “we need that note. We have to send it to the University of Massachusetts as part of his archives.” The only response I could come up with was, “You’re kidding, right?” “No,” was the response. “It’s in case a future PhD candidate needs to see it for research. All researchers need to know what kind of senator he was.”

Legacy or no, the problem is that, after decades in the House of Representatives and the Senate, and after four years as Secretary of State, Kerry can’t spot an authoritarian takeover, a soft coup, when he sees it. Or perhaps he supports it. I don’t know. But his comments at Chatham House certainly fit in well with his neoliberal pro-war personal ideology. Let’s see what he says about the Saudis when the war with Iran finally breaks out. That’s the Saudis’ end game, after all.



John Kiriakou is a former CIA counterterrorism officer and a former senior investigator with the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. John became the sixth whistleblower indicted by the Obama administration under the Espionage Act – a law designed to punish spies. He served 23 months in prison as a result of his attempts to oppose the Bush administration's torture program.

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.


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Trump's Real Constituency Isn't the White Working Class at All Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=10164"><span class="small">E.J. Dionne Jr., The Washington Post</span></a>   
Wednesday, 15 November 2017 09:38

Dionne Jr. writes: "The focus on President Trump's political strength among white working-class voters distracts from a truth that may be more important: His rise depended on support from rich conservatives, and his program serves the interests of those who have accumulated enormous wealth."

President Trump. (photo: Mark Scheefelbein/AP)
President Trump. (photo: Mark Scheefelbein/AP)


Trump's Real Constituency Isn't the White Working Class at All

By E.J. Dionne Jr., The Washington Post

15 November 17

 

he focus on President Trump’s political strength among white working-class voters distracts from a truth that may be more important: His rise depended on support from rich conservatives, and his program serves the interests of those who have accumulated enormous wealth.

This explains why so few congressional Republicans denounce him, no matter how close he edges toward autocracy, how much bigotry he spreads — or how often he panders to Vladimir Putin and denounces our own intelligence officials, as he did again this weekend.

The GOP leadership knows Trump is tilting our economy toward people just like him, the objective they care about most.

To borrow from the president, he could stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot somebody and still not lose House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (Wis.) or Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.) as long as they have a reactionary tax bill to push into law.

Last Tuesday’s elections demonstrated how fed up large parts of the nation are with Trump and how mobilized his opponents have become. The returns ratified polls showing the overwhelming majority of Americans rejecting his stewardship.

Rather than just celebrate the good news, Democrats and anti-Trump Republicans should move next to undermine Trump’s key asset. He needs to be exposed as a fraud whenever he says he has the backs of the “forgotten men and women” whose living standards have been shattered in the new economy.

Admittedly, doing this will be harder for conservatives than for progressives. After all, many conservatives have defended trickle-down economics for decades. But there is a wing of conservatism that has criticized the GOP for exploiting the votes of working-class Americans for years, even before Trump, while delivering them a whole lot of nothing.

This was the argument of the 2008 book “Grand New Party” by Ross Douthat, now a New York Times columnist, and Reihan Salam, an independent-minded conservative policy analyst. They proposed that Republicans become “the party of Sam’s Club.” But the existing party’s tax proposals confirm that the GOP is the party of Prada. And Prada may be a trifle downscale to capture the radical redistribution upward that these tax cuts would bring about. It is Exhibit A for how far Trump and his party will go to entrench an economic oligarchy.

Trump’s willingness to help Republican leaders pay off their largest contributors is the clearest explanation for why they debase themselves through their complicity with him. If you think this is harsh, consider the words of Rep. Chris Collins (R-N.Y.): “My donors are basically saying, ‘Get this done or don’t ever call me again.’?”

I bet they are.

As Gary Cohn, Trump’s top economic adviser, told CNBC’s John Harwood: “The most excited group out there are big CEOs, about our tax plan.”

They should be. The bills now before the House and Senate don’t simply favor the well-off over the middle class and the poor. They advantage certain kinds of extremely rich people over Americans who work for salaries and wages, including some rather affluent people who draw those old-fashioned things called paychecks. Even Karl Marx would be astonished at how far Republicans are willing to go to benefit capital over labor.

All sorts of deductions used by the middle and upper-middle classes are being thrown over the side to pay for a cut in the nominal corporate tax rate from 35?percent to 20?percent, which is especially helpful to the biggest stockholders — and, in the House version, to relieve those struggling millionaire and billionaire heirs and heiresses from the horrible burdens of the estate tax. (The Senate version would reduce but not eliminate the tax.)

Repealing various tax breaks might be justified if these proposals actually simplified the tax code to make it fairer. But in many ways, this concoction makes the code even more complex with all its special provisions for “pass-through” income and the like. That’s another big lie in this deal: The GOP never cared about simplification. It just wants to further the interests of its flushest friends.

Oh, yes, and Republicans, who would demand that Hillary Clinton disclose every penny of her high school earnings from lawn mowing or babysitting, won’t think of asking Trump to release his tax returns so we can know how many benefits he might sign into law for himself.

The Trump regime is not all that innovative. It hides its policies behind divisive rhetoric about kneeling National Football League players — NFL owners would profit from the bill, by the way — and immigrants. This is the sort of thing right-wing authoritarians have done for decades. It never turns out well.


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The Death of a Journalist Print
Wednesday, 15 November 2017 09:36

Excerpt: "Caruana Galizia's unparalleled influence and tragic death should not prevent us from critically assessing her legacy and motivation."

Joseph Muscat, prime minister of Malta. (photo: EPA)
Joseph Muscat, prime minister of Malta. (photo: EPA)


The Death of a Journalist

By Raisa Galea and Michael Grech, Jacobin

15 November 17


Assassinated writer Daphne Caruana Galizia was a victim of the offshore economy she defended in life.

he assassination of Maltese journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia drew the attention of both the local and international media.

Most reporters connected the murder to her work, though they highlighted different aspects of it. The BBC, Economist, Guardian, and Washington Post recognized the global significance of her reporting, agreeing with Politico‘s description of the journalist as “a one-woman WikiLeaks, crusading against untransparency, and corruption.”

La Repubblica and Zeit Online echoed this line, pointing out that the murder could have been orchestrated by organized crime, which has established links in Malta. Local newspapers described the assassination as “an attack on freedom of expression” and implied that Malta’s political class had a direct interest in silencing the journalist.

Both major political parties in Malta have exploited her death to reinforce their perpetual rivalry. The opposition Nationalist Party (PN) blamed the Labour Party (PL) administration for the “collapse of the rule of law” and called on Prime Minister Joseph Muscat to resign. In response, Muscat hinted at the opposition’s interests in silencing Caruana Galizia and called for “national unity.” Local business representatives expressed their concern that the assassination would negatively effect the economy.

The Greens/European Free Alliance in the European Parliament also suggested that Muscat step down because “such incidents bring to mind Putin’s Russia, not the European Union.” A representative of the Socialists & Democrats asked Europol to investigate the murder, claiming that Maltese authorities cannot be trusted. She further criticized the country for facilitating money laundering and tax evasion, which attract organized crime.

Though we still do not know who was behind the murder, we can assess Caruana Galizia’s legacy and analyze whose interests the assassination served. Her beliefs, influence on Malta’s politics, and her country’s role in the global economy all complicate the story of a crusading journalist cut down by political opponents.

Between Two Parties

Ever since its 1964 independence from Britain, Malta has been held hostage by just two parties: the Labour Party and the Nationalist Party. Observers usually characterize the PL as social-democratic and the PN as conservative, but these labels do not reflect the parties’ true political coordinates.

In the 1960s and the 1970s, the rivalry between the two groups was rooted in politics: the PL had connections to Third World independence and socialist movements and was committed to maintaining the welfare state. These policies set it on a collision course with the PN and the Maltese Catholic Church, the conservative party’s close ally.

The PN’s rejection of Labour’s economic policies and the results of the 1981 general elections sparked a political crisis, followed by violent clashes between the parties’ supporters.

But, as in other countries, the parties have since met in the neoliberal middle. Today, so-called social issues — like divorce, LGBT rights, and IVF — are all that separate them.

Indeed, since returning to power in 2013, the PL has pursued a Third Way economic policy, privatizing public assets and attracting global capital. That is, it has largely followed the course set by its predecessor, the PN.

However, this lack of political differences has not ended the rivalry. Both parties own TV and radio stations, allowing them to broadcast partisan interpretations of economic, social, and cultural reality. The political discourse in Malta resembles a competition between two fan clubs.

Disguised as rivalry, the relationship between the parties is in fact symbiotic. Both undermine any constructive criticism by labelling it as their opponent’s propaganda, a strategy that helps them implement neoliberal policies with little public resistance.

Biased and Partisan

Daphne Caruana Galizia wrote about topics ranging from national identity and food to Maltese politicians’ secret bank accounts. She was a towering, if controversial, opinion-maker whose influence in Malta was unrivalled — a position that won her twenty-sixth place in Politico‘s list of “the twenty-eight people who are shaping, shaking, and stirring Europe.” Her blog had as many followers as all the major local media outlets combined.

Caruana Galizia’s unparalleled influence and tragic death should not prevent us from critically assessing her legacy and motivation.

In 2016 she gained international attention for publicizing the Panama accounts of two PL government officials. The following year, she once again stormed the local and international headlines with a new revelation. Based on the testimony of a former bank employee, she claimed that the prime minister’s wife owned Egrant, a Maltese company featured in the Panama Papers. Further, she said that the corporation had received enormous sums of money from the Azerbaijani government. The allegations prompted a snap election, in which the incumbent Labour Party won by a landslide.

These stories make it seem like exposing corruption ranked high on Caruana Galizia’s list of priorities, but she was far from unbiased.

Her journalism seemed more interested in exposing than investigating. She did not always publish reliable or politically relevant stories. Apart from the sources like the Panama Papers, she circulated information provided by contributors whose claims could not be verified. These practices made Caruana Galizia a target of numerous libel suits, some of which she lost.

We also can’t define her journalism as nonpartisan because she rarely targeted the Nationalist Party. For example, when the PN lost to the PL in 2013, she did not criticize the outgoing administration, and not because it has a spotless record of immaculate performance and socially beneficial policies. Instead, she regularly praised the PN government’s decisions. Not only did she not investigate the administration’s role in the Malta shipyard scandal — which lost the shipyards €80 million and led to their privatization — she applauded the move.

Another reason to doubt Daphne Caruana Galizia’s unbiased “crusade against untransparency and corruption” was her reluctance to expose and condemn the offshore accounts of former PN ministers who appeared in the Panama Papers. Moreover, when Italian authorities linked the son of the former conservative prime minister to the Ndrangheta money-laundering ring, Caruana Galizia tried to place himtried to place him above suspicion because he “is immediately recognizable — even to those who haven’t a clue who his parents are — as well brought up.” Finally, at least a few scandalous revelations came from anonymous informers whose insight could only be acquired by participating in the very misdeeds they were reporting.

Caruana Galizia’s uncompromising attitude toward the PL was shaped by her activism in the turbulent 1980s. Her antipathy ran so deep that she rejoiced at the death of Dom Mintoff, former party leader and prime minister, and frequently called the Labour Party “essentially a malign organisation.”

Her anti-Labour bias had an elitist tone. She published politically relevant information alongside tabloid-style hit pieces about (mainly) Labour Party politicians’ and their (largely working-class) supporters’ bad fashion and “tacky taste.” She disdainfully referred to PL officials as “bogans.”

It appears that Caruana Galizia saw a link between politicians’ inappropriate manners and their inclination to corrupt practices. Practically everyone Caruana Galizia regarded as a crook also, in her opinion, lacked style and/or had terrible grammar. She seemed to believe that the people she classed as bogans should never hold any position of power.

Caruana Galizia’s social background helps illuminate this connection. Born in Sliema, the predominantly Anglophone bourgeois town, she graduated from the prestigious, Jesuit-run college preferred by Malta’s ruling class. She became the leading voice of the Anglicized upper-middle class, who shared her disdain for the upwardly mobile. Privileged circles venerated her as much as she was unpopular among the working and lower classes.

Her intolerance of the Labour Party was so profound because, in her opinion, it stood for the interests of — and was represented by — “philistines,” “trash,” and “peasants.” For that reason, the PL “could never be on the same footing as the Nationalist Party.” She dedicated numerous articles to deriding the first lady’s clothes and frequently scoffed at the prime minister’s “peasant utilitarianism.”

More evidence of Caruana Galizia’s devotion to the upper crust came when Adrian Delia was elected leader of the PN. She seemed to regard him as an unpolished political newcomer who had dared to infiltrate the conservative party’s highest ranks. Though she loyally supported the party, her distaste for Delia aligned with her belief that only a select few are suited to govern the “essentially criminal” Maltese people.

Caruana Galizia claimed that Delia used an offshore account to process the profits from a London-based brothel. She paired this politically important revelation with derogatory remarks about his manners, supposedly identical to those of the Labour Party leader. She also slammed him for his “horrendous posture” and a possible extramarital affair with a “white trash” model. When Delia’s supporters reacted to Caruana Galizia’s revelations with threats, she described them as “rabble” with poor grammar.

Caruana Galizia only condemned corruption of a very particular kind. She did her utmost to expose the illegal behavior of so-called bogans, but she ignored the identical misdeeds of the old elite and their associates. She decried mismanagement of finance, offshore accounts, bribes, and abuse of power only if they involved “craven, useless, low-IQ” “guttersnipes.”

Calling Caruana Galizia’s activism anti-establishment is completely unjustified: rather than assaulting the powerful, she guarded the establishment’s privileges from the aspiring elites she deemed inferior.

The Offshore Malta

Malta’s relationship with financial scheming extends beyond its civil servants’ offshore accounts: the country is the European Union’s number four facilitator of corporate tax avoidance. Almost a quarter of Malta’s GDP — “one of the fastest-growing economies in Europe” — relies on financial services and online gambling.

The Nationalist Party administration set this economic model in place in 2005, a year after Malta joined the European Union.

According to research undertaken by the network of European Investigative Collaborations (EIC), every year Malta wipes out €2 billion in foreign tax by giving shareholders 85 percent tax rebates. According to data leaks, 70,000 offshore companies are registered in Malta.

The country’s tax regime drains revenue from other EU countries, but we must understand this situation in the context of Malta’s integration in the global economy and the single market. In order to stay afloat, small peripheral member states compete with established ones by underbidding on tax rates.

When it assumed power in 2013, the Labour Party added another dubious source of revenue: the Individual Investment Programme (IIP). The IIP is designed to make the country a haven for the global rich. Promoted as a means to “attract [ . . .] talent, expertise and business connections,” the IIP allows wealthy individuals to purchase citizenship. Anyone willing to contribute €650,000 to a national development fund and invest €150,000 in government stocks or bonds can apply.

In May 2017, during Malta’s European Union presidency, the international community was steaming over the MaltaFiles — a set of investigations into the country’s shady world of financial services. The documents revealed the scale of illegitimate transactions that pass through the country: secret accounts belonging to Azeri state oil companies, Russian and Turkish elites, shell companies of tax-dodging German corporations and Ndrangheta-run gambling companies.

The revelations shocked the press and prompted one of Germany’s regional finance ministers to denounce the country as the “Panama of Europe.”

One would expect that, after having dedicated considerable effort to exposing some politicians’ offshore accounts, Caruana Galizia would criticize Malta’s economic model and tax regime. Alas, this was not the case: an unsurprising fact when we consider her economic beliefs and partisan loyalty.

After all, Caruana Galizia was a free-market evangelist. “Uniquely for a (Maltese) journalist,” she wrote in the comments section of one post, “I was raised in a business environment.” She frequently flaunted her insight into the rules of the business world.

Also, she was under investigation for tax evasion: the tax department claimed she owed €101,194 after a tax audit discovered sources of undeclared revenue.

Caruana Galizia did not criticize Malta’s tax regime or its economic model — which an administration she supported had introduced — but limited her disapproval to her opponents’ corruption, tastelessness, and immorality. Rather than challenging the legitimacy of all money-laundering facilities, she focused exclusively on a private bank with alleged ties to Labour’s prime minister.

The MaltaFiles did not prompt Caruana Galizia to recognize the economy’s systematic faults. Instead, she argued that the PL’s tarnished reputation threatened the country’s economic success: “Malta was getting along swimmingly before the Prime Minister and his two henchmen decided to set up companies in Panama,” she wrote, adding that “only since April 2016 [has]  . . . Malta  . . . attracted this kind of hostility.”

She also failed to inquire into the online gambling industry’s links to organized crime. When rumors spread that a large Swedish online gambling company might leave Malta, she lamented that the PL’s incompetence and bad reputation was putting jobs at risk. She wrote:

A remote gaming company cannot operate in a jurisdiction where the behavior of politicians in government, and the malfunctioning of institutions, have caused reputational damage that has in turn drawn the attention of banks in other jurisdictions to Malta as a potential money-laundering risk.

When the gambling giant confirmed it would continue operating in Malta, she expressed her relief.

In other words, Daphne Caruana Galizia did not criticize the crooked economy, just the damage crooks in power did to it. Her relentless attacks on “bogans” were not merely ideological but also practical — she seemed to believe that their tarnished reputation was hurting Malta’s offshore economy. Her journalism aimed to oust political newcomers and restore the rule of the pedigreed elites. She failed to consider that her enemies’ crimes were not committed in vacuum and were inseparable from the fabric of the country’s tax regime, the interests of global capital, and the activities of organized crime.

Regardless, her vociferous revelations must have become a threat to the interests of the financial and the political powers.

We do not known who ordered and committed this ruthless assassination. However, it is clear that seeking justice and preventing future crimes like this must go beyond Caruana Galizia’s superficial critique of reputation and moral credentials or Malta’s purported “culture of impunity.”

The true crusade for justice should challenge the ethical foundations of the existing economic model — Daphne Caruana Galizia’s murder might itself become another strong argument for change.


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Megadeaths From America - Yemen Is the Worst Case Among Many Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=20877"><span class="small">William Boardman, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Tuesday, 14 November 2017 15:02

Boardman writes: "As Americans get ready for Thanksgiving 2017 over-eating, their government is on the verge of successfully starving millions of Yemenis to death by siege warfare."

Saudi Arabia's U.S.-backed war on Yemen has brought the entire nation to the brink of starvation. (photo: Reuters)
Saudi Arabia's U.S.-backed war on Yemen has brought the entire nation to the brink of starvation. (photo: Reuters)


Megadeaths From America - Yemen Is the Worst Case Among Many

By William Boardman, Reader Supported News

14 November 17


“Let me be clear: The use of starvation as a weapon of war is a war crime.”
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, January 15, 2016, warning the warring parties in Syria
“People are dying; children are suffering not as a result of an accident of war, but as the consequence of an intentional tactic – surrender or starve. And that tactic is directly contrary to the law of war.”
US Secretary of State John Kerry, February 1, 2016, denouncing atrocities in Syria

s Americans get ready for Thanksgiving 2017 over-eating, their government is on the verge of successfully starving millions of Yemenis to death by siege warfare. The US naval blockade of Yemen has been unrelenting since March 2015. The US Navy is an essential element of this perpetual war crime, this endless assault on a civilian population of about 25 million. This is the kind of collective punishment of innocents that we once put Nazis on trial for at Nuremberg. The US Department of Defense Law of War Manual, however, advises (section 5.20.1, page 315) that: “Starvation is a legitimate method of warfare.” So now the US is a blithe mass-murdering state with impunity, qualities hardly ever mentioned in the world’s freest media (with one remarkable exception in Democracy NOW, where coverage of Yemen has been excellent at least since 2009).

Well, never mind, at least Taylor Swift’s reputation is soaring and everyone gets to throw figurative rocks at Roy Moore, Harvey Weinstein, Kevin Spacey, and other serial predators. Predator is also the name of one of the US drones that the US President sends to assassinate people who may or may not have done anything wrong, but who showed up at the wrong time on the wrong list, and what more due process do those un-white foreign people deserve anyway? You don’t hear Congress complaining, do you? Or mainstream media? Or the courts? This is beyond bipartisan thrill killing, this is national consensual mass murder.

OK, to be fair, there has been some tepid, insincere, sporadic objection to wiping out millions of innocent people. Why, just as recently as October 10, The New York Times ran an op-ed article – NOT an editorial – that began with a pretty fair summary of the carnage being visited on Yemen by the US and its allies:

Imagine that the entire population of Washington State — 7.3 million people — were on the brink of starvation, with the port city of Seattle under a naval and aerial blockade, leaving it unable to receive and distribute countless tons of food and aid that sit waiting offshore. This nightmare scenario is akin to the obscene reality occurring in the Middle East’s poorest country, Yemen, at the hands of the region’s richest, Saudi Arabia, with unyielding United States military support that Congress has not authorized and that therefore violates the Constitution.

The headline on this op-ed piece is “Stop the Unconstitutional War in Yemen,” which is something of a deception since the war is truly criminal by any standard of international law and its “unconstitutionality” is but one aspect of its overall criminality. Like the Times, the authors of the op-ed have yet to face the raw criminality of the aggressive war on Yemen. The authors are three members of Congress, two Democrats, Ro Khanna of California and Mark Pocan of Wisconsin, together with a rare Republican of some integrity, Walter Jones of North Carolina. But they do not call out the gross criminality of American siege warfare against Yemen, they come hat in hand arguing that the war is unconstitutional because Congress hasn’t approved it formally. Congress has approved it with silence. No party leadership on either side has joined with these three in their gentle effort to “Stop the war.” These three Congress members, with Republican Thomas Massie, were the original sponsors of the House resolution introduced September 27, as a hint “to remove United States Armed Forces from unauthorized hostilities in the Republic of Yemen.” The resolution has so far gathered an additional 42 co-sponsors (one more Republican) from the House’s 435 members. One measure of where we are as a country is that something as bland and incomplete as this resolution is seen somehow as a radical act that gets little support in Congress or coverage in the media, where the forced starvation of millions of people is not a big issue.

Yemen is a nation under siege from the air with daily bombings. The Saudis and their allies control the air over Yemen, which has almost no air force and almost no air defenses. Nothing flies in or out of Yemen without Saudi permission, which is rarely given, even for food or medical supplies. The Saudi air force could not function without American support. US military forces select targets, provide intelligence, re-fuel Saudi jets in mid-air and repair them on the ground. Every bomb that falls on Yemen has American fingerprints on it, especially the cluster bombs (another war crime) made in America.

Yemen is a nation under siege from the water, where the US Navy enforces a blockade not only of food, medicine, and other humanitarian relief coming in. The US Navy also turns back Yemenis trying to flee, essentially reducing their choices to risking drowning or starvation. And thanks to the effectiveness of the blockades, there is a massive risk of cholera in Yemen as well, as the US and its allies deliberately wage biological warfare in Yemen as well.

Yemen is a nation under siege on the ground. The Saudis control Yemen’s northern border, which has been under dispute between the two countries for decades. Nothing crosses the border into Yemen without Saudi permission, mostly granted to artillery fire. Little effectual return fire comes from Yemen. Yemen’s eastern border is with Oman, which is a friendly state. In between Oman and Yemeni population centers in the west, the territory is mostly controlled by al Qaeda and ISIS, with the Saudi-backed puppet regime tucked in around Aden. All of those forces oppose the Houthis in control of the northwest, which has been their homeland for centuries. Just to be clear: the US is deliberately starving a population that is fighting al Qaeda and Isis.

With its recent governmental purges, Saudi Arabia maybe have become the second most dangerous nation in the world. Not to worry, the USA is still Number One. But the US/Saudi axis can hardly be much better news for the region than it is for Yemen.

On November 8, the United Nations and some twenty international relief agencies issued a statement of alarm at and opposition to the US/Saudi-enforced siege on Yemen. The human cost of two and a half years of US/Saudi aggression is already unforgivably punishing and cruel. Now the US/Saudi siege threatens unprecedented catastrophe:

There are over 20 million people in need of humanitarian assistance; seven million of them are facing famine-like conditions and rely completely on food aid to survive. In six weeks, the food supplies to feed them will be exhausted. Over 2.2 million children are malnourished, of those, 385,000 children suffer from severe malnutrition and require therapeutic treatment to stay alive. Due to limited funding, humanitarian agencies are only able to target one third of the population (7 million)…. outbreaks of communicable diseases such as polio and measles are to be expected with fatal consequences, particularly for children under five years of age and those already suffering from malnutrition … the threat of famine and the spread of cholera … deadly consequences to an entire population suffering from a conflict that it is not of their own making.

Also on November 8, the day of the statement of alarm, UN Emergency Relief Coordinator Mark Lowcock briefed the UN Security Council on the crisis in Yemen. The briefing was secret, on the request of Sweden. After the briefing, Lowcock met with reporters. He warned that, unless there is a significant, massive humanitarian response soon:

There will be a famine in Yemen. It will not be like the famine that we saw in South Sudan earlier in the year where tens of thousands of people were affected. It will not be like the famine which cost 250,000 people their lives in Somalia in 2011. It will be the largest famine the world has seen for many decades, with millions of victims.

The aggression against Yemen has been a nexus of war crimes from the beginning, when it was sanctioned by the Obama administration to appease Saudi peevishness over international peacemaking with Iran on nuclear development. For almost three years, Yemen has been a holocaust-in-the-making, with this difference: turning most of the country into a death camp, with America’s blessing and collusion. Repubs will choose to confirm 300 unqualified judges before they’ll choose to intervene in one criminal war, and mostly Democrats will not seriously object to either choice.

If the United States doesn’t kill you, it’s perfectly happy to let you die (what health care?). The question – with hope embedded – is whether most Americans support the legal reign of terror that is Pax Americana. Given US treatment of Americans from Ferguson to Flint to Standing Rock to Puerto Rico, the prospect is grim.



William M. Boardman has over 40 years experience in theatre, radio, TV, print journalism, and non-fiction, including 20 years in the Vermont judiciary. He has received honors from Writers Guild of America, Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Vermont Life magazine, and an Emmy Award nomination from the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.

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.


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