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Tag Archives: journalism

Excerpts from Recent Correspondence on Political Spychology

30 Monday Sep 2013

Posted by commart in Journalism, Political Spychology, Politics

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

confidentiality, journalism, political, spooks, spychology

The journalist asked, in essence, “How can I offer a source confidentiality if the government knows I know the source and has the power to intercept everything we talk about?”

Madame X,

More fuel for the fire: http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2013/09/30/nsa-built-secret-shadow-social-network-getprism-and-youve-already-joined-it/

Our military-industrial complex in its surreptitious mode has made it very hard to casually produce a criminal domestic conspiracy — or should have by now: who’s to tell?

If it has, that leads the bad guys back to using runners to pass slips of paper or memorized signal to their associates or, alternatively, produce code, and perhaps along the lines you have suggested with the Jihad. ”Sweet nectar” may not be so sweet these days if it has been attached to a mission involving Islamic Jihad.

Unless you’re committing a crime, the only advice and course possible is to proceed as normal, as you CAN offer confidentiality unless knowingly (on your part) recording and passing information to a controller.

If you’re not doing that, why can’t YOU offer confidentiality?

What you cannot offer any longer is the guarantee of confidentiality — as in times of old and associated with all conflicts, “there are spies everywhere”.

Our own ability as independent writers to query the NSA gather-all-communications system — or test it for reflection of interest in ourselves — is probably nonexistent to primitive.

The circumstance may encourage us to give those who claim the FBI has been following them and such a second glance. Those we usually consign to the ranks of the American Paranoid Movements (of which there are many) and the plainly mentally ill, but with a lurking and invasive government, we might be inclined to taking a second look at some claims or tempted to test the system with breadcrumbs.

Not too many years ago, we had this same conversation and joked about slipping “C4″ and other triggers into correspondence, and I think we found that at least the Google robots were sensitive enough to return invitations to academic programs in national security.

🙂

It’s not just about Google’s impersonal robotic text scanning anymore, is it?

We have a known real enemy in the collection of Islamic Jihad groups and their backers in Islam, and those have cast a wide network across the earth to filter in like-minded thinkers and evildoers.

We have to ask whether developing SIGINT security system in their totality affords sufficient strength and wherewithal to hunt and distill adversary signal.

So far, not so good: Al Shabaab’s attack last week in Nairobi, Boko Haram’s latest in northern Nigeria, the swing of Syrian rebel FSA toward ISIL would seem to suggest our national foreign intelligence community failure or, alternatively, too parochial a collection of intelligence communities across the nations. Whatever the spooks – a most apt term, that one — may think they’re doing, they’re not getting in the way of the orchestration of these attacks or adverse shifts in political position.

A global threat wants for a globally integrated response.

I may post this response to you on my blog with attribution removed.

We are just at the start of “spychology” as security outsider enthusiasts.

_____

On that first paragraph, two notes ago: ” . . . but of nodal personality attracts similar traffic in a similar way.” It should have read ” . . . but of a nodal personality attracting similar traffic in a similar way.” Basically, the “person of interest” may become noted by other people having a conversation with him.

You have seen the spiderweb graphics illustrating relationships between organizations or persons. With a security mission, a node enlarged by the traffic it receives from lesser nodes 🙂 might attract interest.

For state intelligence communities tracking Islamic terrorism, everyone knows a “hit” or an “action” may be yet compelled by a nod or a few words scribbled on the back of a grocery slip. Where mafia methods work, they work.

This is really a good time for fiction writers who can either promote the technology, as is done with CIS and the old 24 series, or it can go the other way with events taking place out of the control of authorities (remember Jeff Bridges in Arlington Road?).

______

The cuckoo and the two peacocks who have made their names synonymous with American military and domestic intelligence leaks and then the machinery revealed have probably already inspired their share of scribbling intended to entertain, some of which will become movies or television episodes if not series.  The theme is “what you don’t know and can’t know conveniently,” and that terrain today includes what governments know about you and everyone with whom you associate via one form of telephony or another (two tin cans and a length of string excepted).

It is of course presumptuous, also narcissistic, and possibly paranoid to think government cares so much about Y-O-U.

Or M-E.

Then too, it seems it has never been more possible that, indeed, government does care, and whichever government it may be, today it may have some powers it could not have dreamed of having, say, 25 years ago.

Related

‘Homeland’ and ‘24’ Creator Howard Gordon on Terror, Tyranny and TV as Art – Tablet Magazine – 9/30/2013

Arlington Road Trailer – YouTube – Posted 5/23/2010

Arlington Road (1999) – IMDb

# # #

A Note on Integrity in the Press

12 Thursday Sep 2013

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Free Speech, Journalism, Middle East, Politics, Russia, Syria

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

agitprop, dictatorship, honesty, integrity, journalism, Orwell, Orwellian, politics, propaganda, reporting, Syria

“Born liars.  Shameless liars.  You cannot embarrass them.”

The subjects of my friend’s recent Skype-enabled rant: Al Jazeera, China Today, and Russia Today (RT).

The basis aside from what he’s been reading:

Al Jazeera – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Al Jazeera is owned by the government of Qatar.

Owned!

China Today – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

China Today (Chinese: 今日中国; pinyin: Jīnrì Zhōngguó), formerly titled China Reconstructs (Chinese: 中国建设;pinyin: Zhōngguó Jiànshè), is a monthly magazine founded in 1949 by Soong Ching-ling in association with Israel Epstein. It is published in Chinese L anguage, English, Spanish, French, Arabic, German and Turkish, and is intended to promote a positive view of the People’s Republic of China and its government to people outside of China.

I haven’t yet done the reading, but let’s call it the “Face of the Nation”, a portal with a role to play, and, at that, a role of immense importance, more so to the People’s Republic of China than to the international reader.

RT (TV network) – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

It is registered as an autonomous non-profit organization[2][3] funded by the federal budget of Russiathrough the Federal Agency on Press and Mass Communications of the Russian Federation.[4][5]

Basically, RT would seem the Russian “Radio Free America” or U.S. Information Agency — it was born with obligations and today has impressive reach.

What the world on the World Wide Web needs now, of course, might be a few international media assembly giants of trustworthy record.

One exists already.

He may be called the International Reader.

* * *

Whether owned by capitalists or communists, private parties or states, complicated boards of directors — we should take a side trip to Time Warner to look at how that works, and with such as Kingdom Holdings in an influential position — the guts and substance of a news organization resides in its journalists and in the humanity, independence, and integrity they bring to their work.

Some may be aware of their career options and who is sitting in the board room; some on the happy-face beat may be naturally inclined to write always “the best truth possible”; some in their early years may have latched on to the thought that “information is power” so how much cooler would it be to have “power over information” and write to an agenda?

This morning, one of my Facebook buddies asked me to prove Syria launched attacks with chemical weapons because the German intelligence services suggested some disconnects.  I countered with Obama’s more specific mention of 11 neighborhoods attacked and communication intercepts of high-level Syrian chatter over the results and, admitted, my trump card: complete trust in Israeli intelligence reporting.  If any entity on earth has a premium stake in displaying, promoting, and valuing integrity, it’s that bunch.

Even if recordings of intercepts were furnished by governments and published on the Internet, there would be some readers who would claim that as much could have been put together in a recording studio.

I’ll leave those people alone.

Others, perhaps less troubled, seem quick to buy “Rebels Admit Responsibility for Chemical Weapons Attack: Militants tell AP reporter they mishandled Saudi-supplied chemical weapons, causing accident.”

And articles like it reported out in an odd assortment of left and right — but not middle — oriented publications, from Mint to The Blaze (and between: Global Research, Godlike Productions, Missing Peace, Prison Planet, Activist Post, etc.).

Free Cow has gone to the trouble of debunking “Syrian rebels admit to AP reporter they mishandled the chemical weapons given by Saudi Arabia”, while I’ve merely suggested that the one claim that ‘the rebels done it’ seemed supported by two plants: 1) the claim that some kind of toxic chemicals handling accident took place and 2) a video, and a lot of stills from it, allegedly involving a rebel launch crew plus rocket technology plus a matched launching platform on wheels (that too — one claim: two elaborate stories — I mentioned to the Facebook buddy).

What is it with some readers that they will devour such contraptions — and with some writers that they will invent or promote them?

Better yet: what is it with some leaders that they believe that controlling people starts with controlling their information environment — and that they have the muscle in money and thugs to do it?

* * *

“Follow the BBC,” said my Skype friend.  “At least they try to tell the truth.”

I don’t know about that, but at least the Wikipedia entry has been clever about the organization:

Its main responsibility is to provide impartial public service broadcasting in the United Kingdom, the Channel Islands, and the Isle of Man.

Impartial!

Fair enough.

BBC one hour ago: BBC News – Assad sets out his terms for chemical weapons convention.

So the rebels didn’t have them after all?

😉

I think I’ll take a look at what Reuters has today on Syria.

Well look at this: Putin wrong to blame Syria rebels for chemical attack, Pentagon says | Reuters 9/12/2013.

Additional Reference

Flacking for Dictators in the 21st Century | Freedom House 3/13/2012

Also Mentioned

Fact-Based, In-Depth News | Al Jazeera America

China General Information, China Information, the People’s Republic of China

RT

# # #

Syria – Coming to a Decision About General Idris

02 Monday Sep 2013

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Islamic Small Wars, Journalism, Middle East, Politics, Regions, Syria

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Al Nusra, Al Qaeda, journalism, news assessment, Syria

Copy and pasted here last week from the Wikipedia article cited:

Here is a Wikipedia listing for detailing armed strength on the rebel side (not including third-way Kurdish forces):

Syria Free Syrian Army: 50,000[4] – 80,000[25]

Syria Syrian Islamic Liberation Front: 37,000[4] (by May 2013)
 Syrian Islamic Front: 13,000[4] (by May 2013)
 Al-Nusra Front: 6,000[4] (by June 2013)
 Foreign Mujahideen: 10,000 (by August 2013)[26]

Should we add up up the two units with “Islamic” in the title and the known “Al-Nusra Front” and predictably passionate “Mujahideen” to suggest that the tide in Islamic fanatics numbers more than 66,000 souls.

Here comes “shimmer“!

On my desktop at the moment: “Al Qaeda militants kill 24 civilians near Ras al-Ain,” Alalam, September 2, 2013, published out of Iran:

Al-Qaeda linked terrorists in Syria have beheaded all 24 Syrian passengers traveling from Tartus to Ras al-Ain in northeast of Syria, among them a mother and a 40-days old infant.

The piece launched by Iran’s anti-western / anti-American press has been picked up by similar other press, but it dovetails nicely with the existential state of affairs for Syria’s Kurdish community, which has indeed gathered and risen to meet the onslaught ventured by the Al Qaeda affiliates in Syria (on this blog, see “Kurdistan – Rojava” published last Thursday, August 29, 2013).

Anyone sincerely interested in quelling the latest in the Syrian theater’s celebration of death will have to stand against the same on the familiar two fronts:

  • the brutal dictatorship that has tried flying the false false-flag of a chemical weapons attack only to find the evidence running against it and the global conscience not as numbed as it might today wish;
  • and the brutal fanaticism of benighted murderers who apparently believe the spilling of Kurdish and other blood has a divine tint to it.

Out here on the virtual berm overlooking the Wild Wild Web, one may wish, albeit with care, for broader, more frequent, and vetted professional journalism from the “back of beyond” in humanity, but the same that sling informational dirt in abundance — and sometimes create it under the “false flag” concept — have a bad reputation with journalists and assorted other do-gooders on various missions to feed, heal, or witness.

* * *

“We think if there is no strike, the regime is going to use chemical weapons and to kill, I’m afraid to say that in the coming days, not coming weeks, to kill more than 20,000 or 30,000 people, of our people … and that’s why we are waiting now for our friends in the Congress to make the right decision to support the president’s decision,” Idris said.

Kopan, Tal.  “Syrian rebel general backs Barack Obama.”  Politico, September 2, 2013.

Of the many personalities to which the world has been introduced in relation to Syria’s civil war, General Salim Idris may stand out as one with the cleanest hands in the mess.  While fighting with the Assad regime, its Idris’s commanders who fight also with Al Qaeda, but how that works Out There — and how it works out — seems another patch for guesswork.

Or just plain guessing.

The braver than ever I will be Bill Roggio has been working this territory in his Long War Journal for months.  The headlines and brief excerpts provide the contour of this part part of the story:

“Free Syrian Army issues ultimatum to al Qaeda over murder of commander.”  July 13, 2013.  From the cap on that piece:

Additionally, the killing of commanders and fighters by rival rebel groups is nothing new in Syria. Islamists have killed FSA commanders in the past, and vice versa. These incidents often occur due to local rivalries and competition for resources, not for ideological reasons. In this recent killing of an FSA commander, the issue wasn’t ideology, but access to a checkpoint in order to deploy forces

That’s some rough “office politics”!

* * *

“Free Syrian Army arming al Qaeda, ISIL, commander claims.”  July 16, 2013.

* * *

Fast forward to last week:

The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, one of two al Qaeda affiliates operating in Syria, announced that it would coordinate with other Syrian rebel groups, including the Free Syrian Army, to take revenge for a chemical weapons attack last week in the capital that is said to have killed more than 300 people.

Roggio, Bill.  “Al Qaeda, rebel groups vow to avenge chemical attack in Syria.”  The Long War Journal, August 27, 2013.

Roggio goes into detail about the makeup of the field and relationships on it, leaving doubts about General Idris’s control of FSA human assets and war materiel.

* * *

Grappling with largely untrained and at times undisciplined fighters, Salim Idris said in an interview that he is trying to turn local militias into a united force of some 120,000 men for a final push against President Bashar Assad.

Laub, Karin.  “New Syria Rebel Chief Describes Clandestine Life.”  AP, The Big Story, December 19, 2012.

Critics say the newly unified command structure he presides over lacks both the ground presence and the heavy weapons that are so desperately needed. Without both, they say, it will be impossible for him to forge a cohesive force from the thousands of fractious, fiercely independent rebel brigades arrayed against the still formidable military of President Bashar al-Assad.

MacFarquhar, Neil.  “Syrian Rebel Leader Deals with Ties to Other Side.”  The New York Times, March 1, 2013.

Writing for the Huffington Post, Daniel Nisman noted back in June, “By bolstering the SMC, the U.S. and Saudi Arabia likely hope to incentivize rebel groups to become more moderate in their ideologies in order to meet their requirements for future military aid” (Nisman, Daniel, “The First Real Test for Moderates in the Syrian Opposition,” The Blog, Huffington Post, June 17, 2013).

I fear to say it but may suggest to the public relations folk representing the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and Qatar and others interested in planting a new Sunni Islam state in Syria: the global anti-Jihad — call them “Islamophobes” if thou wish — ain’t buying the phrase “incentivize to become more moderate in their ideologies.” In such ears and minds, from the desktops of the masses to the halls of Congress, the Is’phobes are still trying to figure out if there is a moderate Islam given milepost statements like this one (from 2008):

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan rejected attempts to call Turkey the representative of moderate Islam. “It is unacceptable for us to agree with such a definition. Turkey has never been a country to represent such a concept. Moreover, Islam cannot be classified as moderate or not,” Erdoğan said, speaking at Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies late Thursday.

Hurriyet Daily News.  “Prime Minister objects to ‘moderate Islam’ label.”  (2008).

* * *

The moderate minded may find agreeably present and numerous Muslim humanists as contemporary and humanist as any Christian, Jewish, or other contemporary liberal humanist on earth this day — and effectively comprising substantial societies, as did that which unseated President Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt recently — but in Syria, the voice raising Cain and getting plenty of the world’s attention isn’t that one: it’s this other that promises moderation while other of its kin abet the funding those with whom Syria’s Kurdish Community finds itself fighting for its very existence.

So General Idris may find himself the voice of moderation but not the commander of it throughout his battle space.

I would like to see this article updated: “AFP, “Syrian rebel chief Idriss emerges as key interlocutor for west,” Al Arabiya, June 14, 2013.

It has got the theme right: General Idris is a modern man, a reasoning man, a good man, but out in the field, the barbaric act of just one soldier reaching into the chest cavity of one of the fallen to pull out an organ and take a bit of it has dampened that image, and, so far, that damage has not been reversed.

From Paul Wood’s article referenced above (inline):

“We condemn what he did,” said the general. “But why do our friends in the West focus on this when thousands are dying? We are a revolution not a structured army. If we were, we would have expelled Abu Sakkar. But he commands his own battalion, which he raised with his own money. Is the West asking me now to fight Abu Sakkar and force him out of the revolution? I beg for some understanding here.”

Wood, Paul.  “Face-to-face with Abu Sakkar, Syria’s ‘heart-eating cannibal’.  BBC, July 5, 2013.

* * *

To say, “they don’t think like we do” is to distill with a cliche the ambiguity shown General Idris down to its cognitive, linguistic, and spiritual essence.

The embrace of barbarism and cruelty, the belief that greater demonstrations of both serve to control one’s enemies, in fact sabotage Syria’s revolutionary front even though Assad’s army and its behavior, perhaps keeping in line with that description of the grammar of the conflict, exceeds in scope and intensity the same lunacy.

# # #

Syria – Actionable

27 Tuesday Aug 2013

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Islamic Small Wars, Journalism, Middle East, Politics, Regions, Syria

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

chemical attack, conflict, democracy, free press, information, journalism, money, politics, press, propaganda, subjugation, Syria

Speaking after U.N. chemical weapons experts came under sniper fire on their way to investigate the scene of the attack, White House spokesman Jay Carney said the use of chemical weapons was undeniable and “there is very little doubt in our mind that the Syrian regime is culpable.”

Wroughton, Lesley and Erika Solomon.  “Syria chemical weapons attack: Kerry accuses Assad of ‘a moral obscenity’.”  Chicago Tribune, August 26, 2013.

Russia has no evidence of whether a chemical weapons attack has taken place in Syria or who is responsible, Russian President Vladimir Putin told British Prime Minister David Cameron in a telephone call, according to Cameron’s official website.

Tehran Times.  “Putin to Cameron: No evidence Syria chemical weapons attack occurred.”  August 27, 2013.

* * *

Syria stinks.

Not only does Syria stink for Syrians — keep in mind this latest imbecility takes place in a war zone that has killed more than 100,000 and displaced upwards of four million souls — but it envelopes everyone with a hand in it.

Ariel Cohen, a senior research fellow at the US think tank the Heritage Foundation, told The Jerusalem Post in an interview on Monday that in response to an attack on their Syrian ally, Russia could “expand supply of dual use nuclear technology” to Iran as its nuclear energy company, Rosatom, is anxious to sell more reactors.

Solomon, Ariel Ben.  “Expert: US-led attack on Syria may lead to increased Russian cooperation with Iran.”  The Jerusalem Post, August 27, 2013.

Let’s do business, shall we?

* * *

Because that’s what Syria’s about.

I happen to have the audacity to think the west wants to earn back some part of its investment in oil; Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey would seem to want to expand the Sunni side of the Islamic enterprise in the middle east; Israel could do with a weakened Iran-Hezbollah-Syria structure on its flanks; and God bless him, truly, for Christian Russia, President Vladimir Putin wants to use Iran’s errant ambitions to keep an old Soviet Era cash machine (we could call it “Cash Mir”) chugging along, Ayatollah –> Assad and Associates –> Post-Soviet, Neo-Oligarch Russia.

It wasn’t a chemical warhead that took lives in the Damascus suburbs last week.

It was the money.

Follow it from Doha to Moscow on its twinned tracks and you will have the outline of the implosion I might just refer to hereafter as “Syria Dark Star”.

Two of the world’s three most powerful states have a business interest in their relationship with the Assad regime.

Analysts say both China and Russia have their reasons to maintain good relations with Syria.

Russia is one of Syria’s biggest arms suppliers. And China ranked as Syria’s third-largest importer in 2010, according to data from the European Commission.

Yan, Holly.  “Why China, Russia won’t condemn Syrian regime.”  CNN, February 5, 2012.

What is the effect of that, information-wise?

In one video appearing in an alternative or dissenting context in World Net Daily (WND), you will see a frame referring to Saudi Arabia’s “Saudi Factory for Chlorine and Alkalais” (Sachlo) in relation to last week’s chemical attack — again: follow the money and do note, please, the production values — the addition of music and titles to what should be as straight as timely documentation gets — on two of the three videos promoted.

What’s true?

What’s not true?

The money is true — and the reportage may be consigned to following state presentations.

The sucker punch is NATO vs. Russia all over again but for no good reason apart from from the ginning of foreign trade receipts.

It’s business.

Conscience has no role in it.

With China perhaps fat, smiling, and unperturbed, that same money will loan out to the United States and others who will happily accommodate this absurd state of affairs between themselves.

As the chips make their way around the Grand and Global Poker Table, all that will be missing comes to (green shades on and lick the nub of the pen) about 355 souls permanently and about 3,245 incapacitated or traumatized souls.

BBC.  “MSF-backed hospitals treated Syria ‘chemical victims’.”  August 24, 2013.

* * *

One has to ask of conscience and desire: are the worlds now “imaged” by CNN and RT — presented to us with many questions left unasked — anything like a world in which one should want to live?

The early 2010 “Question More” advertising campaign created for RT in Britain by McCann Erickson was highly controversial.[33]One advertisement showed American President Barack Obama “morphing” into Iranian leader Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and asked: “Who poses the greatest nuclear threat?” The ad was banned in American airports. Another shows a Western soldier “merging” into a Taliban fighter and asks: “Is terror only inflicted by terrorists?”[34] One of RT’s 2010 billboard advertisements won the British Awards for National Newspaper Advertising “Ad of the Month.”[35]

Wikipedia.  “RT”.

CNNi’s pursuit of and reliance on revenue from Middle East regimes increased significantly after the 2008 financial crisis, which caused the network to suffer significant losses in corporate sponsorships. It thus pursued all-new, journalistically dubious ways to earn revenue from governments around the world. Bahrain has been one of the most aggressive government exploiters of the opportunities presented by CNNi.

Greenwald, Glenn.  “CNN and the business of state-sponsored TV news.”  The Guardian, September 4, 2012.

The human rights-oriented modifications that may come to autocratic states will neither bring to them nor emulate democracy.

That’s life.

However, bending and twisting it some in journalism to suit The Money — yes, you have just been dragged from chemical weapons reports into international trade and on to integrity in journalism (even from my Second Row Seat to History) — will erode and eventually destroy democracy.

American conservatives know the litany: “Without the First Amendment, all of the others are useless.”

Add to it: without a press free of all but ambitious good conscience and readers, there will be no freedom.

Only political programs and programmers — God give them all the money they want because on this most dismal, obscene, and tragic of today’s war stories, The Money would seem the hidden alpha-omega of all motivation, coverage, and presentation — and the feckless programmed, which would be everyone else.

Additional Reference

CBS/AP.  “Fearing a U.S. strike, Syria warns of global ‘chaos’.”  August 27, 2013.

Corsi, Jerome R.  “Evidence: Syria Gas Attack Work of U.S. Allies.”  WND, August 26, 2013.

CNN Press Room.  “CNN International’s Response to the Guardian — Update.”  September 5, 2012.

Whether with CNN or RT, we have journalists working in the vicinity of the wheels of history, which for this BackChannels post seems to be a Qatar-backed Sunni-NATO alliance helped into being by the need to address the threat of a nuclear-armed Iran that is in turn supported, in part, by Syria’s geopolitical view and Russian greed (we know for Putin that cooperation is not about the endorsement of Shiite Islam as laid down by Ayatollah Khamenei).   While that plays, the journalism story plays too, for whether in Russia, the United States, or elsewhere in the world authentically or nominally subscribed to open democracy, if one cannot trust the main run of journalists to report “accurately, clearly, and completely” — add “relentlessly” — on the stories of their day, then one returns to subjugation, and whether with such power cloaked in the name of God or for the cause of Gold makes not the least difference.

Eltsov, Peter.  “Putin Stumps for the Orthodox Church in a Film Celebrating the Kievan Rus Anniversary.”  The Atlantic, July 29, 2013.

Keath, Lee and Zeina Karam.  “Syria Chemical Weapons: UN Inspectors Probe Allegations of Nerve Gas Attack.”  Huffington Post, August 26, 2013.

Stack, Liam.  “Videos Show Aftermath of Possible Syrian Chemical Attack in March.”  The Lede, The New York Times, April 25, 2013.

Walker, Peter and Tom McCarthy.  “Syria: US secretary of state John Kerry calls chemical attack ‘cowardly crime’ – as it happened.”  The Guardian, August 26, 2013.

# # #

Underwritten or undercut? : Columbia Journalism Review

19 Friday Jul 2013

Posted by commart in Free Speech, Journalism

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

democracy, international affairs, journalism

Tom Hundley, the Pulitzer Center’s senior editor and a former foreign correspondent for the Chicago Tribune, is more blunt: “This great mass of freelancers who are depending on grants from us and working on pitiful fees from brand-name outlets—I mean, this just isn’t going to work.”

Underwritten or undercut? : Columbia Journalism Review.

Syria Taliban — Brief Aggregation

15 Monday Jul 2013

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

conflict, Islamic Small Wars, journalism, numbers, Syria, Taliban, war

Update 7/16/2013

Officials will catch up with the war just as soon as it moves farther away from them and far into the Twilight Zone of Language in which lying may tell more about states of affairs — and the character of motives involved — than truth telling.

* * *

AFP.  “Syria: child among nine executed at checkpoint, watchdog groups says.”  The Telegraph, July 16, 2013.

Al Jazeera.  “Pakistan Taliban says its fighters in Syria.”  July 16, 2013.

PTI.  “Pakistan verifying reports of Taliban fighting in Syria.”  DNA, July 16, 2013.

Roggio, Bill.  “Hundreds of Pakistani jihadists reported in Syria.”  Threat Matrix, The Long War Journal, July 14, 2013.

VOA.  “Pakistan Denies Local Taliban Has Sent Hundreds of Fighters to Syria.”

* * *

So awful has the Syrian melee become, but this precisely in the manner of the Islamic Small Wars’ “hot zones”, that even eagle-eyed satellites probably can’t tell much about who (from where) is fighting whom (from where).

Send in the spies and wish them luck because if any get out information — much less survive — on behalf of any of the interests involved, that data has to come from either direct witness or a additional primary sources that may well be lying themselves.

Main Ramble

Most travellers (STET) must have a visa to enter Syria; the only exceptions are citizens of Arab countries. Obtain a visa before arriving at the border, preferably in your home country, well before your trip. Avoid applying in a country that’s not your own or that you don’t hold residency for as the Syrian authorities don’t like this.

http://www.lonelyplanet.com/syria/practical-information/visas#ixzz2Z94ewuqn

Ahmed Ressam, the focus of this FRONTLINE report, was somewhat of an expert in fake passports. He used a counterfeit French passport to enter Canada and apply for political asylum. While living there, he supplied fake Canadian passports to other Algerians. And he used a fake Canadian passport under the alias of Benni Noris in his failed attempt to enter the United States and bomb Los Angeles International Airport.

Zill, Oriana.  “Crossing Borders: How Terrorists Use Fake Passports, Visas, and Other Identity Documents.”  Frontline, PBS, n.d.

Apparently, the lawful go to the bother of obtaining authentic passports and entry visas while the unlawful do much the same in pursuit of inauthentic passports and visas.

🙂

As with proposed firearms laws in the U.S., the lawful are to have the registered and traceable weapons, leaving the unlawful with unregistered and less traceable weapons.

No news here, huh?

😦

The appearance of the Taliban in the Syrian theater underscores the notion (mentioned here several times) that Syria is “dark energy”, an imploding star, the black hole of the Islamic Small Wars: it sucks in energy and plainly burns without end in sight.

* * *

However, one may ask, who has gotten out?

Russia has evacuated the last of its personnel from Syria, including from its Mediterranean naval base in Tartus, in a move that appears to underline Moscow’s mounting concerns about the escalating crisis.

Elder, Miriam and Ian Black.  “Russia withdraws its remaining personnel from Syria.”  The Guardian, June 26, 2013.

Of course, the figures of who has been trying to get away from combat in Syria hovers around four million in combined internally displaced and refugee persons.

If the dead may be considered those who also left, then add about 100,000 to whatever the total figure may be of persons unavailable for fighting.

At the moment, there seem to be about 200 civilians trapped in a Damascus mosque (e.g., Sky News, “Syria: 200 Civilians ‘Trapped in Mosque’,” July 15, 2013).

Gulf News / Retuers reports, “In Qaboun, Republican Guards troops detained hundreds of people in public places to prevent rebel fighters from hitting government troops as they breached rebel defences and entered the district, activists said” (“Syria: Bashar Al Assad’s forces advance on rebel-held Qaboun,” July 15, 2013).

If the above sentence said to you other than “Assad’s forces use human shields,” please remark on the alternative reading.

* * *

Ye know the co-producers by their music!

What happens in Syria should stay in Syria.

Update 1/22/2014: the music was Russian, grand, so I recall.  Evidently, the suggestion has been removed.  I’ll leave the pulled-abandoned tiles up for a while. / I believe Mr. Putin holds the keys to Syria, an old Soviet client, now a potential New Russia Secular state because Russians, foremost, and most everyone else have no want of who’s been laying down the law lately in some Syrian enclaves:

Al-Qaeda-linked jihadists impose Islamic rules, ban music, shisha in Syrian province — RT News – 1/21/2014.

* * *

But it doesn’t.

The wounded refugees were kicked out of the hospital by force, thrown on the side of the adjacent roads, despite the presence of seriously wounded and paralyzed individuals.

Nmsyria.  “Wounded Syrians Kicked Out of Lebanese Hospital.”  July 15, 2013.

Related video:

* * *

While many clearly oppose the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and his security forces, others appear indifferent. Abu Hamza, a driver, now lives with his family in a dusty canvas tent. “I didn’t go to protests. I’m not political,” he says. “We left because of the shelling and the sniping”.

Sammonds, Neil.  “A visit to the Za’atri camp for Syrian refugees in Jordan: ‘I wish I could invite you into the beautiful house we had back home.”  Live Wire (Amnesty’s global human rights blog), July 15, 2013.

* * *

Syria has become a death camp.

It has become the place between a decayed Soviet-Era dictatorship and a boisterous but malignant and deeply narcissistic global totalitarian religious assault.

Syria has become the place where fighters go to fight — nationalist, Islamists, Sunni rebels, Shiite militants — and the place of catastrophe for four million lives disrupted and uprooted “because of the shelling and the sniping.”

# # #

Additional Reference

AP.  “Pakistan’s religious extremists leave for ‘greener pastures’.”  Dawn, July 15, 2013.

Golovnina, Maria and Jibran Ahmad  “Pakistan Taliban set up camps in Syria, join anti-Assad war.”  Reuters, July 14, 2013.

Leigh, Karen.  “War Comes to a Damascus Private School.”  Syria Deeply, July 1, 2013.

Mobarak, Haider.  Taliban: The Tip of a Holy Iceberg.  CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2010.

Roggio, Bill.  “Pakistani Taliban establish ‘base’ inside Syria.”  The Long War Journal, July 12, 2013.

RT.  “Syrian rebels’ Damascus chemical cache found by Assad army – State TV.”  July 14, 2013.

Yusufzai, Mushtaq.  “Pakistani Taliban: ‘We sent hundreds of fighters’ to Syria.”  NBC News, July 15, 2013.

Egypt – To Do What the Generals Have Done

03 Wednesday Jul 2013

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Egypt, Fast News Share, Middle East, Politics, Regions

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

blogosphere, coup, Egypt, journalism, online, politics

Ex-president Mohamed Morsi issued a statement on his official Facebook page saying that the Wednesday military announcement amounts to a coup.

“The procedures announced by the general command of the armed forces represents a full coup d’etat that is completely unacceptable,” the statement asserted.

Ahram Online.  “Morsi refuses army road map, says he remains Egypt president.”  July 3, 2013.

As stated to some of my Facebook friends, “Again, the hope, and this perhaps part of the expression by Egyptians opposed to Morsi’s Administration, may be that the military will prove more responsible than kleptocratic, which has been too often the case, more moderating in the political discourse than strident in its own right, and more capable than the Muslim Brotherhood of returning to Egyptians a true democracy working through an open conversation with the broadest possible participation.”

However, to get from here to there with a president out in front of a party devoted to the possession of power for the experience of it — only God knows how little it has done to further the interests and improve the lives of, at minimum, the millions of Egyptians who have come out on the streets in opposition to it — has meant risking civil war.

Now the question turns to the military’s own best foresight and planning with regard to getting in the way of the development of that kind of bloodshed.  If it is overwhelming in intelligence and force, it may well attenuate the polarization evident on the streets and forestall the kind of “brush fires” that would threaten to become a sullen low-intensity conflict; if it has miscalculated and the Muslim Brotherhood reaches for significant arms and war materiel and comes up with both, it could produce the kind of melting away of law and security experienced elsewhere in states hosting their portion of the Islamic Small Wars.

Quite unlike the Assad regime in Syria, which military in the hands of Maher al-Assad has been something worse than merely fascist in its devouring Syrian civilian assets and lives — the possessions of its own constituency — with a minimum of concern or discrimination between enemy combatants and those simply not involved with the politics, Egypt’s military appears both experienced and responsible.

* * *

Are you in Egypt? Send us your experiences, but please stay safe.

Cairo (CNN) — Egypt’s military deposed the country’s first democratically elected president Wednesday night, installing the head of the country’s highest court as an interim leader, the country’s top general announced.

Gen. Abdel-Fatah El-Sisi said the military was fulfilling its “historic responsibility” to protect the country by ousting Mohamed Morsy,

Sayah, Ben Wedeman and Matt Smith.  “Morsy ou in Egypt coup.”  CNN, July 3, 2013.

From the Second Row Seat to History

If you’re in Egypt and sharing the experience with CNN, let me know if they pay you.

🙂

Honestly, when I moved out of the Washington, D.C. area, I thought I’d be shooting weddings on the weekends and out dancing in the evening.  In my wildest dreams I’d have never imagined developing a global life online and then, here I / you / we are (if you’re reading close to the publishing date and time on this post) communicating about the same thing from every location at about the same time across the planet at the speed of light.

Gone is the poor sod sent to the telegraph office to get the latest communique from the revolution, run it up to an editor for write-up, down to a department for layout, and, later, on to the press for the run on to broadsheet — and the “crank” on the other side of the process who reads of that communique and goes to the writing desks with a pen, later a typewriter, to fire off a missive to the editor on the matter.

Ah, the good old days!

And some of them were mine.

What I can’t do, CNN knows, from the second row seat to history is control my own live link where something’s happening.

I’m on the outside, nose pressed to a transparent wall — invisible “shields up” would be the Star Trek perspective — looking in and looking on.

* * *

The president of the supreme constitutional court will act as interim head of state, assisted by an interim council and a technocratic government until new presidential and parliamentary elections are held.

“Those in the meeting have agreed on a roadmap for the future that includes initial steps to achieve the building of a strong Egyptian society that is cohesive and does not exclude anyone and ends the state of tension and division,” Sisi said in a solemn address broadcast live on state television.

Reuters.  “Egypt’s military leader suspends the constitution, appoints interim head of state.”  The Jerusalem Post, July 3, 2013.

Here’s a powerful headline from the Huffington Post (July 3, 2013): “Adly Mansour, Chief Justice of Egypt’s Supreme Constitutional Court, Named Interim President.”

Referencing Adly Mansour

Enein, Ahmed Aboul.  “SCC approves new chief justice appointment.”  Daily News Egypt, May 19, 2013.

Taylor, Adam.  “Here’s the New Acting President of Egypt.”  Business Insider, July 3, 2013.

According to sources (“Profile of Adly Mansour: Who is Egypt’s interim President?” the Independent, July 3, 2013), Adly was appointed to the Supreme Constitutional Court by Morsi and had taken up the position on June 1, 2013.

# # #

For Pakistan – A Note on Empiricism, Obscurantism, and Justice

02 Tuesday Jul 2013

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Journalism, Pakistan, Philosophy

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

commentary, empiricism, information, journalism, justice, Kainat Soomro, obscurantism, political, politics

If they are hiding the truth, it would seem both self–preservation and loyalty keeps the lock on closed mouths.

If they are hiding nothing, then their names in the world find themselves attached to a libel that cannot be disproved.

The miracle of contemporary justice is that by design it serves neither plaintiffs or accused but rather the greater public interest in knowing the truth of a matter.


To shift from complaining about bad deals, injustice being the rawest of them, to doing something about them, the parts of the world steeped in propaganda and rumor and subject to deep wells of missing information will have to wrestle with the development of systems dedicated to that most public form of knowing with something approaching certainty: empiricism.

Since 2007, Kainat Soomro’s story, that of a 13-year-old girl allegedly gang raped by four men in her village, Dadu, rural Sindh, in Pakistan, has been making the rounds of the civil to conservative press.  For complaining by way of alleging the crime, Kainat became the target of so far threatened “honor killing” while two of the men of the family, the father and a brother, refusing to abide barbaric custom (by killing her themselves) have been beaten and an older brother murdered.

In “Outlawed in Pakistan” the related documentary appearing on PBS, an older brother says, “They said, ‘You failed to follow your traditions.  You failed to kill your sister.  You should have followed our customs . . . .’   I got really angry.  But my dad said that we do not follow the gun culture.  We are educated people and we will get legal help.”

What would the law do when the process of the law has stopped at the precinct desk?

Police and prosecutors in more developed and stable systems — also far less squeamish and defensive– would have been quick to investigate the allegation of rape for proof the crime took place, a procedure so common and familiar that the field has established kits and methods (see “What is a Rape Kit?” posted by the Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network) ready as part of the police and investigative service response at the moment of complaint.

Pakistan’s tribal councils, to which such a complaint may revert, appear to have nothing similar of an empirical — also ethical and humane — investigative method: what they have are elders lost in their own heads.

Kainat and her family seek justice.  “We want them to get punished through the courts,” she says, “so what happened to me won’t happen to someone else’s daughter” (10:12 in the documentary).

The men involved have denied the crime took place.

If they are hiding the truth, it would seem both self–preservation and loyalty keeps the lock on closed mouths.

If they are hiding nothing, then their names in the world find themselves attached to a libel that cannot be disproved.

The miracle of contemporary justice is that by design it serves neither plaintiffs or accused but rather the greater public interest in knowing the truth of a matter.

* * *

At about 22 minutes into the documentary, one sees what happens in the absence of an empirical forensic process.

On Kainat’s complaint, the men have been arrested, held in jail without bond and an uncle and assorted fellows from the village have shown up angered and loud.

Madness!

Then comes to light a little more to the story: a marriage contract, pictures of the couple.

Kainat’s claim: made and recorded under duress when she was thirteen years old.

“If I wanted to marry, I would have told my dad,” she says.

* * *

Let’s go back over this experience I’m having from my “second row seat to history”.

Forensics in a Developing State

While Kainat may be taken at her word, and one wants to do that, neither the word of the complainant nor that of alleged perpetrators mean much absent of observed physical evidence — photographs of bruises, blood chemistry analysis (if the complainant was drugged as claimed), semen scrapes and  DNA comparisons, even circumstantial evidence of struggle — where are Kainat’s shoes?  What happened to her scarf?

It turns out some medical examination took place, enough to confirm intercourse, but examiners and police dropped the ball for lack of interest in the claim and, with reference to DNA matching, lack of resources.

Both the PBS documentary and greater public interest in the case tell us something not said: everyone involved — claimant, defenders, lawyers, villagers, courts, and police — know the forensic issues, and would that I had known that before starting this post.

Social Practices, Morals, and Values

This is where the partisans, either side, power up for confrontation, and first and foremost by keeping stories of outrageous miscarriages of justice before the eyes of the peers.  Let’s go with the accusers on this one, but with a question not likely asked in Pakistan: even if Kainat agreed to be married or played along genuinely lustful, being of age for that, as “wedding pictures” suggest, what is any adult involved, especially the cleric — I don’t want to call to him through the search engines, but his name appears at 32:36 –who facilitated the marriage, doing abetting that contract without the consent and presence of a parent!?

The cleric says he was not aware of her age, “And she looked 18.”

The age of independence sufficient to enter into marriage in Pakistan is 16 under secular law.  Under sharia, the earlier passage into puberty suffices, and the sharia trumps secular law.

Conservative Propaganda

That a 13-year-old child may be injudicious or manipulated in such a way as to alter the character of her life for a lifetime — and in this instance alter her family’s way of life as well — seems to me the most opprobrious aspect of Kainat’s case.

However, close by that may be the kafir conservative’s ambitions to conveniently ridicule Islam and its medieval vision supported by myriad subcultures rather than dig down into each separable core transformative issue and lay it out.

Here, from the western perspective, Kainat’s ordeal involves simply the vigorous and timely investigation of claims involving criminal behavior and, unbelievably, the recognition of childhood and adolescence and the development of laws appropriate and protective of the interests of each and of the surrounding community.

Indeed, the sharia, essentially 7th Century law, has failed, both by tainting Kainat (until she finds herself in the larger world where what’s past is past — and please, dear, get on with living) and detaining the defendants in jail for four years without decision.

Probably, in the political environments of the kafir, the case would have been dismissed for lack of evidence on the first day but the entire matter brought to the legislature with legislators forced to think (for once) with modern comprehension and conscience about what their laws were doing to their young.

* * *

What may and should come to pass,  this through the will of Pakistan’s educated — and one may hope for the application of the will of similar others in other places — is the development of greater and more timely forensic capability and responsibility throughout police and court operations.

Add to that an open discussion about the utility and wisdom of sharia law where it involves relations between young but older men and 13-year-old girls.

Reference

Frontline.  “Outlawed in Pakistan.”  Video (53:39).  PBS.

News Desk.  “Outlawed in Pakistan — Kainat Soomro’s story on film.”  The Express Tribune, February 7, 2013.

Oppenheim, James.  ”When the Second Row Seat to History Ain’t So Hot.”  BackChannels, June 5, 2013.

“Outlawed in Pakistan (Video).”  Huffington Post, May 29, 2013.

Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network.  “What Is A Rape Kit?”

War Against Rape – Pakistan NGO

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Epigram

Hillel the Elder

"That which is distasteful to thee do not do to another. That is the whole of Torah. The rest is commentary. Now go and study."

"If I am not for myself, who will be for me? If I am not for others, what am I? If not now, when?"

"Whosoever destroys a soul, it is considered as if he destroyed an entire world. And whosoever that saves a life, it is considered as if he saved an entire world."

Oriana Fallaci
"Whether it comes from a despotic sovereign or an elected president, from a murderous general or a beloved leader, I see power as an inhuman and hateful phenomenon...I have always looked on disobedience toward the oppressive as the only way to use the miracle of having been born."

Talmud 7:16 as Quoted by Rishon Rishon in 2004
Qohelet Raba, 7:16

אכזרי סוף שנעשה אכזרי במקום רחמן

Kol mi shena`asa rahaman bimqom akhzari Sof shena`asa akhzari bimqom rahaman

All who are made to be compassionate in the place of the cruel In the end are made to be cruel in the place of the compassionate.

More colloquially translated: "Those who are kind to the cruel, in the end will be cruel to the kind."

Online Source: http://www.rishon-rishon.com/archives/044412.php

Abraham Isaac Kook

"The purely righteous do not complain about evil, rather they add justice.They do not complain about heresy, rather they add faith.They do not complain about ignorance, rather they add wisdom." From the pages of Arpilei Tohar.

Heinrich Heine
"Where books are burned, in the end people will be burned." -- From Almansor: A Tragedy (1823).

Simon Wiesenthal
Remark Made in the Ballroom of the Imperial Hotel, Vienna, Austria on the occasion of His 90th Birthday: "The Nazis are no more, but we are still here, singing and dancing."

Maimonides
"Truth does not become more true if the whole world were to accept it; nor does it become less true if the whole world were to reject it."

"The risk of a wrong decision is preferable to the terror of indecision."

Douglas Adams
"Isn't it enough to see that a garden is beautiful without having to believe that there are fairies at the bottom of it too?" Epigram appearing in the dedication of Richard Dawkins' The GOD Delusion.

Thucydides
"The Nation that makes a great distinction between its scholars and its warriors will have its thinking done by cowards and its fighting done by fools."

Milan Kundera
"The struggle of man against power is the struggle of memory against forgetting."

Malala Yousafzai
“The terrorists thought that they would change our aims and stop our ambitions but nothing changed in my life except this: weakness, fear and hopelessness died. Strength, power and courage was born.”

Tanit Nima Tinat
"Who could die of love?"

What I Have Said About the Jews

My people, not that I speak for them, I nonetheless describe as a "global ethnic commune with its heart in Jerusalem and soul in the Land of Israel."

We have never given up on God, nor have we ever given up on one another.

Many things we have given up, but no one misses, say, animal sacrifice, and as many things we have kept, so we have still to welcome our Sabbath on Friday at sunset and to rest all of Saturday until three stars appear in the sky.

Most of all, through 5,773 years, wherever life has taken us, through the greatest triumphs and the most awful tragedies, we have preserved our tribal identity and soul, and so shall we continue eternally.

Anti-Semitism / Anti-Zionism = Signal of Fascism

I may suggest that anti-Zionism / anti-Semitism are signal (a little bit) of fascist urges, and the Left -- I'm an old liberal: I know my heart -- has been vulnerable to manipulation by what appears to me as a "Red Brown Green Alliance" driven by a handful of powerful autocrats intent on sustaining a medieval worldview in service to their own glorification. (And there I will stop).
One hopes for knowledge to allay fear; one hopes for love to overmatch hate.

Too often, the security found in the parroting of a loyal lie outweighs the integrity to be earned in confronting and voicing an uncomfortable truth.

Those who make their followers believe absurdities may also make them commit atrocities.

Positively Orwellian: Comment Responding to Claim that the Arab Assault on Israel in 1948 Had Not Intended Annihilation

“Revisionism” is the most contemptible path that power takes to abet theft and hide shame by attempting to alter public perception of past events.

On Press Freedom, Commentary, and Journalism

In the free world, talent -- editors, graphic artists, researchers, writers -- gravitate toward the organizations that suit their interests and values. The result: high integrity and highly reliable reportage and both responsible and thoughtful reasoning.

This is not to suggest that partisan presses don't exist or that propaganda doesn't exist in the west, but any reader possessed of critical thinking ability and genuine independence -- not bought, not programmed -- is certainly free to evaluate the works of earnest reporters and scholars.

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