Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Winnipeg Free Press - ONLINE EDITION

Manning dealt revenge, not justice

NEW HAVEN, Conn. - Must the government take every possible ounce of flesh from Pfc. Bradley Manning in punishing him for his massive data dump to WikiLeaks? The woeful answer is yes.
Thursday, the military judge in Manning’s trial decided not to drop the most serious — and least supportable — charge against him, "aiding the enemy." The government shouldn’t have brought this charge in the first place. Whatever you think of Manning, it sets a terrible precedent for whistle-blowers. And the only gain is the possibility of a life sentence for a 25-year-old who has already pled guilty to charges that could put him in prison for 20 years. This is about revenge, not justice.
Manning’s leak was, of course, legion. In 2009, he gave WikiLeaks reams of diplomatic cables, logs from the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, files from Guantanamo, intelligence memos, and the video of an Apache helicopter attack in Iraq that showed the "collateral" death of a Reuters photographer and his driver. Manning has admitted to the leaks, and he pled guilty to 10 of the counts against him. But he says he’s not guilty of aiding the enemy because he didn’t intend the publication of the leaked material to help terrorist groups like al-Qaida.
Here’s what the law says: The charge applies to "any person who aids, or attempts to aid, the enemy with arms, ammunition, supplies, money, or other things; or without proper authority, knowingly harbours or protects or gives intelligence to, or communicates or corresponds with or holds any intercourse with the enemy, either directly or indirectly."
The language is broad — the judge didn’t make this up out of whole cloth. But in other cases, courts have required a defendant to specifically intend to help the enemy. The charge has been reserved for traitors who whisper in the ears of U.S. foes. As Yochai Benkler, one of the defence experts at Manning’s trial, wrote in March in the New Republic, the charge of aiding the enemy was previously used "in hard-core cases where somebody handed over information about troop movements directly to someone the collaborator believed to be ‘the enemy,’ to American POWs collaborating with North Korean captors, or to a German-American citizen who was part of a German sabotage team during the Second World War."
None of this fits with the facts surrounding Bradley Manning. For the government and the military, his leaks were destructive and crazy-making. But he says he did it to spark public debate. He had increasing doubts about the war, and he wanted to expose American wrongdoing so the public would know what was happening. "I felt that we were risking so much for people that seemed unwilling to cooperate with us, leading to frustration and anger on both sides. I began to become depressed with the situation that we found ourselves increasingly mired in year after year," Manning said in court earlier this year. "I also believed the detailed analysis of the data over a long period of time by different sectors of society might cause society to re-evaluate the need or even the desire to even to engage in counterterrorism and counterinsurgency operations that ignore the complex dynamics of the people living in the affected environment everyday."
To justify Thursday’s ruling, prosecutors argued that "the evidence will show that the accused knowingly gave intelligence to the enemy." The proof was that some of the documents, once online, reached Osama bin Laden and were found on his computer. In other words, by giving the information to WikiLeaks, Manning was giving it to the terrorists. This is a shockingly broad interpretation of a law that was written too sweepingly. It implicates all kinds of people who publish things that could hurt U.S. interests by tarnishing our image abroad.
Journalists do this routinely; So do plenty of people on social media. It’s called free speech.
Most of the critics have no access to the kinds of damaging goods that Manning had. But now when they do, they will have to fear that publishing it is the legal equivalent of deliberately handing it to terrorists. As Benkler points out, it doesn’t matter if the publishing platform is WikiLeaks or The New York Times or Twitter. And this theory of aiding the enemy "is unprecedented in modern American history." You have to go back to the Civil War, and a case in which a Union officer gave a newspaper in Virginia rosters of Union soldiers, to find a case like Manning’s.
If Manning spends the rest of his life in prison for an act of defiance in his early 20s, this will follow upon conditions of pretrial detention that, in a major understatement, the judge found to be "excessive." Manley was held in solitary confinement for 23 hours a day during his nine months in a military brig. He had to sleep naked, without sheets or pillows. He had no way to exercise. Supposedly, this was because he was a suicide risk, but it looks much more like another form of revenge.
At this point, not even Manning is arguing that he should go free. His case isn’t about guilt or innocence. It’s about proportionality. The government and the court are in danger of crossing the line into a dark place. There is enough room to punish Bradley Manning without going there, and more than enough reason to stay away.

Emily Bazelon is a Slate senior editor and writes about law, family, and kids. Her new book is Sticks and Stones: Defeating the Culture of Bullying and Rediscovering the Power of Empathy and Character.

—Slate

5 reasons to attend Army whistleblower Bradley Manning’s trial


*Please note that this next week court is not in session on Monday (6/24), Tuesday will be a short day, and the trial will resume as normal Wednesday (6/26) at 9:30am, with our weekly vigil taking place from 7-8am that day.

#1: Show the judge the public is watching her

At the beginning of each day of trial, the prosecuting attorney stands and reads to the court information about the levels of public attendance. During most days of the court martial, seats have remained free in the courtroom, and the overflow trailer which provides video feed of the proceedings has remained unused. We hope you’ll help us to change this.
Judge Lind knows that a high-profile case like this one will be part of her legacy. She’s not supposed to read any news about the trial, but there’s no more direct way to show her the importance that her decisions will have for the public than by members of the public taking it upon themselves to fill up her courtroom.

#2: Your attendance means a lot to Bradley and his lawyer

Bradley Manning is a 25 year-old with a conscience who has already spent three years of his life behind bars, and faces potential life imprisonment, all for trying to serve the public good. Despite the gravity of his situation, he maintains optimism, and his attorney David Coombs has explained that his supporters have a lot to do with that.
Mr. Coombs took the opportunity at a public presentation last December to personally thank those who attend the court proceedings and explain how much it means to him:
When I’m in the courtroom, I stand up and I look to my right and I see the United States government, the United States government with all of its resources, all of its personnel. I see them standing against me and Brad, and I have to admit to you that can be rather intimidating and I was intimidated, especially when the President of the United States says, “Your client broke the law.” Especially, when Congress members say, “Your client deserves the death penalty.” I want to tell you, though, today as I stand here, I’m no longer intimidated. I am not intimidated because when I stand up, I know I’m not standing alone. I know I’m not alone because I turn around and I see the support behind me. I see members here today in the audience that are there every time we have a court hearing. I see, what now I’m going to affectionately call the “truth battalion,” those who wear… a black shirt, it has the word “truth” on it and they’re behind me. I look there and I know that I also have unlimited personnel and unlimited resources.

#3: Observe history in action

What happens during Bradley’s trial will affect the future of American journalism and whistleblowing, as well as our fundamental right to know what our government does in our name and with our tax dollars. The legal theory being used by the government to charge Bradley with “Aiding the Enemy” would apply to others who reveal government wrongdoing whether they release 1 document or 1,000, and whether they give information to WikiLeaks or the New York Times. Nobel Peace Laureates, the L.A. Times editorial board, Harvard Law professors, a former State Department Spokesperson and Pentagon Papers whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg all have condemned this charge.
BUT, this trial will not be televised, so attending as a public observer is the only way to see firsthand the precedent that is being set for future generations, and to watch the important players in action.
Decades from now, people will still be discussing this trial. Wouldn’t you like to be able to tell your children and grandchildren that you were there when it mattered?

#4: Communicate to the media this is an issue worth covering

There may always be something new taking over the airwaves, but major U.S. newspapers still send their reporters to cover Bradley’s trial every day it’s in session. While sitting in the media center, reporters can see whether or not public is in attendance in the Ft. Meade courtroom. They often come to conduct interviews with supporters during court recess.
Since attendance at the court martial is one of the most obvious gauges of public interest in the trial that these reporters get to see, the more people who attend the proceedings, the more these papers’ editors will view this as an issue worthy of their front page.

#5: Meet other activists

Interesting people attend the trial from all over the country, and sometimes even the world. There are anti-war veterans from Maryland, lawyers from DC, artists from New York, school teachers from Michigan, and writers from California. And one thing they all have in common is an understanding of the importance this trial carries for one brave young man’s life, as well as our ability as citizens promote transparency in government, and to stop unjust war and human rights violations worldwide.
More importantly, they all know it’s up to us to address these issues and take action to make our world a better place. As we say in our solidarity campaign, “we are all Bradley Manning.”
So come to the trial, earn a truth t-shirt, show Bradley and Judge Lind your support in-person, and meet interesting people you’ll be glad to know well into the future. See directions to the courtroom below.

Getting to Ft. Meade to attend the trial

Any member of the public with government-issued ID is welcome to attend.
Check the Upcoming Events section on www.bradleymanning.org for updates to the trial schedule.
Driving to the Front Gate at Maryland 175 and Reece Rd is the easiest way to access the base (get directions via Google maps). If driving, make sure you have up-to-date vehicle registration and driver’s license. The courtroom is at 4432 Llewellyn Avenue, Fort Meade, MD. (After entering through Main Gate security, go down Reece Rd until you get to Cooper Rd, and then turn left. The courtroom parking lot is at the end of Cooper Rd, where it intersects with Llewellyn Ave.) There is usually parking available near the courtroom. There are no electronic devices allowed through the security check to enter the courtroom–you must leave your mobile phone in your vehicle (or someone’s vehicle). If you wish to attend the morning court session, we recommend arriving on base at 8:30am in order to clear security before court starts at 9:30am. If arriving later you will still be able to enter during a court recess.
Don’t have access to a car? Someone from BMSN or a carpool driver can pick you up from Odenton MARC station if you arrive there by 8:30am. E-mail mckee@bradleymanning.org by 6pm the day before to guarantee a pickup.
If arriving later without a car, the Odenton MARC station is three miles from the entrance to Ft. Meade and is a walk-able or bike-able road if you so desire. You can also call a Maryland cab to pick you up and take you onto the base.
The first day that court is in session each week, we have a vigil from 7-8am in front of the Main Gate at 175 Maryland and Reece Rd. E-mail emma@bradleymanning.org for vigil updates.
Thank you for supporting Bradley!
Bradley Manning Wins Peace Prize
By David Swanson. This article was first published on War is a Crime.
U.S. whistleblower and international hero Bradley Manning has just been awarded the 2013 Sean MacBride Peace Award by the International Peace Bureau, itself a former recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize, for which Manning is a nominee this year.
A petition supporting Manning for the Nobel Peace Prize has gathered 88,000 signatures, many of them with comments, and is aiming for 100,000 before delivering it to the Norwegian Nobel Committee in Oslo. Anyone can sign and add their comments at ManningNobel.org
The International Peace Bureau (IPB) represents 320 organizations in 70 countries. It was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1910. Over the years, 13 of IPB's officers have been Nobel Peace laureates. See ipb.org
The Sean MacBride prize has been awarded each year since 1992 by the International Peace Bureau, founded in 1892. Previous winners include: Lina Ben Mhenni (Tunisian blogger) and Nawal El-Sadaawi (Egyptian author) - 2012, Jackie Cabasso (USA, 2008), Jayantha Dhanapala (Sri Lanka, 2007) and the Mayors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki (2006). It is named after Sean MacBride, a distinguished Irish statesman who shared the 1974 Nobel Peace Prize, and is given to individuals or organisations for their outstanding work for peace, disarmament and human rights.
The medal is made of "peace bronze," a material created out of disarmed and recycled nuclear weapons systems, by fromwartopeace.com The prize will be formally awarded on Sept. 14 in Stockholm, at a special evening on whistleblowing, which forms part of the triennial gathering of the International Peace Bureau. See brochure at: PDF.
IPB's Co-President Tomas Magnusson said, “IPB believes that among the very highest moral duties of a citizen is to make known war crimes and crimes against humanity. This is within the broad meaning of the Nuremberg Principles enunciated at the end of the Second World War. When Manning revealed to the world the crimes being committed by the U.S. military he did so as an act of obedience to this high moral duty. It is for this reason too that Manning has also been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. In more general terms it is well known that war operations, and especially illegal ones, are frequently conducted under the cover of secrecy. To penetrate this wall of secrecy by revealing information that should be accessible to all is an important contribution to the struggle against war, and acts as a challenge to the military system which dominates both the economy and society in today’s world. IPB believes that whistleblowers are vital in upholding democracies - especially in the area of defense and security. A heavy sentence for Manning would not only be unjust but would also have very negative effects on the right to freedom of expression which the U.S. claims to uphold."
Nobel Peace Laureate Mairead Maguire recently wrote: "I have chosen to nominate U.S. Army Pfc Bradley Manning, for I can think of no one more deserving. His incredible disclosure of secret documents to Wikileaks helped end the Iraq War, and may have helped prevent further conflicts elsewhere."

Maguire explains how far-reaching Manning's impact has been: "While there is a legitimate and long-overdue movement for peace and non-violent reform in Syria, the worst acts of violence are being perpetrated by outside groups. Extremist groups from around the world have converged upon Syria, bent on turning this conflict into one of ideological hatred. In recent years this would have spelled an undeniable formula for United States intervention. However, the world has changed in the years since Manning's whistleblowing -- the Middle East especially. In Bahrain, Tunisia, Egypt, and now Turkey, advocates of democracy have joined together to fight against their own governments' control of information, and used the free-flowing data of social media to help build enormously successful non-violent movements. Some activists of what has come to be known as the Arab Spring have even directly credited Bradley Manning, and the information he disclosed, as an inspiration for their struggles.

". . . If not for whistleblower Bradley Manning, the world still might not know of how U.S. forces committed covert crimes in the name of spreading democracy in Iraq . . . Now, those who would support foreign intervention in the Middle East know that every action would be scrutinized under international human rights law. Clearly, this is for the best. International peacekeepers, as well as experts and civilians inside Syria, are nearly unanimous in their view that United States involvement would only worsen this conflict."


Won't you add your name to the petition now?

Mairead Maguire adds: "Around the world, Manning is hailed as a peacemaker and a hero. His nomination for the Nobel Peace Prize is a reflection of this. Yet at his home in America, Manning stands trial for charges of espionage and 'aiding the enemy'. This should not be considered a refutation of his candidacy -- rather, he is in good company. Burmese politician Aung San Suu Kyi and Chinese writer Liu Xiaobo were each awarded the prize in recent years while imprisoned by their home countries."

U.S. military drone surveillance is expanding to hot spots beyond declared combat zones

By Craig Whitlock, Published: July 20

The steel-gray U.S. Air Force Predator drone plunged from the sky, shattering on mountainous terrain near the Iraq-Turkey border. For Kurdish guerrillas hiding nearby, it was an unexpected gift from the propaganda gods.
Fighters from the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK, filmed the charred wreckage on Sept. 18 and posted a video on YouTube. A narrator bragged unconvincingly that the group had shot down the drone. But for anyone who might doubt that the flying robot was really American, the video zoomed in on mangled parts stamped in English and bearing the label of the manufacturer, San Diego-based General Atomics.
For a brief moment, the crash drew back the curtain on Operation Nomad Shadow, a secretive U.S. military surveillance program. Since November 2011, the U.S. Air Force has been flying unarmed drones from Incirlik Air Base in Turkey in an attempt to suppress a long-simmering regional conflict. The camera-equipped Predators hover above the rugged border with Iraq and beam high-resolution imagery to the Turkish armed forces, helping them pursue PKK rebels as they slip back and forth across the mountains.
As the Obama administration dials back the number of drone attacks in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Yemen, the U.S. military is shifting its huge fleet of unmanned aircraft to other hot spots around the world. This next phase of drone warfare is focused more on spying than killing and will extend the Pentagon’s robust surveillance networks far beyond traditional, declared combat zones.
Over the past decade, the Pentagon has amassed more than 400 Predators, Reapers, Hunters, Gray Eagles and other high-altitude drones that have revolutionized counterterrorism operations. Some of the unmanned aircraft will return home with U.S. troops when they leave Afghanistan. But many of the drones will redeploy to fresh frontiers, where they will spy on a melange of armed groups, drug runners, pirates and other targets that worry U.S. officials.
Elsewhere in the Middle East, the U.S. Air Force has drone hubs in Qatar and the United Arab Emirates to conduct reconnaissance over the Persian Gulf. Twice since November, Iran has scrambled fighter jets to approach or fire on U.S. Predator drones that edged close to Iranian airspace.
In Africa, the U.S. Air Force began flying unarmed drones over the Sahara five months ago to track al-Qaeda fighters and rebels in northern Mali. The Pentagon has also set up drone bases in Ethiopia, Djibouti and Seychelles. Even so, the commander of U.S. forces in Africa told Congress in February that he needed a 15-fold increase in surveillance, reconnaissance and intelligence-gathering on the continent.
In an April speech, Deputy Defense Secretary Ashton B. Carter said the Pentagon is planning for the first time to send Reaper drones — a bigger, faster version of the Predator — to parts of Asia other than Afghanistan. He did not give details. A Defense Department spokeswoman said the military “hasn’t made any final decisions yet” but is “committed to increasing” its surveillance in Asia and the Pacific.
In South and Central America, U.S. military commanders have long pined for drones to aid counternarcotics operations. “Surveillance drones could really help us out and really take the heat and wear and tear off of some of our manned aviation assets,” Marine Gen. John F. Kelly, chief of the U.S. Southern Command, said in March.
One possible destination for more U.S. drones is Colombia. Last year, Colombian armed forces killed 32 “high-value narco-terrorists” after the U.S. military helped pinpoint the targets’ whereabouts with manned surveillance aircraft and other equipment, according to Jose A. Ruiz, a Southern Command spokesman.
The U.S. military has occasionally operated small drones — four-foot-long ScanEagles, which are launched by a catapult — in Colombia. But with larger drones such as Predators and Reapers, U.S. forces could greatly expand the range and duration of their airborne searches for drug smugglers.
An invitation from Turkey
In the fall of 2011, four disassembled Predator drones arrived in crates at Incirlik Air Base in southern Anatolia, a joint U.S.-Turkish military installation.
The drones came from Iraq, where for the previous four years they had been devoted to surveilling that country’s northern mountains. Along with manned U.S. aircraft, the Predators tracked the movements of PKK fighters, sharing video feeds and other intelligence with the Turkish armed forces.
The Kurdish group has long fought to create an autonomous enclave in Turkey, launching cross-border attacks from its hideouts in northern Iraq. Turkey has responded with airstrikes and artillery attacks but has also sent ground troops into Iraq, further destabilizing an already volatile area. The Turkish and U.S. governments both classify the PKK as a terrorist group.
Turkey’s leaders had feared that U.S. cooperation against the PKK would wither after the Americans left Iraq. So they invited them to re-base the drones on Turkish soil and continue the spying mission from there.
Neither side has been eager to publicize the arrangement. The Obama administration has imposed a broad cone of silence on its drone programs worldwide. Pentagon officials declined interview requests about Operation Nomad Shadow.
The Turkish government has acknowledged the presence of Predators on its territory, but the robotic planes are a sensitive subject. A global survey released Thursday by the Pew Research Center found that 82 percent of Turks disapprove of the Obama administration’s international campaign of drone attacks against extremists.
Officials with the Turkish Embassy in Washington declined to comment for this report.
Pilots 6,000 miles away
The drones occupy a relatively tiny corner of the sprawling base at Incirlik, according to interviews with other officials and public documents that shed light on Nomad Shadow.
The operation is staffed by about three dozen personnel from the U.S. Air Force’s 414th Expeditionary Reconnaissance Squadron and private contractor Battlespace Flight Services.
The drones, which began flying in November 2011, are sheltered in an unobtrusive hangar converted from an abandoned “hush house,” a jet-engine testing facility outfitted with noise suppression equipment.
“It was tight, but we could fit four aircraft inside the hangar and close the doors,” said a former Air Force official involved in Nomad Shadow who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the operation.
For most of their time aloft, the remote-control Predators are flown via satellite link by pilots and sensor operators stationed about 6,000 miles away, at Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri.
While in Turkish airspace, the drones cannot spy and must turn off their high-tech cameras and sensors, according to rules set by the Turkish government. It takes the sluggish Predators, with a maximum air speed of 135 mph, about five hours to reach the Iraqi border.
The Iraqi government permits the overflights. Once in Iraq, the Predators usually fly a rectangular route known as “the box” for up to 12 hours each mission as they beam video and other intelligence to Missouri.
U.S. analysts view and evaluate the footage before transmitting it to a joint U.S.-Turkish intelligence “fusion cell” in Ankara, the capital. There’s usually a built-in delay of at least 15 to 20 minutes. That would give a drone enough time to leave the vicinity if Turkish authorities decided to launch artillery rounds or airstrikes against detected PKK targets, the former Air Force official said.
From the outset, some U.S. officials have worried about the potential for botched incidents.
In December 2011, Turkish jets bombed a caravan of suspected PKK fighters crossing from Iraq into Turkey, killing 34 people. The victims were smugglers, however, not terrorists — a blunder that ignited protests across Turkey.
The Wall Street Journal reported last year that American drone operators had alerted the Turkish military after a Predator spotted the suspicious caravan. Rather than ask for a closer look, Turkish officials waved off the drone and launched the attack soon after, the paper said. Turkey’s leaders denied the report, saying they decided to attack based on their own intelligence.
The incident exacerbated simmering frustrations among officials in Ankara and Washington.
The Turkish government has long pressed the Obama administration to devote more flight hours to the operation and to sell Turkey a fleet of armed Reaper drones. But U.S. officials and lawmakers have resisted both requests.
The Pentagon has expressed concern that the Turkish military wants the fruits of the drone surveillance but has been unwilling to consult with Americans on the best ways to exploit it. “There have been a lot of U.S. attempts to help the Turks get better at fusing the intelligence with an operation,” said a former U.S. defense official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to give a candid assessment.
At the same time, the former U.S. official called Nomad Shadow an overall success. The constant stream of surveillance footage has prevented PKK attacks, he said, and has enabled the Turkish military to carry out more-limited, precise counterterrorism operations instead of sending large numbers of troops into northern Iraq.
“It’s been extremely effective in preventing cross-border operations by the Turks,” the former official said.
Clues in the crash report
On Sept. 17, 2012, Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, visited Ankara to see Gen. Necdet Özel, chief of the general staff of the Turkish armed forces.
As other Turkish officials had done in previous talks, Özel pressed Dempsey for more help against the PKK, including more drone flights, according to Turkish media accounts of the meeting.
The next day, in a fit of unlucky timing, a Predator on a routine patrol experienced a sudden and complete loss of power. Drone operators at Whiteman Air Force Base could not communicate with or control the aircraft.
The drone nose-dived, dropping 11,000 feet in about four minutes before crashing into an uninhabited region, according to a U.S. Air Force accident investigation report obtained by The Washington Post under the Freedom of Information Act.
Before releasing the report, the Air Force redacted all geographic references to the location of the crash or where the drone was based. But parts of the report contain clues that make clear that the drone was on a Nomad Shadow mission in northern Iraq.
Transcripts of interviews with the drone’s ground crew mention that they were deployed to Incirlik with the 414th Expeditionary Reconnaissance Squadron. Another document identified the lost aircraft as NOMAD 01.
But the strongest evidence can be found in an appendix to the report with photographs of the accident site.
The images are outtakes from the propaganda video that the PKK posted on YouTube the day after the crash. The photos show several damaged Predator pieces. U.S. military censors carefully blocked out the faces of guerrillas posing with the wreckage.


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2013 Sean Macbride Peace Prize awarded to Bradley Manning.
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Bradley Manning Support Network

MacBride Peace Prize awarded to Bradley Manning

The International Peace Bureau, a former Nobel Peace Prize recipient, is delighted to announce that this year’s Sean MacBride Peace Prize is to be awarded to Bradley Manning, the US whistleblower whose case has attracted worldwide attention, for his courageous actions in revealing information about US war crimes.
By the International Peace Bureau,
19 July 2013 Geneva
The International Peace Bureau is delighted to announce that this year’s Sean MacBride Peace Prize is to be awarded to Bradley Manning, the US whistleblower whose case has attracted worldwide attention, for his courageous actions in revealing information about US war crimes. His trial is likely to be concluded in the coming days...
IPB’s Co-President Tomas Magnusson comments:
IPB believes that among the very highest moral duties of a citizen is to make known war crimes and crimes against humanity. This is within the broad meaning of the Nuremberg Principles enunciated at the end of the Second World War. When Manning revealed to the world the crimes being committed by the US military he did so as an act of obedience to this high moral duty.

It is for this reason too that Manning has also been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. In more general terms it is well known that war operations, and especially illegal ones, are frequently conducted under the cover of secrecy. To penetrate this wall of secrecy by revealing information that should be accessible to all is an important contribution to the struggle against war, and acts as a challenge to the military system which dominates both the economy and society in today’s world. IPB believes that whistleblowers are vital in upholding democracies – especially in the area of defense and security. A heavy sentence for Manning would not only be unjust but would also have very negative effects on the right to freedom of expression which the US claims to uphold.

Daniel Ellsberg recognizes heroic actions of Bradley Manning in new video


Vote for the SF Pride Bradley Manning Contingent!

Yes, Bradley Manning supporters were the "most absolutely fabulous" contingent at SF Pride. Watch a video of the march!
Bradley Manning supporters made up the largest non-corporate sponsored group, consisting of well over a thousand people, including Daniel Ellsberg featured in the video above!
Voting is open until July 31st!

Only few hours left to add your name to the NY Times ad!

Add your name alongside Alice Walker, Daniel Ellsberg, Russell Brand, Noam Chomsky, Joan Baez, Tom Morello, Shepard Fairey and Graham Nash, in our full page ad in the New York Times! We’ve reached our $52k goal to publish the “We are Bradley Manning” ad this week, so all remaining donations (Until the July 23rd, 3pm EST deadline) will support Bradley’s defense fund.

Monday, July 22, 2013


The Toothpick Kid

 


From The Pen Of Frank Jackman

They still talked about the Toothpick Kid in all the hobo camps, the railroad jungles and skid row flophouses and soup lines of the West, long years after he passed away, long after his exploits had entered in entered into hobo, tramp, bum legend. By the way nobody ever called him by his real name, or maybe even knew his real name, but only his tramp moniker derived from his addiction to chewing toothpicks, a habit he picked up when he faced really hard times to stave off hungry, whisky thirst, or cigarette craving and so it stuck. Stuck like lots of half-thought out monikers from childhood on, like lots of guys want so that they can hide, hide from their past, their kin, their own horrors.  
Later, after the Kid ran the rack, after his number came up, someone, Benson Billy maybe, found out that his real name was George Nelson a son of a small trading post owner out in the high California desert near Barstow but in respect every skid row, railroad jungle, and camp denizen stayed with the Toothpick Kid when they mentioned his name. It was like such a straight arrow name could not fit in the Boston Blackie ,Benson Billy, Blue River Benny, Be-BopKid world and that was that . And maybe they were right to whisper among themselves his road name if only to make themselves feel better that one of their own tweaked the noses of the cops, the railroad bulls, and the respectable citizenry of the towns out there in the high desert, places like Yucca Falls, Cheyenne Flats, Victorville and Barstow.

The hoboes, bums, and tramps of the world mainly sit around their camps, warmed by the fire, and their flops, warmed by rotgut whiskey ( paying more than a dollar for a pint was some kind of sacrilege and thus no Johnny Walker blend ed, or such high shelf stuff passed through the camp. More likely Willie’s Premium mixed from all the highway and parks found bottles into a suitable elixir).  Sterno if times were tough, and speaking of all the heroic exploits  they were capable of. Talk, all talk when it came right down to it since the only heroic things most of them were capable of was to con some respectable out of a few bucks on a hard luck story, maybe do a little back alley jack-rolling, or some other two bit cheapjack scam. The Kid put them all to shame, the Kid went for the big score, the one all the other guys just talked about in the light of some moonless night’s campfire. Yes, for a while, a short while as far as human existence goes, the Toothpick Kid had them all on their toes.     

See the Toothpick Kid went for the big score, the big score that every guy in the skid row community dreamed of, dreamed that he was capable of, capable of doing more than dream about. He took out the Southern Pacific-delivered   payroll for the Delmo Company that was supposed to be taken to Hightower out near Needles on a late Friday afternoon by one of its agents. The Toothpick Kid got wind of that fact, the fact that this payroll was delivered weekly on late Friday afternoons and make his plans accordingly. The routine was that Bill Hayes, the railroad agent, would deliver the dough, roughly $50,000, to the guardhouse at the entrance to the Delmo works and the guard, usually only a single guard, would take it from there to the paymaster’s office a couple of miles up the road.

Simple routine, no heavy security, a piece of cake thought the Toothpick Kid. All he saw was easy street ahead, and maybe he was right and maybe he was wrong on that score, but he saw his chance, saw that his young life was going nowhere without some big score to tide him over, saw he was going to wind up some old time geezer bindle stiff buried in some potter’s field graveyard if he didn’t make his move and he was ready to stake his life on success. Life on the road, the hard camps road was, in short, nasty and brutish unlike the romance of the road stuff you read in books by guys who were on the road for a week or two, got their fill of romance and headed back just as quickly as possible to their Mayfair swell digs. So he leaped into his future and let he deal go down.       

The robbery itself actually was a piece of cake. Simplicity itself. First the Kid  came upon the guard standing alone in his guardhouse to ask the way to Hightower and as the guard was prepared to tell him the directions he quickly beat him over the head, beat him to a pulp, with a pipe he had acquired along the way. A few minutes later, after removing the guard’s body to his small office, taking his clothes off and then putting them on, Bill Hayes came up in his Southern Pacific company car. Before Bill could even ask where Hank the regular guard was the Kid shot him point-blank with Hank’s gun. The Kid pulled Bill out of the car, placed him alongside Hank in the guardhouse office, and went back to Bill’s car and checked to see that the payroll satchel was there. It was, and he was gone. Beautiful, and many a lonely hobo jungle camp night, many a tramp roadside hungry day, and many a skid row rotgut whisky barroom turned electric to the thrill of some guy telling the details of the Kid’s saga. Jesus, fifty grand, and like taking candy from a baby.          

Of course what the Kid didn’t count on, or maybe even figured on in his figuring was the Southern Pacific blowback. The hard fact of life that even in the square’s world a couple of murders and a major robbery when the railroads were going down in that time required some attention. To speak nothing of the Delmo Company’s position that something, something big and right now had to be done about the thing. As so the railroad, the company, Sagamore county, and the state police went at the case tooth and nail. Offered rewards, ran roughshot over the camps, jungles, and skid row flops from the Mexican border to Eureka up in Redwood country, and plastered the particulars of the case (not much) on walls, telephone poles and wherever the hobo world congregated. A massive effort.      

Funny though they probably never would have caught the Kid if it hadn’t been for a woman, well, a woman, and a bum (let me tell you sometime the differences, the social, political and economic differences between bums, hoboes, and tramps and there are and recognized in the community as such  but it doesn’t affect this story so later okay). The Kid had hightailed it to Reno up on the border and was laying low, well not really laying low, but spending his dough of dope, booze, women and whatever else caught his fancy in  a very private suite in a very private hotel. After about a year of that though easy street ran out of steam, he ran out of dough.

That is where the woman comes in, the woman, Heidi, whom he spent most of his dough on. When fund got low he put her out on the streets to do a few tricks to keep them in clover. She agreed to it so there was nothing wrong there. What was wrong was that she tried to hustle a guy she had known, and old flame going under the moniker Black River Sid, from way back, who had fallen on hard times, had been roughhoused in one of the cop raids looking for the Kid down in Lancaster and so knew the Kid legend, and asked what she had been up to but more importantly why was she doing cheapjack tricks on the streets. So she told him the story, the Kid dough story, except she did not know how the Kid had gotten his dough (or think to ask as long as the dope, booze, casino chips and occasional off-hand piece of jewelry was around). And that was that.

Black River Sid when he put two and two together came up with reward, reward and his own getting well again (he has a serious cocaine habit that needed some attention) and so he snitched, snitched as hard and fast as a man could snitch. So one early morning, before sunrise, the combined forces of law and order in California and Nevada, combined railroads of the West, and the combined mineral resources organizations and Black River Sid gathered in front of a certain private hotel in Reno and attempted a forced assault on one Toothpick Kid and his honey. Yes, the Kid went down, went down in a hail of bullets after a several hours gunfight (as did Heidi who stood by her man until the end) as he probably knew he must, or maybe should have known he must it is hard to tell the difference in such cases.

But before the Kid left this good green earth he took down two railroad bulls, a couple of deputy sheriffs and one Black River Sid (directed to him by Heidi). So to the Kid (George Nelson), RIP.  And you wonder why fifty years or more later they speak of him in hushed whispers wherever guys are down on their luck, down on their dreams, and down in the fellahin ditches out in the American West night.                            

 
Spartacist Canada No. 177
Summer 2013
Guantánamo Hunger Strike: Free the Detainees Now!
The following article is reprinted from Workers Vanguard No. 1022, 19 April, newspaper of the Spartacist League/U.S.

APRIL 15—A mass hunger strike at the U.S. military’s Guantánamo detention center in Cuba is now in its third month. Precipitated by a raid in February during which prisoners’ Korans were desecrated, the hunger strike includes a number of men who are near death as they protest being consigned to endless incarceration in the prison’s notorious torture chambers. Lawyers for the detainees report that some 130 prisoners are participating in the hunger strike, with the military force-feeding 13 of them. As one striker told attorney David Remes, detainees “feel like they’re living in graves” (Al Jazeera, 19 March). There has been at least one attempted suicide as well as reports of prisoners coughing up blood and others hospitalized for dehydration. On April 13, shortly after a Red Cross delegation investigating the strike had left the camp, guards fired “non-lethal” rounds at prisoners who resisted being forcibly moved to single-cell lockups. In another display of cruelty, a federal judge today dismissed an emergency motion from a hunger striker that sought an end to the mistreatment, sneering that the prisoner had “self-manufactured” his condition.
The hunger strike is a cry of despair over the legal limbo that detainees have suffered under since U.S. imperialism launched its “war on terror” following the September 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. As the U.S./NATO began its murderous occupation of Afghanistan, hundreds of detainees were incarcerated indefinitely without a shred of legal rights. Of the 166 men still imprisoned at Guantánamo, 86 were cleared for release years ago. Most of the remaining 80 have not been charged with any crime, and only 30 detainees are subjects of active “investigations.”
A March 14 letter to Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel by detainees’ attorneys described the prisoners as “feeling hopeless in the face of 11 years of detention without prospect of release or trial and the continuing inability of the political branches to carry through on their commitment to close the prison in a just manner” (ccrjustice.org). It is not only that Barack Obama has reneged on his 2008 campaign pledge to close Guantánamo. The letter reports “a background of increasingly regressive practices at the prison taking place in recent months,” described by prisoners as a return to conditions in the Bush era that were widely recognized as constituting torture.
Hunger striker Shaker Aamer is one of those who have been held since 2002, never charged, never tried or convicted, cleared to go home but still in detention despite protest from the government of Britain, where his family resides. In a statement published in the New Statesman (5 April), Aamer describes the plight of Yemeni detainee Abu Bakr, a/k/a “171,” who has been on hunger strike since 2005 and has now become a special target of the prison administrator: “Back in October, 171 was tied in the feeding chair, and just left there for 52 hours. Then, from 4 January, he was isolated for a full month.... He thinks they’ll kill him off, to encourage the others to give up their strike.”
In an op-ed piece in the New York Times (14 April), another Yemeni hunger striker, Samir Naji al Hasan Moqbel, movingly recounted his ordeal, not least the excruciating pain of the force-feedings. Moqbel observed: “The only reason I am still here is that President Obama refuses to send any detainees back to Yemen.” Indeed, the U.S. president in early 2010 halted the repatriation of detainees to Yemen under the pretext of “current security conditions” in that country. Today, a majority of the remaining Guantánamo detainees are Yemeni nationals. With the detentions provoking protests in Yemen, its president, who has given his unqualified blessing to the U.S. campaign of terror-by-drone in Yemen, felt compelled to intone: “We believe that keeping someone in prison for over ten years without due process is clear-cut tyranny.”
Whereas the Bush administration rounded up hundreds of men (some under 18 years old) and tossed them into the CIA secret prison and rendition network, the Obama White House has preferred to simply kill its targets, mainly through drone strikes. At the same time, under Obama’s plan to shutter Guantánamo, the system of indefinite detention would have continued, simply relocated onto American soil. But with Congress working to ensure that Guantánamo remain a detention center, the military’s Southern Command has requested up to $170 million to upgrade existing facilities and an additional $49 million for a new prison building to hold “special” detainees.
Meanwhile, the Obama administration cynically paints the force-feeding of prisoners—officially recognized by the United Nations and others as a form of torture—as supposedly protecting their safety and welfare. This was too much even for the Obama-friendly New York Times, which ran a 5 April editorial declaring that “the truly humane response to this crisis is to free prisoners who have been approved for release, end indefinite detention and close the prison at Guantánamo.” For such bourgeois liberals, Guantánamo stains the veneer of “democracy” with which America’s capitalist rulers cover their depredations around the world.
As revolutionary proletarian opponents of imperialism, we call for closing Guantánamo as well as for the release of all the remaining detainees, despite the enormous gulf between our Marxist worldview and that of the reactionary Islamist forces that the detainees are alleged to support. Our program is not that of liberal reformers who seek to perfect the mechanisms of imperialist rule by cleaning up its “excesses.” Our fight is to mobilize the working class in opposition to imperialist wars and occupations and in defense of all the exploited and oppressed, a struggle that must culminate in proletarian revolution to destroy the imperialists’ machinery of state terror once and for all.
Platforma Spartakusowców 17
Kwiecień 2013
 
Antysemicka prowokacja
 



w Warszawie przed 70. rocznicÄ… powstania w gettcie warszawskim
Warszawa, 17 lutego. Znaczna ilość czarno-biaÅ‚ych plakatów z portretem Adolfa Hitlera wisi na sÅ‚upach ogÅ‚oszeniowych w centrum Warszawy co najmniej od koÅ„ca grudnia. Portrety Hitlera powróciÅ‚y do Warszawy pokazywane jako „sztuka”. To reklama „wystawy” Maurizio Cattelana, zorganizowanej przez Centrum Sztuki Współczesnej Zamek Ujazdowski w Warszawie, pod honorowym patronatem ambasady WÅ‚och i miasta Warszawy. Do plakatu wykorzystano zdjÄ™cie woskowej figury klÄ™czÄ…cego Hitlera, wykonanej przez Cattelana w 2001 r. Figura Hitlera jest „jednym z głównych elementów” tego wydarzenia i jest prezentowana od poÅ‚owy listopada przy ul. Próżnej 14, w zamkniÄ™tym przejÅ›ciu bramy prowadzÄ…cym na podwórze przedwojennego zdewastowanego budynku na terenie byÅ‚ego getta. KlÄ™czÄ…cÄ… figurÄ™ woskowÄ… można zobaczyć tylko z oddali i z tyÅ‚u, przez otwór w zamkniÄ™tej drewnianej bramie. Figura zostaÅ‚a opisana w mediach jako „modlÄ…cy siÄ™ Hitler”, majÄ…cy prosić o „przebaczenie”. Można przeczytać, że instalacja Cattelana zostaÅ‚a umieszczona w budynku przy Próżnej jako „artystyczny komentarz dla katolickiego credo: co to wÅ‚aÅ›ciwie znaczy miÅ‚ować swych wrogów?” www.csw.art.pl, Maurizio Cattelan, AMEN).
Jakiekolwiek by nie byÅ‚y ogÅ‚oszone intencje jego autorów, obiektywnie ten pokaz woskowej figury Hitlera i jej portretów w Warszawie jest antysemickÄ… prowokacjÄ…, sÅ‚użącÄ… jako lodoÅ‚amacz dla nazistowskiego terroru. DobrÄ… odpowiedź na tÄ™ medialnÄ… bzdurÄ™ daÅ‚a kobieta przechodzÄ…ca PróżnÄ…, zacytowana przez Jerusalem Post www.jpost.com, 26 grudnia 2012, za GazetÄ… WyborczÄ… z 20 listopada 2012). ZastanawiaÅ‚a siÄ™ ona: „»Dlaczego w tym miejscu artyÅ›ci umieÅ›cili modlÄ…cego siÄ™ chÅ‚opca? (...)«. Gdy usÅ‚yszaÅ‚a, że to »dziecko« byÅ‚o w rzeczywistoÅ›ci Hitlerem, powiedziaÅ‚a ze zÅ‚oÅ›ciÄ…: »Hitler nie miaÅ‚ prawa prosić o przebaczenie«”.
Kurator „wystawy” Justyna WesoÅ‚owska, wyrażajÄ…c typowÄ… dla polskiego nacjonalizmu bezczelność, powiedziaÅ‚a dziennikarzowi Jewish News One (kanaÅ‚ wiadomoÅ›ci telewizyjnych z siedzibÄ… w Brukseli w Belgii): „Jest to faktycznie dosyć Å›mieszne, dla mnie jest to bardzo pozytywne, że lokalnie otrzymujemy tylko pozytywne reakcje” www.jn1.tv, 4 stycznia 2013). Zignorowali oni fakt, że w 2010 r. w Mediolanie we WÅ‚oszech zakazano wczeÅ›niejszej wersji tego samego plakatu z klÄ™czÄ…cym woskowym Hitlerem, użytego jako rzekomej reklamy wystawy Cattelana. Po wielodniowej debacie ratusz w Mediolanie postanowiÅ‚ zatrzymać rozpowszechnianie tych plakatów. Å»ydowska spoÅ‚eczność pozytywnie przyjęła decyzjÄ™ zakazujÄ…cÄ… plakatów. „Ta reklama rani wrażliwość naszÄ… i wielu ludzi, przeważajÄ…c nad sarkastycznym przesÅ‚aniem o Hitlerze żebrzÄ…cym o przebaczenie”, powiedziaÅ‚ przywódca spoÅ‚ecznoÅ›ci Roberto Jarach www.lagazzettadelmezzogiorno.it, 15 wrzeÅ›nia 2010).
Warto zacytować oÅ›wiadczenie Centrum Szymona Wiesenthala. Nazwali oni „zamierzone umieszczenie figury ― na terenie, gdzie zamordowano dziesiÄ…tki tysiÄ™cy Å»ydów i z którego deportowano setki tysiÄ™cy Å»ydów na Å›mierć przez nazistowski reżim, na czele którego staÅ‚ Hitler ― bezsensownÄ… prowokacjÄ… obrażajÄ…cÄ… pamięć żydowskich ofiar nazistów”. Ponadto „instalacja jest przejawem zupeÅ‚nego braku wrażliwoÅ›ci na nazistowskie zbrodnie w Polsce, a zwÅ‚aszcza na zbrodnie popeÅ‚nione na polskich Å»ydach. JeÅ›li chodzi o Å»ydów, jedynÄ… »modlitwÄ…« Hitlera byÅ‚o, żeby zostali starci z powierzchni Ziemi. (...) Zatem »modlÄ…cy siÄ™« Hitler celowo umieszczony w centrum terenu getta warszawskiego stanowi zupeÅ‚ne wypaczenie historii II wojny Å›wiatowej i Holokaustu” (www.wiesenthal.com, 27 grudnia 2012).
Innym przykÅ‚adem bezczelnoÅ›ci polskich nacjonalistów jest oÅ›wiadczenie protestacyjne, zamieszczone na prawicowej stronie internetowej wPolityce.pl (29 grudnia 2012), gdzie o Å»ydach w ogóle nie wspomniano! ZatytuÅ‚owane „Podatniku! (...) w setkach plakatów, powróciÅ‚ zbrodniarz Hitler!”, oÅ›wiadczenie to ilustrowane jest zdjÄ™ciami plakatu z Hitlerem oraz zdjÄ™ciami paru kamiennych tablic upamiÄ™tniajÄ…cych głównie zabitych żoÅ‚nierzy Armii Krajowej (AK) plus jednej tablicy upamiÄ™tniajÄ…cej zabite katolickie ofiary nazistowskiego obozu koncentracyjnego. KrytykujÄ… tam również „bawienie siÄ™ »pytaniami o sens katolickiego credo«”. Jak gdyby koÅ›ciół katolicki nie kolaborowaÅ‚ z nazistami, lamentujÄ…: „tak jakby ten germaÅ„ski zbrodniarz [Hitler] miaÅ‚ cokolwiek wspólnego z wiarÄ… chrzeÅ›cijaÅ„skÄ…, jakby nie przeÅ›ladowaÅ‚ księży, tak w Niemczech, jak i na dużo wiÄ™kszÄ… skalÄ™, w Polsce, i innych okupowanych krajach. Jakby jego zbrodnie nie wzięły siÄ™ wÅ‚aÅ›nie z odrzucenia Boga, z uznania siÄ™ przez Niemców za nadludzi”. Autorzy oÅ›wiadczenia wolÄ… milczeć o ksiÄ™dzu Józefie Tiso, który staÅ‚ na czele faszystowskiego reżimu lojalnego wobec Hitlera w sÄ…siedniej SÅ‚owacji. Albo o poparciu, jakie otrzymaÅ‚ faszystowski dyktator Chorwacji, Ante Pavelić od Watykanu i miejscowego koÅ›cioÅ‚a katolickiego. Albo o poparciu, jakiego udzieliÅ‚o wielu znaczÄ…cych księży w Niemczech i Watykanie dla krucjaty Hitlera przeciw bezbożnemu „żydokomunizmowi”, czego wyrazem byÅ‚o np. hasÅ‚o na klamrach pasów niemieckiej armii: „Gott mit uns!” (Bóg z nami!).
W istocie dla caÅ‚ego politycznego spektrum grup prawicowych, wÅ‚Ä…czajÄ…c w to rzÄ…dzÄ…cych miastem i paÅ„stwem, jedno jest wspólne: wszyscy oni sÄ… zadowoleni z tego, że już nie ma Å»ydów w Polsce. Kiedy doszli do wÅ‚adzy podczas kapitalistycznej kontrrewolucji w okresie 1989-90, kierowanej przez „Solidarność”, wielu z tych ludzi opowiedziaÅ‚o siÄ™ za antysemityzmem, razem z narodowym szowinizmem i antykobiecÄ… katolickÄ… bigoteriÄ…. Kontrrewolucja kapitalistyczna w Europie Wschodniej i ZSRR otworzyÅ‚a dÅ‚ugi okres reakcji, kiedy to odbywajÄ… siÄ™ doroczne marsze faszystowskich weteranów we Lwowie, w Rydze itd. W 1943 r. przywódcy powstania w getcie warszawskim wyglÄ…dali Armii Radzieckiej jako ich potencjalnego wyzwoliciela, a niektórzy jego uczestnicy liczyli na rewolucjÄ™ socjalistycznÄ… w Europie jako jedynÄ… nadziejÄ™ dla pozostajÄ…cych we Wschodniej Europie Å»ydów. Faktycznie to Armia Radziecka wyzwoliÅ‚a kraj od nazistów. Lecz rewolucja socjalistyczna zostaÅ‚a zdradzona przez pasożytniczÄ… stalinowskÄ… biurokracjÄ™ „socjalizmu w jednym kraju” na dÅ‚ugo przed wojnÄ…. ZaÅ› w 1948 r. ci biurokraci popierali utworzenie kapitalistycznego Izraela i żydowskÄ… emigracjÄ™, oraz okresowo kierowali antysemickimi nagonkami w kraju. W Polsce tÅ‚em dla antysemickich nagonek i pogromów byÅ‚ tradycyjny antysemityzm dominujÄ…cego koÅ›cioÅ‚a katolickiego. Ich antysemityzm nie zniknÄ…Å‚.
Jako rewolucyjni marksiÅ›ci nie liczymy na kapitalistyczne paÅ„stwo czy wÅ‚adze lokalne, by zakazaÅ‚y nazistowskiej propagandy. Takie zakazy zawsze sÄ… przede wszystkim wymierzone w ruch robotniczy, dlatego sprzeciwialiÅ›my siÄ™ niedawnemu prawnemu zakazowi „noÅ›ników symboliki faszystowskiej, komunistycznej lub innej totalitarnej” w Polsce (8 czerwca 2010 ‒ 3 sierpnia 2011, zob.: „Precz z antykomunistycznym prawem w Polsce!”, Platforma Spartakusowców nr 15, maj 2011, WV nr 958, 7 maja 2010). W interesie klasy robotniczej leży dziaÅ‚anie przeciw nazistowskim prowokacjom, jako że ostatecznym celem faszystowskiego terroru jest zorganizowana klasa robotnicza. Tym, czego potrzeba sÄ… mobilizacje zorganizowanych robotników, wiodÄ…cych wszystkie uciskane mniejszoÅ›ci: Å»ydów, Romów, homoseksualistów, oraz innych obranych przez nazistów jako ofiary ich terroru. Potrzebujemy zbudowania awangardowych partii leninowsko-trockistowskich, do poprowadzenia przyszÅ‚ych Rewolucji Październikowych, by obalić ludobójczy porzÄ…dek kapitalistyczny, by zbudować nowe spoÅ‚eczeÅ„stwo demokracji robotniczej z gospodarkÄ… planowÄ…, oraz by w peÅ‚ni pomÅ›cić ofiary nazistowskiego Holokaustu w Niemczech, Polsce i w innych krajach. Precz z antysemickÄ… prowokacjÄ… z „modlÄ…cym siÄ™” Hitlerem w Warszawie!

Los crímenes del imperialismo estadounidense al descubierto

¡Viva Bradley Manning! ¡Libérenlo ya!

Traducido de Workers Vanguard No. 1019 (8 de marzo de 2013).




















Tras soportar casi tres años detenido, a veces en condiciones de tortura, el 28 de febrero el soldado Bradley Manning confesó haber proporcionado a WikiLeaks una cantidad importante de documentos militares y diplomáticos que exponían los planes y las atrocidades de guerra del imperialismo estadounidense. El haberse declarado culpable de diez de los 22 cargos que enfrenta podría llevarlo a una condena de 20 años de cárcel. Pero esa libra de carne no es suficiente para los gobernantes imperialistas, que no sólo buscan venganza, sino que están decididos a silenciar a cualquiera que perciban como un obstáculo a sus designios de dominación mundial. Al día siguiente de la confesión de Manning, los fiscales militares anunciaron que planeaban juzgarlo por los demás cargos, incluyendo el “ayudar al enemigo” y el haber violado la Ley de Espionaje. Se espera que el juicio comience a principios de junio. Si se le encuentra culpable de estos cargos, Manning enfrentaría la cadena perpetua.

Al levantar un poco el velo de ocultamientos y mentiras con que los gobernantes capitalistas cubren sus depredaciones, Brad- ley Manning hizo un gran servicio a los obreros y los oprimidos de todo el mundo. Todos los que se opongan a la barbarie y las maquinaciones imperialistas reveladas en el material que Manning entregó deben unirse en demanda de su inmediata liberación. También es crucial defender a Julian Assange contra la vendetta de Estados Unidos, Gran Bretaña y sus secuaces, que están tratando de enviarlo a prisión por cualquier medio por su papel a la cabeza de WikiLeaks.

En una declaración de 35 páginas que leyó ante el tribunal militar después de declararse culpable, Manning narró su travesía desde casi ser rechazado del entrenamiento básico hasta llegar a ser analista de inteligencia militar. En ese puesto, se topó con montañas de pruebas de la duplicidad y de los crímenes de guerra estadounidenses. El material que entregó a WikiLeaks incluyó bitácoras militares que documentaban 120 mil muertes de civiles en Irak y Afganistán y una política militar oficial de encubrir tortura, violaciones y asesinatos. Un cuarto de millón de cables diplomáticos trata de todo tipo de operaciones letales dentro de los estados clientes de Estados Unidos, desde la “guerra contra las drogas” en México hasta los ataques de drones en Yemen. También entregó archivos que contenían informes sobre los detenidos en Guantánamo, Cuba. Estos documentos muestran que el gobierno aún retiene a muchos que, como declaró Manning, se creía o se sabía que eran inocentes, así como a “soldados rasos que no tenían información útil”.

El Pentágono declaró la guerra a WikiLeaks tras la publicación de un video, que entregó Manning, de un bombardeo de 2007 donde un helicóptero Apache estadounidense mata a al menos doce personas, incluyendo a dos periodistas de Reuters. Las fuerzas estadounidenses aparecen después disparándole a una camioneta que se detuvo a ayudar a las víctimas. Manning dijo que para él lo más alarmante era “la sed de sangre que mostraban”. Describió cómo, en lugar de pedir atención médica para un herido grave que trataba de arrastrarse para ponerse a salvo, uno de los miembros de la tripulación aérea pedía “que el herido tomara un arma, para tener un pretexto para disparar”.

Manning cuenta que, para enero de 2010, ya “había empezado a deprimirme con la situación en la que seguíamos, cada vez más empantanados, año tras año”, y decidió hacer públicos muchos de los documentos que había copiado como parte de su trabajo de analista. Se los ofreció primero al Washington Post y al New York Times. Al ver que estos pilares de la prensa burguesa oficial no lo llevaban a ningún lado, en febrero de 2010 hizo su primera entrega a WikiLeaks. Adjuntó una nota que señalaba que “éste bien podría ser uno de los documentos más significativos de nuestra época para disipar la niebla de la guerra y revelar la verdadera naturaleza del combate asimétrico del siglo XXI. Que tengan buen día”.

El cargo de “ayudar al enemigo” —es decir, a Al Qaeda— es especialmente siniestro. Este cargo solía referirse a cosas como sabotaje militar o entregarle información sobre movimientos de tropas al enemigo en el campo de batalla. En el caso de Manning, la fiscalía alega que el hecho mismo de difundir las actividades diplomáticas y militares estadounidenses, algunas de las cuales tuvieron lugar hace años, equivale a mantener comunicación “indirecta” con Al Qaeda. Manning dijo al tribunal que él creía que el acceso público a la información “podría detonar un debate nacional respecto al papel del ejército y a nuestra política exterior en general”. Esperaba que ello conduciría “a la sociedad a reevaluar la necesidad o incluso el deseo de emprender operaciones de contraterrorismo y contrainsurgencia que pasaran por alto la compleja dinámica del pueblo que vive diariamente en la zona afectada”. Pero, según los términos de la guerra imperialista contra el terrorismo, cualquier revelación de sus depredaciones puede ser interpretada como apoyo al enemigo “terrorista”, quien quiera que éste sea.

El Pentágono pretende llamar al menos 141 testigos en su farsa de juicio, incluyendo a cuatro que testificarán anónimamente. Se cree que uno de ellos, al que se designa como “John Doe” [Juan Pérez], es miembro de las fuerzas especiales SEAL de la armada que participaron en el ataque que mató a Osama bin Laden. Se dice que “Doe” tomó tres discos del complejo de bin Laden en Abbottabad, Pakistán, en los que había el equivalente de cuatro archivos del material que Manning entregó a WikiLeaks. También se dice que se halló en los discos duros de bin Laden una colección de videos porno estadounidenses. ¿Acaso Obama y Cía. planean acusar también a Vivid Entertainment [una empresa popular de la industria porno de EE.UU.]?

Tampoco los cargos de violación a la Ley de Espionaje tienen nada que ver con espionaje verdadero. Esa ley fue una de las muchas medidas adoptadas para criminalizar la actividad antiguerra tras la entrada del imperialismo estadounidense a la Primera Guerra Mundial. La ley penaba con cárcel cualquier acto que se considerara un obstáculo al reclutamiento de tropas. Entre sus primeras y más prominentes víctimas se contó el vocero del Partido Socialista Eugene V. Debs, que fue encarcelado por un discurso pronunciado en junio de 1918 en un mitin obrero en Canton, Ohio, donde denunció la guerra como una masacre capitalista y rindió homenaje a los líderes de la Revolución Bolchevique de 1917. Decenas de organizadores de los Industrial Workers of the World [Obreros Industriales del Mundo] también fueron encarcelados. Tan amplio era el alcance de la ley, que Robert Goldstein, productor de la película The Spirit of ’76 [El espíritu del 76], fue hallado culpable y sentenciado inicialmente a diez años de cárcel por el modo en que su película retrataba la brutalidad de los soldados británicos durante la Guerra de Independencia estadounidense, ¡lo cual podía minar el apoyo a uno de los aliados de Estados Unidos en la guerra!

A principios de los años 70, el gobierno de Nixon intentó, sin éxito, usar esa ley contra Daniel Ellsberg. Los Documentos del Pentágono que Ellsberg entregó al New York Times arrojaron luz sobre la historia de la larga guerra que el imperialismo estadounidense estaba perdiendo contra los obreros y campesinos de Vietnam. Obama ha recogido alegremente el estandarte de Nixon. El juicio de Manning será la sexta ocasión en que el gobierno de Obama use la Ley de Espionaje contra la fuente de una filtración no autorizada de información clasificada...más que todos los demás presidentes juntos desde que la ley se promulgó en 1917. Como hemos señalado repetidamente, Barack Obama, que llegó a la presidencia con amplio apoyo de los liberales y la izquierda, no está llevando a cabo más que sus deberes como Comandante en Jefe, acelerando los ataques a los derechos democráticos para prepararle el camino a nuevas depredaciones imperialistas y ataques a los obreros y oprimidos en el país.

Señalando sus dudas iniciales respecto a filtrar los cables diplomáticos, Manning comentó que una vez había “leído y usado una cita sobre la diplomacia abierta, escrita tras la Primera Guerra Mundial, sobre cómo el mundo sería un mejor lugar si los estados dejaran de hacer pactos y tratos secretos los unos con los otros y los unos contra los otros”. Y añadió: “Creí que esos cables eran un perfecto ejemplo de la necesidad de una diplomacia más abierta”.

Detrás de las intrigas diplomáticas de los imperialistas —las cuales llevan a cabo a veces en contubernio con sus aliados, otras veces unos contra otros— está su impulso por explotar a los obreros y los oprimidos del mundo según sus propios intereses. La brutal represalia del gobierno de Obama contra Manning y Assange muestra que nada ha cambiado en este respecto desde que el dirigente revolucionario León Trotsky describiera la diplomacia secreta, en noviembre de 1917, como “un instrumento necesario para la minoría propietaria que se ve obligada a engañar a la mayoría para someterla a sus intereses”. Trotsky, codirigente junto con V.I. Lenin de la Revolución de Octubre de 1917, hizo este punto en una declaración que emitió como comisario de asuntos exteriores del recién nacido estado obrero soviético. Trotsky estaba anunciando la publicación y abrogación de los tratados secretos que el anterior régimen zarista y el Gobierno Provisional burgués habían fraguado con sus aliados.

Uno de los primeros actos del gobierno soviético fue emitir un decreto de paz que sacaba a Rusia de la carnicería interimperialista de la Primera Guerra Mundial y exigirle a todos los beligerantes una paz “justa y democrática” sin anexiones ni indemnizaciones. El periódico soviético Izvestia pronto empezó a publicar los tratados que se habían firmado durante la guerra. Al partido bolchevique de Lenin y Trotsky lo impulsaba la perspectiva de la revolución proletaria mundial. De hecho, la Revolución de Octubre era un faro de liberación para los explotados y oprimidos en los países capitalistas avanzados y en el mundo colonial y semicolonial. Junto con el repudio del gobierno soviético a los acuerdos depredadores firmados por gobiernos anteriores, la publicación de los tratados ayudó a desatar olas de lucha por parte de quienes seguían bajo la bota imperialista, cuyos tratos sucios habían quedado al desnudo.

Para los revolucionarios proletarios, los materiales que entregó Manning tienen verdadero valor para abrirles los ojos a los trabajadores del mundo ante las mentiras y la violencia sistemáticas que sostienen el dominio capitalista. Quienes se oponen a las ocupaciones y la guerra imperialistas deben ser ganados al entendimiento de que hará falta una serie de revoluciones socialistas para poner alto al orden capitalista. Es con el fin de aportar la necesaria dirección al proletariado en esta lucha que estamos comprometidos a forjar partidos leninistas-trotskistas alrededor del mundo.