No Place to Hide: Glenn Greenwald’s account of the Snowden revelations

BOOKS

By Patrick Martin, senior political analyst with wsws.org
30 May 2014

noPlace2Hide.greenwaldNo Place to Hide: Edward Snowden, the NSA and the US Surveillance State, by Glenn Greenwald, Metropolitan Books, Henry Holt and Company, New York, NY, 2014.

This account of the revelations by former US intelligence agent and contractor Edward Snowden, and the significant role the author played in bringing them to the public, is a welcome antidote to the unceasing vilification of Snowden by US government officials and their apologists in the American corporate media.

It gives Greenwald’s first-person account of how he was approached by Snowden, came to appreciate the significance of the material the former contractor possessed on the worldwide spying operations of the National Security Agency (NSA), and worked to make the story public, principally in articles for the Guardian (US), the American edition of the British daily newspaper.

Greenwald provides a succinct summary of the colossal scale of the NSA’s efforts to monitor the electronic communications of the entire human race, summed up in the agency’s motto “Collect it all.” He makes an impassioned case for the right to privacy against the claims that pervasive surveillance of everyone’s communications is necessary in the struggle against “terrorism.” And he concludes with an indictment of the American corporate media as courtiers for the US ruling elite and its military-intelligence apparatus.

Four journalists played major roles in the production of the articles that brought the Snowden revelations to the world. First place, in Greenwald’s account, goes to Laura Poitras, the documentary filmmaker who has been fighting US government harassment because of her unsparing exposés of the atrocities perpetrated in the US occupation of Iraq and the broader “war on terror.”

Next is Greenwald himself, who came to Snowden’s attention because of his vocal criticism of US government spying in columns written for the US online magazine Salon and then for the Guardian (US). He was actually the first journalist contacted by Snowden, but failed to take the steps required to receive his leaked documents, such as enabling encrypted email. Snowden then turned to Poitras, who, in turn, brought Greenwald on board.

Joining them, at the insistence of Guardian (US) editor Janine Gibson, was a veteran Guardian reporter with experience in national security stories, Ewan MacAskill. Poitras, Greenwald and MacAskill traveled to Hong Kong to make the first face-to-face contact with Snowden and receive his archive of documents, then wrote the Guardian stories that had such a powerful global impact last year.

The fourth contributor was Barton Gellman, a former national security reporter for the Washington Post who returned to work for that newspaper as a contractor. The Post and Gellman were brought in to provide backup for theGuardian, with Gellman and Poitras collaborating on several reports, most notably on PRISM, one of the most invasive NSA programs.

Greenwald briefly recounts Snowden’s career in the intelligence services, which he joined after enlisting in the Army in 2004 and breaking both legs in a training accident. With a flair for technology despite his lack of formal education, Snowden rose rapidly in IT work, first at the NSA, then at the CIA, working as a contractor, then as a full-time employee, systems administrator and, for three years, CIA cyber security expert stationed undercover in Geneva.

Snowden became disillusioned by the cynicism and ruthlessness of the CIA and left the agency in 2009. According to Greenwald, he had “hoped that the election of Barack Obama as president would reform some of the worst abuses he had seen.” But no such change took place.

Snowden considered becoming a whistle-blower and made a number of career moves to further that goal. He switched agencies, going back to the NSA as a Dell contractor, working in Japan and gaining access to additional information on surveillance. He then worked for Dell at a CIA office in Maryland before transferring to an NSA facility in Hawaii. In early 2013, he applied for an NSA job with Booz Allen Hamilton because it would give him access to a further set of files he wanted to download and make public.

Greenwald details three aspects of Snowden’s outlook that contributed to his decision to inform the people of the United States and the world of what the US intelligence apparatus was doing:

* Individual responsibility: Snowden told Greenwald that after recognizing that Obama was continuing the abuses he had seen under the Bush administration, “I realized then that I couldn’t wait for a leader to fix these things. Leadership is about acting first and serving as an example for others, not waiting for others to act.” (p. 43)

* Valuing online freedom: “As for many of his generation, ‘the Internet’ for him wasn’t some isolated tool to use for discrete tasks. It was the world in which his mind and personality developed, a place unto itself that offered freedom, exploration, and the potential for intellectual growth. To Snowden, the unique qualities of the Internet were incomparably valuable, to be preserved at all costs.” (p. 46)

* Willingness to sacrifice: Far from the alienated loner, acting out of frustration, Snowden “had a life filled with the things people view as most valuable. His decision to leak the documents meant giving up a long-term girlfriend that he loved, a life in the paradise of Hawaii, a supportive family, a stable career, a lucrative paycheck, a life ahead full of possibilities of every type.” (p. 47)

Greenwald sums up Snowden in a striking passage that reflects genuine admiration for the courage and intelligence of this remarkable young man, who became the focus of worldwide media attention and a global manhunt by US intelligence agencies:

“Snowden seemed to derive a sense of strength from having made this decision. He exuded an extraordinary equanimity when talking about what the US government might do to him. The sight of this twenty-nine-year-old young man responding this way to the threat of decades, or life, in a super-max prison—a prospect that, by design, would scare almost anyone into paralysis—was deeply inspiring. And his courage was contagious: Laura and I vowed to each other repeatedly and to Snowden that every action we would take and every decision we would make from that point forward would honor his choice.” (p. 51)

The drama in Greenwald’s account of the ten days in Hong Kong—his only face-to-face experience with Snowden—lies less in the interactions with the NSA leaker than with the struggle to get the story published in the Guardianand the Post. Both newspapers adhered to the practice of allowing the intelligence agencies to review the stories before they were published, thus subjecting editors to enormous pressure from both the government and their own corporate legal departments to curtail the exposures or suppress them altogether.

At one point, Greenwald says he was prepared to quit the Guardian and go elsewhere, or even begin publishing the revelations online himself, in the fashion of WikiLeaks. But he credits Janine Gibson, the editor of the newspaper’s US edition, with standing up to both legal and governmental browbeating, posting the first report online on June 5, 2013 under the headline, “NSA Collecting Phone Records of Millions of Verizon Customers Daily.”

A steady stream of revelations followed, with enormous repercussions throughout the world. The names of surveillance programs operated by the NSA became well known synonyms for police state spying: PRISM, X-KEYSCORE, BOUNDLESS INFORMANT, MUSCULAR, BLARNEY, STORMVIEW, PINWALE, to name a few.

The book includes a series of slides and screen captures that graphically display the scope and scale of NSA surveillance, as well as documenting the agency’s main collaborators in data collection: 80 US corporations, including all the major telecommunications and e-mail services providers; the governments of four English-speaking countries—Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand—which together with the US comprise the “Five Eyes” group; and dozens of other governments that provide access or information to US intelligence.

As Greenwald observes: “Taken in its entirety, the Snowden archive led to an ultimately simple conclusion: the US government had built a system that has as its goal the complete elimination of electronic privacy worldwide. Far from hyperbole, that is the literal, explicitly stated aim of the surveillance state: to collect, store, monitor, and analyze all electronic communication by all people around the globe.” (p. 94)

Greenwald maintains that this surveillance state is itself criminal in character. It is not a question of “rogue” operators within the NSA or other agencies who might “misuse” the vast databases assembled. Rather, the very existence of these databases is a crime against humanity.

He argues that “it is in the realm of privacy where creativity, dissent, and challenges to authority germinate.” He continues: “A society in which everyone knows they can be watched by the state—where the private realm is effectively eliminated—is one in which those attributes are lost, at both the societal and the individual level.” (p. 174)

Moreover, there is a social dimension to the buildup of domestic spying. “Worsening economic inequality, converted into a full-blown crisis by the financial collapse in 2008, has generated grave internal instability,” he writes. “There has been visible unrest even in relatively stable democracies, such as Spain and Greece. In 2011, there were days of rioting in London.” (p. 177)

Within the United States, the police state buildup is not simply a response to the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. The author traces the roots of the surveillance state back to the COINTELPRO operations by the FBI against political dissent in the 1960s and 1970s, which included massive infiltration of anti-war, black nationalist and socialist groups.

These activities were partially exposed in the Church Committee hearings in the mid-1970s, from which Greenwald drew the title of his book. Senator Frank Church, chairman of the committee, warned nearly 40 years ago that the technical powers of the NSA were so great that if they were turned inwards against the American people, there would be “no place to hide.”

The book concludes with a direct attack on the American corporate media, which Greenwald characterizes, justifiably, in the most scathing terms. He recounts the campaign of political vituperation in the “mainstream” press after the Snowden revelations began, with many commentators—most notably David Gregory of NBC’s “Meet the Press”—suggesting that not only Snowden, but the journalists who worked with him, including Greenwald himself, should be prosecuted. Andrew Ross Sorkin, financial columnist for the New York Times, called for the arrest of both men.

Greenwald explores the hypocrisy of the media pundits, who readily provide a venue for officially sanctioned leaks—the “revelations” of the corporate-controlled press are usually nothing more than that—while denouncing “only those disclosures that displease or undermine the government.”

The very existence of the media as a “fourth estate” is conditioned on an adversarial relationship between the press and the powers-that-be, he maintains, adding, “Nobody needed the US Constitution to guarantee press freedom so that journalists could befriend, amplify, and glorify political leaders; the guarantee was necessary so that journalists could do the opposite.” (p. 230)

Before the Snowden revelations, the biggest exposure of domestic spying by the NSA came in a 2005 report in the New York Times by James Risen, detailing illegal wiretapping. But Times Executive Editor Bill Keller blocked publication of the report in 2004, before the presidential election, when it might have damaged the Bush administration, only allowing it to surface a year later, and even then, only after Risen threatened to take his material to a book publisher and denounce the Times for censorship.

Perhaps the most critical passage in this section is Greenwald’s description of the material basis for press collaboration with the surveillance state. He writes:

“This identification of the establishment media with the government is cemented by various factors, one of them being socioeconomic. Many of the influential journalists in the United States are now multimillionaires. They live in the same neighborhoods as the political figures and financial elites over which they ostensibly serve as watchdogs. They attend the same functions, they have the same circles of friends and associates, their children go to the same elite private schools…

“US establishment journalism is anything but an outside force. It is wholly integrated into the nation’s dominant political power. Culturally, emotionally, and socioeconomically, they are one and the same. Rich, famous, insider journalists do not want to subvert the status quo that so lavishly rewards them. Like all courtiers, they are eager to defend the system that vests them with their privileges and contemptuous of anyone who challenges the system. (p. 235)

There are significant limitations to Greenwald’s political perspective, expressed particularly in the epilogue, which hails the introduction of a bipartisan bill to defund the NSA surveillance programs, jointly introduced by liberal Democrat John Conyers and ultra-right Republican Justin Amash and narrowly defeated in the House of Representatives.

Greenwald is a small-d democrat, an opponent of mass spying and political repression, but not an opponent of capitalism. He makes a scathing denunciation of the role of money in corrupting US politics and the media, but recently launched an on-line media venture with the backing of Pierre Omidyar, the billionaire founder of eBay.

However aggressive his criticism of the existing order—and it is quite sharp in places—he remains shackled to a perspective of reforming that system through individual efforts to expose the worst evils and arouse public opinion. The development of a mass political movement from below, directed at uprooting the entire social order, seems for him to be a closed book.

That said, No Place to Hide is a serious contribution to the public understanding of the Snowden revelations and the emergence of a police state apparatus in America. It deserves a wide audience.




Dispatches From the Ministry of Truth: Ukraine in the grip of civil war

Branch: CBS Evening News

Official headline: In eastern Ukraine, residents fear threat of civil war
Date: 5.28.14


WARNING: Always assume the opposite of what you are led to believe.




The Pope in the Holy Land

Palestinian Christians Need a Political Pope Too

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By JONATHAN COOK, Counterpunch

Nazareth.

When Pope Benedict XVI visited the Holy Land five years ago, Israel heightened its security, gladly emphasising the potential threat he supposedly faced in Israel from Muslim extremists.

As his successor, Pope Francis, arrived in Israel late on Sunday, security was no less strict. Some 9,000 police had been drafted in to protect him, Christian institutions were under round-the-clock protection, and the intelligence services were working overtime. According to a Vatican official, Israel’s preparations had turned “the holy sites into a military base”.

On this occasion Israel was less keen to publicise the source of its fears, because the most tangible threat came not from Islamists but Jewish fanatics linked to Israel’s settler movement.

Last month they issued a death threat to the Roman Catholic Bishop of Nazareth and his followers, while recent weeks have seen clergy attacked, churches and monasteries defaced with offensive graffiti, and cemeteries desecrated.

The building where the Pope was due to meet Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu today was daubed with “Death to Arabs and Christians”. Last Friday, a church in the city of Beersheva was sprayed with “Jesus is a son of a bitch”.

Israeli police have arrested or issued restraining orders on several dozen Jewish extremists in the past few days.

Fouad Twal, the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, has warned that “acts of unrestrained vandalism are poisoning the atmosphere”.

Indeed, the mood of intolerance has spread beyond a dangerous fringe. Hundreds of Israeli Jews demonstrated angrily in Jerusalem last week against the Pope, while police barred Catholic authorities from putting up banners celebrating his visit, apparently fearful it could trigger wider protests.

The local Palestinian Christian population, both in the occupied territories and inside Israel itself, is feeling more embattled than ever – and not just from settlers.

In Bethlehem on Sunday the Pope made an unscheduled stop to pray at the monstrous concrete wall that has turned Jesus’ birthplace into a prison for its modern inhabitants. At a nearby refugee camp he was reminded that Israel bars residents from ever returning to homes now in Israel.

Meanwhile, Netanyahu has provided his personal backing to a plan whose barely concealed goal is to divide the large Palestinian minority inside Israel – pitting Christian against Muslim – by seeking to draft the former into the Israeli military.

Despite this Pope’s popularity, there have been rumblings of dissatisfaction at his priorities on this brief, three-day trip.

The official purpose is to mark the 50th anniversary of a meeting in Jerusalem between Pope Paul VI and Patriarch Athenagoras that ended of a 1,000-year schism between Rome and the Orthodox Church.

The Vatican has emphasised that Francis’ trip is “absolutely not political”. His itinerary, which did not include time for a visit to the Galilee, where most Palestinian Christians are located, suggested the Pope was not likely to offer his flock solace beyond the general hope he expressed in Bethlehem for a “stable peace” in the region.

The Holy Land’s Christians are an increasingly vulnerable minority. Inside Israel, for example, their proportion has fallen from nearly a quarter of the Palestinian minority in the early 1950s to just 10 per cent today. A similar decline has taken place in the occupied territories.

Although Israel blames Muslim fanaticism for this decades-long trend, the truth is different. In repeated surveys, only a small minority of Christians blame Muslims for the exodus.

In part, the proportion of Christians has fallen over time simply because of their tendency to smaller familes than Muslims. But equally significant are Israel’s oppressive twin policies of belligerent occupation in the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem and a political system of exclusive Jewish privilege inside Israel.

All Palestinians, Muslim and Christian alike, have been harmed by Israeli rule. But Christians have been better able to exploit connections to Western communities, giving them an easier passage out.

None of this fits well with Israel’s narrative of a clash between the Judeo-Christian world and Islam, or its desire to present itself as a unique haven as neighbouring Arab states sink into sectarian conflict. On Sunday Netanyahu claimed Israel was the only Middle East country to offer “absolute freedom to practice all religions”.

The reality, however, is that the settlers’ violence feeds off a religious and ethnic intolerance cultivated on many fronts by the Israeli state itself.

It starts early, with a majority of Jewish children educated in religious schools that scorn a modern curriculum. Instead they drill into pupils literal interpretations of the Bible that encourage Jewish chauvinism.

Israel’s programme of Holocaust education rejects universal lessons, preferring to nurture a sense of Jews as history’s eternal victims. Many Israelis believe they should be constantly on guard – and armed – against a world of anti-semitic gentiles.

Hardline Orthodox rabbis, given control over large areas of Israeli life, have become the sole arbiters of moral values for many Israelis.

The government’s latest effort to pass legislation affirming Israel as the “nation-state of the Jewish people” is designed to stymie any hope of a multi-cultural future.

And finally, decades of rule over Palestinians have been exploited by Israel to invest ever greater Jewish religious symbolism in contested or shared holy places, most notably the al-Aqsa mosque compound in Jerusalem. Slowly a territorial conflict is gaining the attributes of a religious war.

Local church leaders understand this well. In the run-up to the Pope’s visit, Twal asked pointedly: “What effect is created by [an] official discourse on Israel being a state for one group only?”

The Pope noted in Jordan on Saturday that religious freedom was a “fundamental human right”. That is certainly a message Israel’s leadership needed to hear stressed when Francis met them today.

A papal visit that eschews politics to focus only on religion – elevating holy sites above the people who live next to them – betrays a Christian community that needs all the help it can get as it fights for its continuing place in the Holy Land.

Jonathan Cook won the Martha Gellhorn Special Prize for Journalism. His latest books are “Israel and the Clash of Civilisations: Iraq, Iran and the Plan to Remake the Middle East” (Pluto Press) and “Disappearing Palestine: Israel’s Experiments in Human Despair” (Zed Books).  His website is www.jonathan-cook.net.

A version of this article first appeared in the National, Abu Dhabi.




Why Are Russia and China (and Iran) Paramount Enemies For the U.S. Ruling Elite?

The Faux Cry for Democracy
putin_wenJibao
by JOHN V. WALSH

Does it not seem strange that, with the Cold War long over, the Paramount Enemies of the United States remain Russia and China? That is not a bad question to ponder with Vladimir Putin’s visit with Xi Jinping in Beijing.

And there is no doubt that Russia and China hold this pariah status in the eyes of the U.S. imperial elite. In the last months we have watched the U.S. try to push Russia East and tear it apart. At the same time Obama traversed East Asia trying to stitch together an anti-China military and economic alliance in the Western Pacific with Japan as the linchpin. In fact it is striking that the U.S. has allied itself with neo-Nazism in Ukraine and Japanese militarism on the other side of Asia. This is happening despite the considerable changes that have taken place in both Russia and China, neither of which would any longer claim to be interested in an anti-capitalist crusade. The only country that comes close in the opprobrium heaped upon them by the West is Iran. Why do these countries, especially Russia and China, remain the enemies of the West? With the struggle against Soviet-style Communism long over, the reason is certainly not ideological.

This riddle finds its answer in a suggestion by Jean Bricmont in hisHumanitarian Imperialism. He observes that the main political development of the last 100 years was not the defeat of fascism nor the fall of Soviet style Communism, but the battle against Western colonialism. And this battle is far from over, for most of the world is still subject to total or partial domination by the West, a condition that Sartre and Nkrumah dubbed neocolonialism. The colonized peoples of the world, the overwhelming majority of humanity, still live under the worst of material conditions. Originally Nkrumah described neocolonialism thus:

The result of neo-colonialism is that foreign capital is used for the exploitation rather than for the development of the less developed parts of the world. Investment, under neo-colonialism, increases, rather than decreases, the gap between the rich and the poor countries of the world. The struggle against neo-colonialism is not aimed at excluding the capital of the developed world from operating in less developed countries. It is aimed at preventing the financial power of the developed countries being used in such a way as to impoverish the less developed.

In the post Cold War world, the domination of the West has increasingly taken the form of direct military action by the U.S. with its Empire of Bases, subversion of defiant governments or “integration” of their military with the West, as is proceeding apace in Africa now.

How do Russia and China fit into this sweep of history?

Before the Bolshevik Revolution Lenin saw WWI as a war between the great European colonial powers, pitting England and its allies against Germany and its allies, for colonial spoils and imperial power. Or as has been said, England owned the world and Germany wanted it. That inter-imperial war precipitated the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917, with the simple call for “Bread, land and peace,” and also a German Socialist Revolution which failed, forcing the Bolsheviks to turn inward.

The Bolsheviks were deadly serious. They took Russia and then the rest of the USSR out of the Western orbit, out of the ambit of the Western colonial powers, and they brought industrial development to their backward land. The failure of a revolution in Europe and the post WWI military assault on Russia by the West, including the U.S., meant that the USSR could no longer look to the West for advancement toward “socialism.” And because of Lenin’s view that the colonized nations needed to rebel against imperialism to advance and develop, the Bolsheviks also took up the cause of anticolonialism – from Africa to Latin America to Asia and, most importantly, to China.

In the end Russia became a great power and it remained out of the orbit of the West for over 70 years, almost three generations. Socialism and Communism were certainly not achieved, whatever one might mean by them. And that is a thing that disturbs most Left wing or “progressive” Western intellectuals to this day, most notably the Trotskyites and their ideological fellow travelers mired in the past. That outlook, however, misses the essential point in light of the struggle against colonialism. A proud independence, an escape from poverty and a severing of almost all institutional and economic ties with the West became accomplished facts in Russia. Few Russians studied abroad and few Westerners studied in Russia. There were no old school ties between the two.

Then came WWII, an attempt by Germany to conquer Europe and to destroy the Soviet Union. Out of this war came another great revolution, the Liberation of China. China had tried many things to escape the humiliation imposed on it by the West, including an attempt by Sun Yat-Sen and his followers to set up a Chinese democracy, Western style. One of those followers was Mao Zedong. With the failure of Sun and the victory of Lenin, Mao saw his chance, and he too adopted a Leninist Party structure but with emphasis on the peasantry. As Mao himself put it in July, 1949, The Russians made the October Revolution … and the revolutionary energy of the…laboring people of Russia, hitherto latent and unseen by foreigners, suddenly erupted like a volcano, and the Chinese and all mankind began to see the Russians in a new light. Then, and only then, did the Chinese enter an entirely new era in their thinking and their life.”

By 1946 China had defeated Japan and by 1949 the Chinese Communist Revolution secured victory. And then China closed the door to the West and established its independence. Ties with the West were severed decisively for nearly two generations. With its independence secured by Mao and baseline development achieved, China could “open the door” but from a position of strength. Deng’s reforms turned China into a great economic power. China today is the second most powerful nation on the planet, once again interacting with the West – but on its own terms, as does Russia.

So the Communists of Russia did not achieve Communism. But they did achieve independence and great economic and military power. Surely China’s achievement was the greatest blow against colonialism in the wake of WWII and the greatest anticolonial victory in history. Western Europe and the U.S. did all they could to defeat the Chinese Communists, and they failed. They were on the wrong side of history – the colonial side, the side of domination and humiliation of entire peoples.

So today we find these two great powers, Russia and China, recently driven into one another’s arms by the endless crusades of the West to undermine them. Together they constitute a great power center outside the control of the U.S. Empire. Bent on global domination, the U.S. cannot tolerate such a defiant and alternative center of power. The reason is that such a center provides an alternative for others who would gain their independence from the West. Such an organization as BRICS would not exist, or if it did would not mean much, without the “R” and the “C.”

But the battle against colonialism has not ended. Certainly India, most of Latin America, much of East Asia and most of Africa have yet to break free of the West and develop their full economic potential. (They certainly have not escaped underdevelopment while in the embrace of the West.) In some places governments defiant of the U.S. have emerged as in Bolivia, Venezuela and Ecuador. Where once the U.S. fought battles against insurgent liberation movements, now it fights to bring down defiant governments or leaders, another insight of Bricmont. That is also a feature of neo-imperialism. Some, like Mossadegh, Allende and Chavez, were genuine democrats who wished to bring their people out of poverty. Others have not been so democracy minded, but defiance of the West has been the common denominator for those whom the West seeks to destroy. As the world knows by now, “democracy” and “human rights” have nothing to do with U.S. neo-imperial strategy. The two cross paths only by accident.

Let us be clear about this outlook. This view is not intended to be a paean to the Communist nature of the great 20th Century revolutions. In fact these revolutions were failures in terms of the goals that they set themselves. They did not achieve an egalitarian society at any point. But they did find the road to independence and development and now to advanced development, which they are still undertaking today. And they serve as an alternative to the West – a powerful one. In this sense they might be termed accidental revolutions. Little in history goes according to script no matter who writes it. It can be said, though, that in terms of the great struggle against colonialism and for human development the Russian and Chinese revolutions were on the right side of history. And they were the major steps in that battle in the 20th Century.

Finally, Iran is the third of the big three Paramount Enemies of the U.S. and the West. Interestingly, Iran followed the same course as China and Russia. After the overthrow of the duly elected social democrat and nationalist Mossadegh by the CIA and the imposition of a brutal dictator, the Shah, a revolution, led by clerics in this case, and a peaceful one at that, overthrew the Shah and cut ties with the West. The clerical establishment played the same role in Iran that the Communist Parties of China and Russia played there. They led a revolution for independence and development and they have kept Iran largely outside the orbit of the West for 35 years. They will engage the West now largely on their own terms, just as China and Russia have done. The form of organization to break free is not critical nor is the ideology. It can range from Communism to Islam and other ideologies and organizations may serve as well. Perhaps we are witnessing some new forms of organization in Ecuador, Bolivia and Venezuela. The resolve and intelligence with which the break is carried out and the degree to which the common people support and benefit from it are the crucial factors.

But for those on the Left, religious antiwar activists and Libertarians who have campaigned over the years against the wars of the West, this is good news. Those who have fought against Western “interventionism” have been on the right side of history – wittingly or more often unwittingly. Given the different ideologies that the anticolonial movements in the West have adopted, it might well be that the core motivation is the side of us which is humane, perhaps our inner Bonobo versus our inner Chimpanzee.

Now, unfortunately, the dominant “progressive” strain in the West has largely abandoned an anticolonial stance. The world is no longer viewed through the lens of the far from finished anticolonial struggle but through the dubious categories of “human rights” and “real, true democracy.” The likes of Pussy Riot have replaced Mao in the eyes of the Western “progressives.” And all too many progressives, Juan Cole and Amy Goodman among them, for example, cheered for the Obama/Hillary war on Libya as Gaddafi was crushed. It went unmentioned in such “progressive” circles that Gaddafi gave Libya the highest Human Development Index in all of Africa, stood in the forefront of the struggle against U.S.-backed Apartheid, both in South Africa and Israel, and advocated a Pan-Arabism and Pan-Africanism that would make for independence from the West.

In sum the “progressives” of the West are now viewing events on the world stage through the wrong lens, the same one used by their rulers when it suits them. It is time to return to the proper way of looking at what is going on in the world. Only then will the anti-colonial and anti-interventionist movement be restored on the Left.

For the genuine libertarians the matter is simpler. They have always held to the view that our government has no business interfering in the life of other nations. For them the emphasis has been on the other side of neocolonialism, neo-imperialism. They simply do not want their government intervening abroad, do not believe it is moral, and do not want to pay for it, a bit of good solid Ayn Randian self-interest. If progressives pull free of the faux cry for democracy and human rights peddled to them, the door is open for a very broad antiwar, anti-Empire movement. And the need for such cooperation is essential lest we stumble into a world conflagration.

This article originally appeared in The Unz Review.

John V. Walsh is a contributor to Antiwar.com, CounterPunch.com, DissidentVoice.org and Unz Review.  He can be reached at john.endwar@gmail.com




US-Led NATO’s War on Humanity

Petro Poroshenko smiles during a press-conference in Kiev during the election's evening on May 25, 2014. Western-friendly chocolate baron Petro Poroshenko claimed victory Sunday in a presidential election seen as key to dragging Ukraine out of its worst crisis since independence.

By Stephen Lendman

Friday, Putin said it may join NATO. Washington may take full advantage.  It may deploy nuclear-armed missiles on Russia’s borders. It may target its heartland.  Ukraine’s coup occurred, said Putin. “(T)hey (won’t) talk to us.” They obey orders from Washington.  “The next step will be Ukraine’s membership in NATO. They never ask us about that…”

“(A)nd they do not engage in dialog with us…’No dialog,’ they say…(I)t is none of your business, and it does not concern you.’ Ukraine may become a member of NATO tomorrow,” said Putin. Under US control.

Doing so threatens Russia. Cooperative relations with Moscow ended. Minimal contacts alone continue.  Putin said Western countries elevated Kiev putschists to power. They have no legitimacy whatever.  “There was a coup d’etat backed by American and European partners,” he explained. “Then there was chaos, and now we are witnessing a full-scale civil war.”

Washington imposed sanctions on Russia to gain economic advantage, Putin said. They’re counterproductive. They won’t work.  On the one hand, Chinese investors will replace EU companies if they’re squeezed out. So will other global businesses. On the other, Russian economist/Putin advisor Andrey Belousov said Moscow prepared retaliatory measures in response.  At different levels, he explained. It depends on US policy going forward. Moscow will respond in kind.  In its own way. Its own timing. “(W)e know exactly how to react,” said Belousov.

On May 23, Reuters headlined “Exclusive: EU weighs Russia sanctions from caviar to oil and gas,” saying:

May 24, Itar Tass headlined “Lugansk Republic head says provocations possible during Ukrainian presidential elections.” A false flag attack may be planned. Lugansk People’s Republic (LPR) Governor Valery Bolotov said:

“I recommend LPR nationals not go to the polling stations as we have information about provocations being prepared by the Ukrainian government and National Guard.”

“They will be conducted to later accuse the Army of the Southeast of disrupting the elections.”

May 25 voting began. It remains ongoing. Kiev’s sham electoral process won’t change things.

Putschist approved aspirants alone are competing. Billionaire bandit Petro Poroshenko looks sure to win.  A previous article explained. He made his money the old-fashioned way. He stole it.

He supported Maidan putschists. He ignored their violence. He helped bankroll them. He wants Ukraine plundered for profit. He’s up to his old tricks again. He’s paying 1,000 hryvnyas per day (about $84) for anti-Eastern Ukrainian freedom fighter volunteers.  He admitted it publicly. Their “life and health will be insured for one million hryvnyas,” he said. Ukrainian forces receive 600 hryvnyas per month.

Results are predetermined for Poroshenko to win. Perhaps on two rounds. Ballot choices exclude democracy. Expect worse than ever policies to follow. Fascist regimes operate this way. Ukraine is Europe’s worst. Putschists threaten regional security and stability.  Voice of Russia (VOR) interviewed Ukrainian Dennis Schedrivy. He participated in Maidan protests. He supported them. No longer.

Kiev-instigated violence continues, he said. He expects more ahead. He called coup-appointed Kiev officials “junta” governance.  “I don’t see (May 25) elections as anything,” he said. “The whole thing with Maidan revolution is not successful. According to the law they have adopted, even if the small village (alone) votes…elections will be considered successful.”

“I am sure that at least part of the sane world will not accept these elections,” he added.  (T)hey are bombing…civilians…(T)his is a farce. (T)hey will try to (legitimize) this whole circus…”

Growing thousands of Ukrainians express similar views. Nothing ahead looks encouraging.  War without mercy rages. Ukrainian forces target civilians. They’re killing them in cold blood.

Freedom is on the chopping block. Fascists want it entirely eliminated. They want  unchallenged top-down hardline rule replacing it. They want it enforced. They want junta power institutionalized. Gangsterism is planned. Democracy is prohibited.  They want what most Ukrainians oppose. It remains to be seen how they’ll react. Civil war rages. National rebellion may follow.  Nothing ahead looks promising. What kind of government usurps power? What kind establishes itself by force?  What kind rules extrajudicially? What kind by intimidation? What kind of legitimacy do ultranationalist, xenophobic, Neo-Nazi, anti-Semites have?

What kind substitutes unrestrained coercion for rule of law principles? What kind prohibits opposing views?  What kind mandates its message alone getting out? The same kind substituting despotism for democracy!

The battle for Ukraine’s soul didn’t end with putschists usurping power. It just began. It continues.  Ukraine’s future is up for grabs. Ordinary people alone will determine it. They have every right to do so.

Hopefully they’ll take full advantage. They’ll have themselves to blame if not.

A Final Comment

On May 24, RT International headlined “Russian journalists being banned entry to Ukraine to cover presidential election.”  They’re accredited to do so. It doesn’t matter. They’re refused entry. RT’s press service said:

“Without explaining the reason for refusal, the members of (Ukraine’s) border service forced the RT crew to buy return tickets at their own expense.”

It’s not the first time. It won’t be the last. Fascist regimes operate this way.  Expect more of the same ahead. Expect police state ruthlessness enforced.  RT’s Anna Knishenko, Elderra Khaled ad Konstantin Bolshakov arrived at Kiev’s Borispol International Airport.

Knishenko explained what followed, saying:

“At the border control, they immediately took our passports. An hour later, we – one by one – were invited to a special room for an interview.”  They were denied entry. For falsified reasons. For not properly explaining why they came, they were told.  Echo of Moscow correspondent Ilya Azar was treated the same way. So were Russian TV channel reporters.  Everyone denied entry had press cards. Ukraine’s Central Electoral Committee accredited them to cover its election earlier.  It didn’t matter. Fabricated reasons denied them. Kiev wants its message alone reported. It wants truth suppressed.

“A whole range of Russian media outlets, including Channel One, NTV, TVC and Zvezda channels have been denied entry to Ukraine headed by the coup-appointed authorities,” said RT.

Kiev putschists wage war on media freedom. Russian journalists are targeted. So are others not putschist-approved.  On May 23, The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) headlined “Russian journalists barred from entering Ukraine,” saying:

CPJ “condemns the move…(It) call(ed) on Ukrainian authorities to allow all journalists to carry out their job without harassment.”  CPJ’s Europe and Central Asia program researcher Muzaffar Suleymanov added:

“If Ukrainian authorities are looking to build a democratic state, they must stop barring the press from covering public events in the country, especially the presidential vote.”

“Openness and transparency are vital for democracy.  We urge Ukraine to grant entry to all journalists, no matter their nationality or affiliation, or their newsroom’s editorial line.”

It “equate(s)” legitimate conflict reporting “with terrorism,” he added. CPJ denounced what media scoundrels ignore.  They support Sunday’s sham process. They equate putschist rule with democracy.  They turn truth on its head claiming it. Don’t expect them to explain.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago. He can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.  His new book as editor and contributor is titled “Flashpoint in Ukraine: US Drive for Hegemony Risks WW III.” 

http://www.claritypress.com/LendmanIII.html

Visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com

Listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the Progressive Radio Network.  It airs three times weekly: live on Sundays at 1PM Central time plus two prerecorded archived programs.

http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour