Sunday, December 25, 2011

Can the U.S. Government close social media accounts? ALSHABAB USES TWITTER AS MEDIA CAMPAING

The Obama administration and The New York Times are teaming up to expose and combat the grave threat posed by a Twitter account, purportedly operated by the Somali group Shabab, and in doing so, are highlighting the simultaneous absurdity and perniciousness of the War on Terror. This latest tale of Dark Terrorist Evil began on December 14 when the NYT‘s Jeffrey Gettleman directed intrepid journalistic light on the Twitter account maintained under the name “HSMPress,” which claims to be the press office of Harakat al-Shabab al-Mujahedeen, the Shabab’s full name. Gettleman’s article included this passage early on in its account:President Barack Obama. Right: A Somali al-Shabab fighter stands guard

President Barack Obama. Right: A Somali al-Shabab fighter stands guard (Credit: AP/Reuters)

But terrorism experts say that Twitter terrorism is part of an emerging trend and that several other Qaeda franchises — a few years ago the Shabab pledged allegiance to Al Qaeda — are increasingly using social media like Facebook, MySpace, YouTube and Twitter.

That has to be the single most amusing phrase ever to appear unironically in the Paper of Record: Twitter terrorism. And, of course, the authority cited for this menacing trend is that ubiquitous sham community calling itself “terrorism experts,” which exists to provide the imprimatur of scholarly Seriousness on every last bit of inane fear-mongering hysteria. That cottage industry (like the government’s demands for greater power and Endless War) remains vibrant only if Terrorism does (that is, Terrorism by Muslims: a propagandistic redundancy). Thus, with Osama bin Laden dead, a full decade elapsed since the last successful Terrorist attack on U.S. soil, and the original Al Qaeda group rendered inoperable, these experts are now warning the nation about lurking sleeper tweets.

In that original article, Gettleman detailed the taunting Twitter messages directed by this account at the Kenyan Army, which has responded in kind. The exchanges sound exactly like every other petty, schoolyard Internet spat that has ceaselessly sprouted up in every cyber crevice for the last two decades. After quoting a Terrorism expert from Rand on the menace of social media Terrorism, Gettleman provided just a small taste of the frightening threat posed by this innovative vehicle for jihadism:

For the Shabab, this often translates into pithy postings, like “Europe was in darkness when Islam made advances in physics, Maths, astronomy, architecture, etc. before passing on the torch,” and sarcastic jabs at the Kenyan Army. Kenya’s military spokesman, Maj. Emmanuel Chirchir, is also a loquacious writer of posts, and the result is nothing short of a full-on Twitter war.

After Major Chirchir wrote that the Shabab might be transporting weapons on donkeys and that “any large concentration and movement of loaded donkeys will be considered as Al Shabaab activity,” the Shabab responded: “Like bombing donkeys, you mean! Your eccentric battle strategy has got animal rights groups quite concerned, Major.”

Major Chirchir fired back, “Life has better to offer than stonning [sic] innocent girl,” a reference to the Shabab’s penchant for harsh Islamic punishments like stoning.

The Shabab have teased Major Chirchir for his spelling mistakes and have tossed around some SAT-quality words.

“Stop prevaricating & say what you really think, Major!” the Shabab wrote. “Sure your comments will invite derision but try to muster (or feign) courage at least.”

Other messages disseminated by the dastardly masterminds behind this Twitter account include things like this:

As CNET‘s Declan McCullagh noted: “For scary Somali militants, the folks behind @HSMPress have a fine appreciation of Starbucks’ caramel macchiatos” (undoubtedly, Terrorism experts would quickly admonish McCullagh that this is no laughing matter, as tweets of this sort — innocuous though they may appear to the untrained, non-expert eye — could contain coded directives to activate plots against the West).

Toward the end of the article, Gettleman tacked on what he and his editors apparently considered to be an unimportant afterthought: “Of course, it is impossible to know who exactly is operating the Twitter account.” Of course: but there’s no reason to let that small fact deter anyone.

All of this would be worth nothing more than a few moments of entertaining ridicule if not for the reaction it has spawned. Gettleman is back today with a new article detailing the response of the U.S. Government to his exposé. Headlined “U.S. Considers Combating Somali Militants’ Twitter Use,” the article reports:

The United States government is increasingly concerned about the Twitter account of the Shabab militant group of Somalia, with American officials saying Monday that they were “looking closely” at the militants’ use of Twitter and the possible measures to take in response. . . .

[S]ome American officials said the government was exploring legal options to shut down the Shabab’s new Twitter account, potentially opening a debate over the line between free speech and support for terrorism. . . .

American officials say they may have the legal authority to demand that Twitter close the Shabab’s account, @HSMPress, which had more than 4,600 followers as of Monday night.

So the U.S. Government believes it may have “legal authority” to compel Twitter to close accounts. From where does that authority derive? Presumably, the Obama administration could consider Twitter’s providing of a forum to a designated Terrorist organization to constitute the crime of “material support of Terrorism.” That raises a variety of questions: is the NYT guilty of that crime by quoting some of those tweets and promoting the account (since the first NYT article was published, the number of people following @HSMPress has significantly increased and is almost certain to increase more as a result of today’s article). Can one be guilty of that crime if one re-tweets any of their messages? How about if one defends their right to have a Twitter account?

What is more likely than compulsory action is thuggish extra-legal intimidation aimed at Twitter to “voluntarily” close the account. That path is less overt but just as insidious, if not more so. That is how government officials such as Joe Lieberman succeeded in cutting off all of WikiLeaks’ funding sources and web hosting options without the bother of charging that group with a crime: by demanding that Amazon, Master Card, Visa, Paypal and others “on their own accord” terminate WikiLeaks’ accounts and refuse to provide the group with any services. As EFF’s Trevor Timm asked today: “How fast does Joe Lieberman release a statement today saying we should censor the Net in the name of national security? I bet before noon.”

Are there really people who want the U.S. Government empowered to dictate who can and cannot have social media accounts to communicate ideas? Two weeks ago, the London Police characterized the Occupy movement as a “Terrorist” group alongside Al Qaeda and FARC. The Kenyan Army spokesman engaged in the “Twitter war” with the Shabab account today wrote: “Al Shabaab needs to be engaged positively and twitter is the only avenue.” Having the government shut down social media accounts is laughably ineffective — it would take Shabab about 30 seconds to open a new one — but the theories embraced to justify that power are purely tyrannical.

At this point, there is an almost perfect inverse relationship between the seriousness of the Terrorist threat and the severity of the powers the U.S. Government claims in its name. The Washington Post today has a long and quite good article by Karen DeYoung entitled “Secrecy defines Obama’s drone war.” It describes how the Obama administration claims the right to kill anyone designated by the President as a Terrorist anywhere in the world, in total secrecy and without any checks, and how the administration refuses to account to anyone for what it does, who makes those decisions, and on what basis:

Since September, at least 60 people have died in 14 reported CIA drone strikes in Pakistan’s tribal regions. The Obama administration has named only one of the dead, hailing the elimination of Janbaz Zadran, a top official in the Haqqani insurgent network, as a counterterrorism victory.

The identities of the rest remain classified, as does the existence of the drone program itself. Because the names of the dead and the threat they were believed to pose are secret, it is impossible for anyone without access to U.S. intelligence to assess whether the deaths were justified.

In outlining its legal reasoning, the administration has cited broad congressional authorizations and presidential approvals, the international laws of war and the right to self-defense. But it has not offered the American public, uneasy allies or international authorities any specifics that would make it possible to judge how it is applying those laws. . . .

They’ve based it on the personal legitimacy of [President] Obama — the ‘trust me’ concept,” [American University Professor Kenneth] Anderson said. “That’s not a viable concept for a president going forward.”

That is the heart and soul of the U.S. Government’s framework: we can do what we want, in total secrecy and with no checks, including to U.S. citizens, and you don’t need to know anything about it and we need no checks: you should just trust us. That, of course, was precisely the rationale long offered by the neocon Right to justify the radical, transparency-free powers of detention, surveillance and militarism seized by the Bush administration: maybe these powers could theoretically be abused one day by a Bad Leader, but right now, we have a good, noble, Christian family man in office who only wants to Keep us Safe, so we can trust him. That has now been replaced by: maybe these powers could theoretically be abused one day by a Bad Leader, but right now, we have a good, noble, urbane, progressive Constitutional scholar and family man in office who only wants to Keep us Safe, so we can trust him(see, for instance, CAP’s Ken Gude dismissing concerns about the indefinite detention bill by expressly invoking the Goodness of President Obama: “if the president does not believe it is necessary or appropriate to order military operations in the United States, then there is no military detention authority in the United States”; “President Obama has made clear he does not want military detention in the United States. . . . Yes, a future president may interpret that authority differently, but that is [] a fight for another day . . .”).

The powers with which the U.S. Government has vested itself would be disturbing and odious no matter the magnitude of the highlighted threat. But the fact that they’re now reduced to bottom-of-the-barrel screeching about Twitter Terrorism — while simultaneously claiming the “legal authority” to force the closing of social media accounts — reveals just how wide is the gap between the magnitude of the powers they seek and the magnitude of the threat they cite to justify them. As always, the War on Terror is not a means to an end; it is the end in itself.

UPDATE: That HSMPress Twitter account today tweeted this:

That link goes to this article. Perhaps a zealous U.S. prosecutor could use this as evidence to allege that I have materially supported Terrorism (though the NYT should be first in line to be so accused, given that this Twitter feed has gained another 1,000 followers today as a result of that newspaper’s highlighting of it). On a related note, Mother Jones‘ Adam Serwer looks at a conviction today to document a very ominous trend, one I’ve written about several times: the way the DOJ and courts are jointly converting pure free speech into the crime of “material support for Terrorism.”

Friday, December 23, 2011

Saylicipress News International Post (SNIP) – The Overdue Somaliland Republic Recognition is Already Here


December 22, 2011 By: adal Category: Editorial

The overdue Somaliland Republic recognition is already here: The time to demand or hope to obtain it from illegitimate and illegal 20th century dictators is over

Top stories in Brief:

1. The Overdue Somaliland Republic Recognition is brighterthan ever before Due to the Rapidly Changing International Structures. The oldworld power structure dominated by so-called interest oriented and hegemoniccolonial powers is rapidly declining and its demise has started long time ago. Thefirst sign of their long but gradual decline and economic collapse is the ongoingeconomic collapse in North America and Europe. The second sign is the rapidlyexpanding Arab Spring that is sweeping North Africa and the Middle East. Thepost-colonial tyrants that scoff off with suspicion at any kind of change in Africaare also aging and at the same time on the verge to be swept away by the comingAfrican Spring. The bottom our native model is a unique model in the world andwon’t be in hurry for anybody in the dying old system to recognize. With theadvent of the rapidly changing international political and economic landscape, recognition will be automatic and will come tous instead seeking from a dying world power structure.

2. The Ottawa conference held to supportSomaliland’s sovereignty and Independence. Sheikh Omar Abdi emerged as aSomaliland hero of the rally.

3. United States Withdrawal from Iraq

4. Arab Spring

5. IGAD Dictatorships/UN Bureaucrats Ravaging theformer Somalia

6. Keeping U.S. Troops in a mess called Afghanistan even for Ten Moreyears is a waste of blood and Money

7. DPRK leader (North Korea) died on 12/17/2011.

8. A huge rally to support Somaliland independenceand sovereignty was held in Ottawa. Large numbers of patriotic and enthusiastic Somlilanders have taken part in therally.

9. TheGreen Bay Packers have lost to the Kansas City Chiefs but still has a 13-1record which is the best in the NLF.

10. The Saudi king called for the countries ofthe Gulf Council and the newly joined out of the Gulf countries such as Morocco andJordan to join a new union. Saudi Monarchs/Dictators apringre probablymotivated by the raging Arab Spring.

11. The Djibouti dictator dispatched token fewhundred soldiers to the hell on earth called Mogadishu.

12. Dictator Assad is still torching the peacefulopposition to his dictatorial rule. Assad must step down before he met the Gadhafisyndrome of fighting a losing game to the bitter end.

13. IGAD dictators.

14. Struggle in Egypt

15. Foreign military intervention

16. Insulting others because of their political positionor opinion or criticism is an exercise on futility. It should be and must bebased on political philosophy and opinion.

17. Inthe so-called foreign sponsored meeting in Garowi, Faroole put up his own flag everywhere.When Shariff landed at Garowi airport, Puntland flag was decorated everywhere. They behaved time and behaving like a separatecountry for a long time.

Top stories in Dept.

1. Somaliland Republic: The Overdue SomalilandRepublic Recognition is Brighter Due to the Rapidly Changing International;Structures. The Arab Spring is chewing on the most recalcitrant and favoritedespots regarding the former western powers and the Unites States. The ragingpeoples’ revolutions through North Africa, middle east and already makinginroads into sub-Saharan Africa, Europe and beyond is the begging of changingthe world power structure, a lopsided dominated by few former colonial powersand the U.S. For example, in the so-called Security Council, The U.S., France, Britain,and Russia are basically Euro-American nations. They are mostly in sync witheach other regarding international power and governance, Russia differs withthem here and there and from time to time, but rarely criticizes or blocks whenBritain, and the U.S. are doing so big world move when pursuing their interest.Only China is a different state that also went through difficult colonial andneo-colonial times.

2. Ottawa:Ottawa meeting came out as super meeting where so many heroes who were both menand women emerged. Sheikh Omar Abdi emerged as preeminent hero. She showedunprecedented courage and oratory. His speech was a combination of inspirational,advice, historical perspective and advice.

3. Iraq:United States Withdrawal from Iraq is a good thing to do and a step in theright direction and destruction but a very high cost. There about 5,000American troops dead, and about 30, 00 injured. INS and discussions the Iraqiside about 100,000 people is dead. Huge death and destruction to cities, roads,electric grid, water systems, schools, universities and industry. The war wasstarted in the false premise that Iraq has weapons of mass destruction whichfound to be false. That war will be the subject of endless debates anddiscussions for many years to come.

4. ArabSpring: The Arab Spring that started in Tunisia spontaneously has already sweptaway three well-entrenched dictators who are Zhine Al-Abadine of Tunisia,Mubarak of Egypt, and Kaddafi of Libya? Assad of Syria, Salah of Yemen, and theBahraini Sunni minority monarchs arehanging by a cliff hanger and will be topples sooner than later also.

5. Dictators:IGAD Dictatorships/UN Bureaucrats Ravaging the former Somalia

For the last 30 ye tears, the bankrupt, political and economics ridden IGAD dictators has made theformer Somalia their lucrative project they make other money, and every fewyears come with some new trick, magic poor project. They sent this proposalunder the auspices of the so-called war of terrorism to milk money from the westernn colonial powers. The as-called Unisom in Mogadishu and [projects before wereall this game of keeping the former Somalia. Since the start of the Arab Springthe IGAD dictators are looking over their shoulders. These dictators became thepoor, Hungary, and feuding despots riddled with their own political,corruption, and economic problems. The Somali project is not only a moneymaking lucrative project for them, but also a distraction from their horriblecountries where a number of insurgencies and armed opposition is going on.

6. Afghanistan: Keeping U.S. Troops in a Countryin which is messed up, so screwed up, there is no chance of any semblance ofpeace and order. History tells both Afghanistan and Pakistan are two violentstates. Through history Afghanistan has never known to have a real centralgovernment. Keeping American and other western troops over there is nothing butan exercise in futility; it is also just a waste of money and blood. I did notunderstand what the United States troops will do there since 2012. Nobody canbring peace in a place where there was no history of peace. The American peoplemust demand to bring our troops home. There is no reason of keeping our troopsthere. There is no peace top keep there. Afghanistan was never a centrally controlled country. It was an always aplace historical or pre-mordial society if you will. Karzai is also a corruptand multi-faced charlatan who is just milking the international money boringthe hell hole called Afghanistan. These tribes were bitter enemies for the lastmillennium and beyond. The third years of experiment as a nation state failedand worked, and there is no reason that another one of central control can’t work.

7. DPRK: The leader Of DPRK,the Democratic Peoples’ Republic of Korea died on 12/17/2011. The country ismourning. Since the Korean war of 1950-1953, the two Koreas are in a state war.They never signed a peace treaty. There is just an armistice was struck in1953, and demoralized zone patrolled by UN forces was established between thetwo countries. In the Korean war South Korea was backed by forces led by theUnited States who were the banner of the United States, and DPRK was backed by China and the then Soviet Union. According to North Korean television Kim JongIL will be succeeded by his son Kim Jong UN.

8. Somaliland Sovereignty: Ahuge rally to support Somaliland independence and sovereignty was held inOttawa. Large numbers of patriotic and enthusiasticSomalilanders who love their country have participated. Great speeches weredelivered, patriotic songs were sung. The atmosphere was festive and jubilant.

9. Green Bay packers: The Super ball champions,the Green Bay Packers have lost to the Kansas City Chiefs. 13-1. The Super Ball Champions still enjoy thebest NFL record. Many sport experts expect them again to Super contenders thisyear also.

10. Saudi Monarchs/Dictators: TheSaudi king proposed a Union between the Gulf Sheikhdoms. What is that? This maythe result of the Arab Spring. Could It an attempt stall the Arab Spring?

11. Djibouti: The Djibouti dictator has sent few hundred somewhattoken forces to Mogadishu the capital of the former Somalia. Nobody knows whyhe sent few hundred token soldiers to Mogadishu. For him to endanger Djiboutiansoldiers to a futile and fruitless dictators’ mission in Mogadishu ispointless. There is one thing which iscrystal clear dictators is showy, token and they love publicity and praise.They like to be called what they are not.

12. Syrian Tyrant: Finally itis Syria is still smoldering and the immoral world is still le watching aheavily armed and violent genocidal butcher to use heavy weapons includingartillery, tanks, antitank weapons, multiple rocket launchers and what have youagainst unarmed and peaceful demonstrators. If there is conscience left in theworld, the world needs to intervene very quickly because the murder, andcriminal strong man, the so-called Assad is just murdering people at will. Hisfather killed 20, 000 people in the city of Hama in 1982. A huge neighborhoodwas attacked with heavy weapons, and when the dust clear. Settled 20, 000people innocent civilians were dead. What kind of world we live in? AfterRwanda I and Srebrenica I won’t be surprised.

13. IGAD Tyrants: IGAD dictatorships fully involved with the affairs of the former Somalia, and none of them wantany reconciliation or semblance of peace to come back to that war torn place.Moreover, these defective and unstable dictatorships are not equipped, or havethe capacity, the funds and the will to fix any place. All of them have hugedomestic problems including corruption, internal dissent and some cases activeinsurgencies.

14. Egypt: The people of Egypthave toppled long reigning dictators last year, but he was just replaced by theEgyptian military who were ruling Egypt for the last 60 years. Since 1952 coupby the so-called free officer union ( Dubaad Al-Ahraar), Egypt was ruled by themilitary. The military became a rather privileged entity that owns Real Estate,companies and industry. They control at least 10% of the Egyptian economy. What is happening here the cunning Egyptianmilitary were embarked in hijacking the grass roots peoples’ revolution and theEgyptian people refused that? That is the reason came up with a brutal force tocrush and silence the people. Now the people are demanding that the militarymust give up all power, something they will not accept. Then they respondedwith brutal force and the people refused to budge to their violence andoppression. Now, Egypt entered the second phase of the revolution between the remnantsof the old privilege guard, the Egyptian military and the revolutionary forceswho will not be satisfied unless the military completely gives power. Jugglefor freedom and democracy. That is where the Egyptian struggle for freedom anddemocracy, and the ongoing violence in the streets of Cairo will not endanytime soon. There is genuine fear that the current standoff will escalateinto an armed shoot out between the military and the Egyptian revolutionariesand people.

15. African DictatorsIntervention: The intervention of African dictators into former Somalia iscurse. It is a terrible omen to have troops from poor, tribal, corrupt andundisciplined forces into former Somalia a Muslim is not going well and notexpected to go well either. The involved countries are mostly underdevelopedstates that are saddled with social, economic political problems, and in somecases such as Ethiopia, Djibouti, Uganda and Burundi have their own localinsurgencies.

16. Insultingothers because of their political position or opinion is pointless: If you want to criticize others you need tocriticize them on the issues, political philosophy, and on the record. It is illegitimate, unethical, and immoral to write baseless lies about others.

17. When Sharifflanded at Garowi airport, Puntland flag was decorated everywhere. Immoral act to attack the personality of a messenger. You do not need toattack by been e objective. Sayingnonsense and baseless things about the messenger is called a harangue. Criticismshould be objective and should be confined to the issues. Garowi meeting put the seal of approval to the real contestants in the politicalquagmire of the former Somalia: WhenShariff landed at Garowi airport, Puntland fla17. Garowig was decorated everywhere. ClearlyFarool’s Puntland, his crime enterprise infested with pirates and other criminalsyndicate groups looked like a separate government. Puntland or in other a longtime in other wards Farooleland was behaving like a separate country for solong time with any declaration. The man also acts like real gangster byintimidating and bullying his opponents. The sham Garowi is a reflection of feudinggroups in the former Somalia. What isleft of the former Somalia is clearly a contest between the Hawiye and Majiirteen. If you want tounderstand that ,look closely the people congregating in Garowi. They arePunland representing Majiirteen,Galmudug representing Hawiye,Mogadishu figment packaged as a government primarily representing Hawiye. Theother Somalis of Italian Somalia are marginalized and all they mostly have is atoken representation. In conclusion the current political and military stalematein Somalia is between Hawiye and Majiirteen.

SayliciPress.Net

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Shirkadda SomCable Oo Soo Bandhigaty Muuqaalo Muujinaya Halka Uu Marayo Mashruuca Isgaadhsiinta Ee Xadhiga Kaybalka Badda Ee Ay Doonayso Inay Somaliland Keento.

Hargeysa-(Qor)-Shirkadda Isgaadhsiinta SomCable oo qayb ka ah Companiga weyn ee IMCG oo uu Leeyahay ganacsadae Maxamed Aw Siciid ayaa kusoo bandhigtay Carwada ganacsiga Somaliland ee laga furay Hargeysa toddobaadkan hawsheeda dhinaca Isgaadhsiinta Kaybalka badda ee ay doonayso inay keento Somaliland.
Iyadoo SomCable carwadaa kusoo bandhigtay halka ay marayaan hawsha xadhiga mashruuca Kaybalka Badda ee ay doonayaan in Somaliland laga hirgeliyo muddooyinka soo socda, kaas oo hadda shaqadiisu ka socoto dhinaca Xeebta galbeedka Somaliland, isla markaana la doonayo sidii loo soo gaadhsiin lahaa magaalada Berbera. Eng. Yuusuf Xuseen Cabdalle oo ah wakiilka Shirikadda SomCable ee Somaliland ayaa u sheegay  inay mashruucaa soo jiidista Kaybalka xadhiga Isgaadhsiinta hadda kasoo bilaabeen dhinaca dalka Djibouti oo laga soo wado xadhiga Submarine Cable, kaas oo lasoo raacinayo xeebta badda Somaliland, isla markaana la gaadhsiinayo magaalada dekeda ah ee Berbera.
Qorilugud WebNews Chief Editorial

Ethiopian Court: 2 Swedish Reporters Guilty


ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) — A court in Ethiopia convicted two Swedish journalists Wednesday of supporting terrorism after the pair illegally entered the country with an ethnic Somali rebel group.
The pair, who now face up to 15 years in prison at their sentencing next week, have said they were gathering news at the time of their arrest.
However, Judge Shemsu Sirgaga said that was “very unlikely,” accusing the Ogaden National Liberation Front of organizing the Swedes’ journey starting in London via Kenya and Somalia into Ethiopia. Outlawed groups in many countries frequently facilitate the travels of reporters in order to have their version of events told.
Ethiopian troops captured Johan Persson and Martin Schibbye six months ago during a clash with rebels in Ethiopia’s restive Somali region in the country’s east, a no-go area for reporters. Ethiopia considers the rebel group a terrorist organization, and it is very difficult for journalists to gain access to the region. Rights groups say that is so abuses there are not exposed.
The chairman of the Swedish Union of Journalists, Jonas Nordling, deplored the conviction, saying it is clearly aimed at deterring reporters from investigating alleged human rights abuses in the Ogaden region.

Bradley Manning and the miscarriage of justice - Opinion - Al Jazeera English

President Obama has already made statements acting as if Manning had been proven guilty [GALLO/GETTY]

Last week, after an astounding 567 days in prison, Bradley Manning - the US Army private accused of leaking the WikiLeaks documents - finally began his pre-trial hearing.

In the year and a half since he has been in jail, Manning has been severely mistreated by his jailers, has been assumed guilty by the president and now potentially faces life in jail. Yet the "crime" he is accused of is something many US officials do with regularity: leak classified information in the public interest to news organisations.

When Manning was held at Quantico military base earlier this year, he was shamefully subjected to extremely harsh, even torturous, conditions. He was forced to sit alone in his cell for 23 hours a day, was barred from exercise or socialising with other inmates, and stripped naked at night - all despite showing no behavioural problems.

Over 250 law professors, including President Obama's Constitutional law professor at Harvard Law School, Laurence Tribe, signed a letter calling the treatment of Manning illegal, unconstitutional and possibly torture. Former State Department spokesman PJ Crowley, the State Department's lead critic of WikiLeaks, was even forced to resign when he called the treatment of manning "ridiculous and counter-productive and stupid".

Around the same time President Obama was defending Manning's treatment, he was also publicly stating that Manning "broke the law" - despite not being convicted of any crime. Many legal observers found the remarks inappropriate and potentially "unlawful command influence". As Salon's Glenn Greenwald asked, "How can Manning possibly expect to receive a fair hearing from military officers when their Commander-in-Chief has already decreed his guilt?"

The government should have to answer for its statements and treatment of Manning in court no matter what his alleged crime, but the government's own assessments of the disclosures and similar acts makes its reaction that much worse.

According to Manning's lawyer, the White House, State Department, and Defence Department have each conducted secret reviews of the WikiLeaks disclosures. Each review found the disclosures did not damage national security. Reportedly, the reviews conclude the facts revealed in the WikiLeaks disclosures were "either dated, represented low-level opinions or [were] already known because of previous public disclosures". The government has so far refused to release the alleged studies, even though they could potentially impact Manning's case.

"How can Manning possibly expect to receive a fair hearing from military officers when their Commander-in-Chief has already decreed his guilt?"

- Glen Greenwald

Of course, anyone who has been paying attention already knew that the government's hysteria over the disclosures has been wildly exaggerated from the beginning. Officials have quietly, but consistently, admitted they cannot point to single person who has died because of the WikiLeaks disclosures, despite constantly claiming WikiLeaks was putting "hundreds of lives at risk".

Misleading the public in order to shut down WikiLeaks

More than a year ago, when asked for the Pentagon's official response amidst calls for WikiLeaks to be labelled a terrorist organisation and the alleged leaker to be charged with treason, then-Secretary of Defence Robert Gates said the disclosures were "embarrassing" and "awkward", but downplayed any real damage.

When then-State Department spokesman PJ Crowley was publicly saying the disclosures created "substantial damage", State Department officials were privately admitting the disclosures were "embarrassing but not damaging". Reuters reported that "the administration felt compelled to say publicly that the revelations had seriously damaged American interests in order to bolster legal efforts to shut down the WikiLeaks website and bring charges against the leakers."

In other words, they were lying to help their case against Manning.

At the same time, the documents have provided the public a much-needed window into US affairs that is increasingly and ludicrously secret, and the most consequential foreign policy event that WikiLeaks did influence - the democratic revolution in Tunisia - was an event the US State Department applauded. Unfortunately, Manning's lawyer has been severely restricted in raising questions such as "Why is this information classified in the first place?" As Denver Nicks wrote in the Daily Beast, "By truncating the conversation, the state has robbed the public of a unique opportunity to learn about the secrecy system operating in its name and on its dime."

It's important to note that the regular leaking of classified information by high-ranking US officials has continued unabated - and unpunished - since Manning has been in jail. In the past year, US officials have leaked non-WikiLeaks related classified information to many of the US' most established news publications about Afghanistan, Pakistan, Russia, Yemen, Somalia, Libya, Iran, China and others. Much of the information is likely classified at a higher level than anything Manning is accused of leaking.

Just two weeks ago, "several US officials" anonymously leaked classified information to Bloomberg News about the drone - one of the most classified in the US arsenal - that crashed in Iran. US officials did the same for the Associated Press the day before.

The sole leak investigation involving a high-ranking official is that of former CIA general counsel John Rizzo, whose only mistake was apparently speaking on-the-record about the same drone program. But as National Journal reported, the investigation will most likely end not with life in prison, but "with some sort of formal reprimand, and possibly a financial penalty such as a decrease in his government pension".

It's clear the US has lost more because of its treatment of Manning - and the extreme double standard it has held him to - than because of any crime he allegedly committed.

Trevor Timm is an activist and blogger for the Electronic Frontier Foundation. He specialises in free speech issues and government transparency. The views expressed here are his own.

The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy.

Bradley Manning and the miscarriage of justice - Opinion - Al Jazeera English

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Al-Shabab is currently Somalia’s only hope for peace, stability and order.

By David Williamson, Western Mail                              =                                           Dec 13 2011

To end the war and famine ravaging Somalia the West must deal with men it regards as dangerous extremists, urges Welsh foreign affairs expert Grant Dawson

WHO can bring peace to Somalia after two decades of destructive civil war and cope with its worst famine in 60 years?

Could it be that Somalia’s only hope are the people we have been told to despise – the terrorists?

It won’t be US troops and experts with support of the Canadians and Europeans, that’s for sure.

There is no confidence in Washington that military intervention could rescue the 750,000 at immediate risk of starvation over the next few months, no mood in the US, Canada, and Europe for another intervention to solve Somalia’s serious problems.

The same follows for security sector reconstruction. The government of Somalia has asked Canada and other countries to deploy police and army trainers in Somalia. However, only the European Union has agreed and it only trains army personnel outside the country.

The West has been so stand-offish and mindful of its limitations for two reasons.

The first relates to Al-Shabab, the Islamist insurgency with al-Qaida links. Frustration over Al-Shabab’s obstruction of humanitarian relief is tempered by the knowledge that the famine is not about them but a disintegrated collapsed state awash in guns and misery.

That wasn’t clear back in 1992. When famine struck that year, shocking Western publics and governments, a US-led coalition intervened to protect UN and NGO deliveries of food and medicine. The coalition withdrew as planned months later, and was not supposed to focus on the wider issues.

The second is that the US priority in East Africa is the war on terrorism. It is able to wage and indeed escalate this war from outside Somalia. Drone aircraft have done surveillance missions, but now the US is deploying an armed model equipped with bombs and missiles.

The US is also relying on private contractors to train African troops to fight the Al-Shabab.

In addition to the legal issues and troubling implications for global order, notably whether states should be sending robotic devices over borders to kill perceived enemies, the war on terror is a blatant example of the West subordinating Somalia’s interests to its own.

It is small wonder, then, that the yield from the West’s and the UN’s political and military interventions in Somalia has been so meager.

Somalis want law, order and justice for their communities. They rallied in 2006 to the banner of the Union of Islamic Courts, the predecessor to the Al-Shabab, because it ended the petty corruption, criminality and hated ad hoc checkpoints of the warlords and roaming gunmen.

None of the many central governments brokered by the UN (14 in total so far) have been able to fulfil these basic needs. This includes the current Transitional Federal Government, installed after the US and Ethiopia destroyed the Courts movement because of suspected terrorist links.

The Transitional Federal Government took power in Mogadishu. It is allied with the US in the war against terrorism, but it is corrupt and propped up by African Union troops.

It is too weak to provide law and order. Often civilians are better off outside the capital, where Al-Shabab is in control.

Indeed, Al-Shabab is currently Somalia’s only hope for peace, stability and order.

The West must recognise that Al-Shabab is the only actor capable of setting up a system of governance and basic infrastructure in Somalia. The Al-Shabab are supportive of global and regional order, they ought to be seen as state-builders rather than as a group of terrorist extremists.

The media presents the Al-Shabab as a problem because they threaten Western foreign policies.

Kenya’s incursion to protect its tourist industry from Somali kidnappers is presented this way.

This is stupid. The terrorist label just de-legitimises and invalidates the Al-Shabab.

Use of this label hampers Somalia’s recovery and global order more than it helps.

To understand why this is so we have to look at the human behind the terrorist label. The Al-Shabab has not been allowed to participate in Somalia’s political process. Terrorist attacks like suicide truck bombings and recent Al-Shabab audiotape calling for attacks on the US, Canada, and other countries are the only tactics available to them to effect change and insert themselves into the debate about the future of their country.

The Transitional Federal Government has said it wants to negotiate with the Al-Shabab. It knows it cannot compete.

Like the Courts movement, Al-Shabab has the local contacts, support of the civil elites, grassroots leaders and bottom-up approach that Somalis respect and trust.

Turning to the Al-Shabab is not an ideal solution. But Somalia’s mixture of famine, conflict and state collapse is far from an ideal situation.

Al-Shabab will be able to provide peace and stability, and in a calmer and less confrontational atmosphere famine relief from outside should be acceptable.

Dr Grant Dawson is deputy director of the David Davies Memorial Institute of International Studies at the Department of International Politics of Aberystwyth University

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Ethiopia proposed ‘semi-recognition’ for Somaliland

Posted by Daniel Berhane on Thursday, September 8, 2011 @ 10:41 pm · 

A leaked Cable of US Embassy Addis Ababa shows Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi lobbying for a ‘semi-recognition’ status for Somaliland, a breakaway northern territory of Somalia.
In a January 30, 2009 meeting with Assistant Secretary Phil Carter, the Ethiopia Premier was quoted as saying that:
he(Meles) has already broached the notion of an interim- or semi-recognition, along the lines of what the Palestinian Authority enjoys, with Somaliland President Kahin Riyale, and that Riyale has become increasingly receptive to the strategy……the next steps must be for others in the international community to help convince the Somalilanders of such an approach.
Meles argued that granting a "semi-recognition" for Somaliland would be ‘a critical step necessary to enhance the international community’s ability to support Somaliland on regional security/stability and in its own domestic efforts toward democratization.’ He stressed further that ‘the international community’s status quo relationship with Somaliland is untenable and that Somaliland needs a way around the issue of legal recognition to allow the international community to "recognize some authority within Somaliland with which it can engage”.
While accepting the Assistant Secretary’s criticism of Somaliland’s internal political dynamics in the prior two years and the need to hold credible elections as planned, Meles Zenawi insisted that ‘Somaliland’s democratic process cannot be sustained without some kind of interim recognition which can allow for the provision of international assistance to bolster Somaliland’s own democratic process.’ [Note that the 2010 Presidential election went as planned and Somaliland managed a peaceful transfer of power to an opposition party, albeit with some hitched in ...]
However, Somaliland needs a "good sponsor" within the African community to advance the cause, Meles observed. Speaking of potential sponsors, Meles suggested that:
Djibouti would be the best choice, and acknowledged that Ethiopia would be the worst (as the move risked only fueling detractors’ arguments that Ethiopia is bent on breaking up Somalia).
Once the support of Africans is secured, ‘the onus would be on the U.S. and UK to make the Somaliland semi-recognition case to the Europeans and others in the international community’, Meles outlined the strategy. 
Read the Cable below.
********************
Reference ID – 09ADDISABABA260
Created – 2009-02-02 14:31
Released – 2011-08-30 01:44
Classification – CONFIDENTIAL
Origin – Embassy Addis Ababa
VZCZCXRO0925
OO RUEHDE RUEHROV RUEHTRO
DE RUEHDS #0260 0331431
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
O 021431Z FEB 09
FM AMEMBASSY ADDIS ABABA
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 3588
INFO RUCNSOM/SOMALIA COLLECTIVE PRIORITY
RUZEFAA/HQ USAFRICOM STUTTGART GE PRIORITY
RUEAIIA/CIA WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RUEPADJ/CJTF HOA PRIORITY
RUEKDIA/DIA WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RUEKJCS/JOINT STAFF WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RHEHAAA/NSC WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEKJCS/SECDEF WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
C O N F I D E N T I A L ADDIS ABABA 000260
SIPDIS
E.O. 12958: DECL: 01/30/2018
TAGS: PREL PGOV SO ET
SUBJECT: ETHIOPIA MAKES CASE FOR SOMALILAND "SEMI-RECOGNITION"
Classified By: Ambassador Donald Yamamoto for reasons 1.4 (b) and (d).
¶1. (C) On the margins of a discussion with Acting AF Assistant Secretary Phil Carter On January 30, Ethiopia Prime Minister Meles made the case for "semi-recognition" of Somaliland as a critical step necessary to enhance the international community’s ability to support Somaliland on regional security/stability and in its own domestic efforts toward democratization. Meles argued that the international community’s status quo relationship with Somaliland is untenable and that Somaliland needs a way around the issue of legal recognition to allow the international community to "recognize some authority within Somaliland with which it can engage."
¶2. (C) Meles accepted Acting A/S Carter’s argument that Somaliland’s internal political dynamics over the past two years have not helped their case, and agreed that the region must get back on track and hold credible elections as planned this spring. Still Meles argued that Somaliland’s democratic process cannot be sustained without some kind of interim recognition which can allow for the provision of international assistance to bolster Somaliland’s own democratic process.
¶3. (C) Meles noted that he has already broached the notion of an interim- or semi-recognition, along the lines of what the Palestinian Authority enjoys, with Somaliland President Kahin Riyale, and that Riyale has become increasingly receptive to the strategy. Meles argued to Carter that the next steps must be for others in the international community to help convince the Somalilanders of such an approach. Then, Somaliland needs a "good sponsor" within the African community to advance the cause. Meles suggested that Djibouti would be the best choice, and acknowledged that Ethiopia would be the worst (as the move risked only fueling detractors’ arguments that Ethiopia is bent on breaking up Somalia). Once the strategy had support among African states, Meles argued that the onus would be on the U.S. and UK to make the Somaliland semi-recognition case to the Europeans and others in the international community.
YAMAMOTO
**************************************
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