Glenn
Greeenwald schrijft over het feit dat een tweede oorlog tegen terreur op til is, nu gericht tegen de binnenlandse terreur in de VS, echter gegarandeerd
dat er al generaals zijn en topgraaiers van de geheime diensten, die proberen om dit om te vormen tegen de ‘buitenlandse
terreur……’ (zoals de nazi’s het woord terreur al gebruikten als ze het hadden over
verzetsdaden, ook in het buitenland…….) Al zal men in de nabije
toekomst de wat men in de VS extreem linkse sites noemt, van het internet bannen, zoals Brasscheck TV nu al bijna geen door YouTube ‘geserveerde’
video meer kan weergeven in haar berichten of je krijgt te lezen dat
men ‘dit adres niet vertrouwt’, of je nog maar even wilt kijken, echter
wat je ook doet: je krijgt de video niet te zien….. (een enkele uitzondering daar gelaten)
Kortom
links (althans wat men in de VS politiek ‘links’ noemt) zal worden
gecensureerd en dan krijg je zo’n video bijvoorbeeld niet meer te
zien en met ‘een beetje geluk’ wordt je account verwijderd dan wel geblokkeerd……. Benieuwd
of men ook zo hard achter rechts aangaat en dan heb je het over extreem
rechts, je weet wel de figuren die zich lieten opjutten om het
Capitol te bestormen. De vraag stellen is haar beantwoorden:
uiteraard worden deelnemers van die bestorming strafrechtelijke
vervolgd, anders zouden er ‘South Park rellen’ uitbreken over de hele
VS…. Maar reken gerust dat men na een eerste ‘opwinding’ onder het volk, extreem rechts
weer snel ‘links’ zal laten liggen…… Met ‘links’ bedoel ik uiteraard niet
het spreekwoordelijke links van zojuist, maar allen die uit
overtuigende redenen werken aan een betere wereld, een wereld waar
iedereen gelukkig kan zijn en niet alleen de kleine minderheid die de
‘zaakjes prima voor elkaar heeft’, een wereld ook waar men werkelijk probeert de klimaatverandering af te remmen en de luchtvervuiling daadwerkelijk zo snel mogelijk probeert uit te bannen…. (zo behoort de Nederlandse luchtkwaliteit tot de slechtste van de EU, waardoor jaarlijks rond de 18.000 mensen [het echte cijfer], niet maanden maar jaren eerder overlijden en dat in verreweg het grootste aantal gevallen na een akelig ziekbed….) Tja, als je je inzet voor een wereld die ook voor komende generaties leefbaar moet blijven, word je al snel als links neergezet…..
Maar
terug naar het onderwerp: deze tweede oorlog tegen terreur zal naar
schatting nog veel meer mensen schaden en de de dood injagen…..
In de
film het verhaal van Mohemedou Slahi, een man die het slachtoffer
werd in de eerste oorlog tegen terreur, hij zat 14 jaar gevangen, niet
alleen in Guantanamo Bay maar ook in de geheime CIA gevangenissen
over de wereld en als in Guantanamo werd hij daar vreselijk werd gemarteld…. (maar ja zijn
daarin nog gradaties te ontdekken? vast wel….) Obama beloofde bij zijn aantreden de gevangenen van Guantanmo Bay vrij te laten tegen wie geen zaak was, echter zijn administratie en daarmee hijzelf ging in tegen de vrijspraak van Slahi, zodat hij nog langer moest vastzitten…. Slahi is nooit veroordeeld en toch is hij ondanks dat hij in 2016 vrij kwam nog steeds een gevangene, daar hij Mauritanië niet mag verlaten van de VS, een voorwaarde voor zijn vrijlating, daardoor kan Slahi o.a. zijn zoon niet bezoeken die in Duitsl;and woont….. Ach ja de VS, de grootste terreurentiteit ter wereld…..
Onlangs
had ik nog een bericht over Ahmed
Rabbani die
nog steeds volkomen onterecht gevangen zit in Guantanamo Bay*, deze mensen, voor het
overgrote deel niet eens veroordeeld, moeten vrijgelaten worden en
liever gisteren dan vandaag, zijn ze in de VS nu helemaal gek
geworden???? (nogmaals: de vraag stellen is haar beantwoorden….) Slahi heeft nog een opmerkelijke gelijkenis met Rabbani: ook hij koestert verder geen wrok tegen de VS (ik kan me dat niet voorstellen na zoveel ellende, het geeft nogmaals aan dat de VS willekeurig mensen heeft ontvoerd, niet zelden na tipgeld te hebben betaald aan schoften die zogenaamde terroristen aangaven en dat is dan weer een vergelijking met het kopgeld dat de nazi-Duitse bezetter betaalde voor het verklikken van o.a. Joden…….)
Zoals gezegd de VS is de
grootste terreurentiteit ter wereld en is alleen deze eeuw al
verantwoordelijk voor de moord op 5 miljoen mensen en weet je wat?
Die massamoord begon met de ‘terreuraanval’ op de Twin Towers in New
York en ja dat is intussen 20 jaar geleden…… Een aanval die
overduidelijk is georganiseerd door de CIA, NSA en
hoogstwaarschijnlijk met hulp van de Israëlische Mossad, deze torens
en WTC gebouw 7 kunnen onmogelijk door hitte zijn neergegaan, zoals
intussen een groot aantal deskundigen hebben verklaard, zoveel en
overtuigend dat de figuren die dit af durven doen als de door de CIA
uitgevonden term ‘complottheorie’, zichzelf volkomen belachelijk maken……
Lees het
ontluisterende artikel hieronder, geschreven door Glenn Geenwald en zie de video’s
en houd in de toekomst je ogen open en je camera of smartphone bij de hand (en zet je
GPS uit!!)!! Geeft het door, voor je het weet ben jij slachtoffer
van de heksenjacht 2021, of die nog een paar jaar op zich laat wachten……..
Je kent het devies: mensen die nadenken zijn uitermate lastig (voor
de autoriteiten…..) en nee bij rechts zijn maar weinig mensen te
vinden die echt zelf kunnen denken…… Vandaar ook het succes van fascistische partijen of bewegingen als resp. FVD en de PVV……
VIDEO:
With a Second War on Terror Looming, a New Film Explores the Grave
Abuses of the First
Imprisoned
without charges for fourteen years in Guantánamo, Mohamedou Slahi is
a symbol of humans’ impulse to abuse power and their capacity for
redemption.
SYSTEM
UPDATE interview with Mohamedou Slahi from his home in Mauritania,
March 6, 2021
Mohamedou
Slahi is
an extraordinary person with a harrowing past and a remarkable,
still-unfolding story. The interview I conducted with him on
Saturday, which can be viewed below, is one I sincerely hope you will
watch. He has much to say that the world should hear, and, with a new
War on Terror likely to be launched in the U.S., his story is
particularly timely now.
Known
as the author of the best-selling Guantánamo
Diary
— a memoir he wrote during his fourteen years in captivity in the
U.S. prison camp at Guantánamo — he is now the primary character
of a new Hollywood feature film about his life, The
Mauritanian.
The first eight years of Slahi’s imprisonment included multiple
forms of abuse in four different countries and separation from
everything he knew, but it afforded no charges, trials, or
opportunities to refute or even learn of the accusations against him.
The
film stars Jodie Foster, Benedict Cumberbatch and Shailene Woodley,
while Slahi is played by the French-Algerian actor Tahar Rahim.
Foster last week won a Golden Globe award for her role as Nancy
Hollander, Slahi’s lawyer who worked for years, for free, to secure
his right simply to have a court evaluate the evidence which the U.S.
Government believed justified his due-process-free, indefinite
imprisonment. Cumberbatch plays Slahi’s military prosecutor whose
friend died on 9/11 when the American Airlines passenger jet he was
piloting was hijacked and flown into the South Tower of the World
Trade Center.
Slahi’s
story is fascinating unto itself but, with a second War on Terror
looming, bears particular relevance now. No matter your views on the
post-9/11 War on Terror — ranging from “it
was necessary to take the gloves off and dispense with all limits in
order to win this war against an unprecedented evil and existential
threat”
to “the
U.S. gravely overreacted and mirrored the worst abuses of what it
claimed it was fighting”
to anything in between — it cannot be disputed that limitless power
was placed in the hands of the U.S. Government to imprison, to
monitor, to surveil, to kidnap and to kill anyone it wanted, anywhere
in the world, with no checks. And like most authorities vested in the
state in the name of some emergency, these powers were said to be
temporary but, almost twenty years later, show no signs of going
anywhere. They are now embedded in the woodwork of U.S. political
life.
What
happened to Slahi is a vivid embodiment of how humans will inevitably
abuse power when it is wielded without safeguards or limits. In
November, 2001, Slahi was attending a party with his mother and other
relatives in his home country of Mauritania, the U.S.-aligned nation
in Northwest Africa plagued for years by dictatorships and military
coups. Police arrived and told him they needed to question him. That
was the last time he would ever see his mother.
After
two weeks of intense interrogation about his ties to Islamic
radicals, Slahi was flown in chains and shackles to Jordan, the
U.S.-controlled oil monarchy where he had never visited and with
which he had no ties. For the next eight months, he was interrogated
on a daily basis by Jordanian and U.S. operatives, including CIA
agents. The Jordanians frequently used classic torture techniques to
extract information when their CIA bosses assessed that he was not
being forthcoming. After eight months, the Jordanians concluded that
he was not affiliated with any extremist groups and had no more
information to provide, but the Americans, still reeling from the
9/11 attack, were not convinced.
He
was told he would return to Mauritania but quickly realized that was
a lie as he was placed in full-body shackles, chains and a jumpsuit.
This time, he was flown to the notorious U.S. military base in
Bagram, Afghanistan, home to thousands of prisoners detained
indefinitely
by the Bush and Obama administrations with no charges or human rights
protections. After two weeks of brutal daily interrogations, Slahi
was told that he was being taken to a U.S. military base in
Guantánamo.
Because
the camp had opened only after Slahi was first detained in
Mauritania, he had no idea what Guantánamo was. But, he told me, he
was so happy and relieved to hear he was being taken to the U.S.
because “the U.S. is where you get legal rights and there is a
functioning court system.” Upon hearing the news, he thought his
nightmare, now almost a year long, was about to end. In fact, it was
only beginning, and was about to get far darker than he could have
imagined.
Flown
to the floating island prison in the middle of the Caribbean,
thousands of miles away from his home, Slahi, though in American
custody on a U.S. military base, was in a place which the U.S.
Government had decreed was not the United States at all. It was a
no-man’s land, free of any law or authority other than the
unconstrained will of U.S. political leaders. Shortly after his
arrival, the Bush administration — guided
by
then-Vice President Dick Cheney, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
and his deputy Paul Wolfowitz, National Security Adviser Condoleezza
Rice, and Attorney General John Ashcroft — authorized the use of
multiple forms of torture that it and the U.S. press euphemistically
called “enhanced interrogation techniques.”
It
is not in dispute, because official U.S. Government documents
acknowledge it, that Slahi, along with dozens of others, was
subjected to these techniques over and over. They included prolonged
sleep deprivation, beatings and stress positions, a mock execution,
and sexual humiliation and assault.
When
he arrived at the camp, he spoke Arabic, German and French, and then
quickly learned English from his captors and interrogators. His
refuge from his hopelessness was the book he wrote, which he authored
in English. Completed in 2005, it was taken from him by camp guards
and not permitted to be published until ten years later, when it
became a global bestseller while Slahi was still consigned to a cage,
convicted of nothing and with no idea of when, if ever, he would be
freed.
Throughout
his ordeal,
all Slahi wanted, as any human would, was the opportunity to be told
of the charges against him and presented with the evidence
corroborating the accusations. But the U.S. government’s decree
that Guantánamo was foreign soil and thus free of constitutional
constraints enabled them to imprison people indefinitely with no due
process of any kind. A bipartisan law enacted by Congress in 2006
called
“the Military Commissions Act” fortified the Bush
administration’s position by barring federal courts from reviewing
any petitions brought by War on Terror detainees to have the validity
of their imprisonment legally evaluated.
In
2008, the U.S. Supreme Court — by a 5-4 majority in Boumediene
v. Bush
— ruled
that the Guantánamo military base was under U.S. sovereignty and the
U.S. Constitution thus governed what the U.S. Government could and
could not do there. As a result, detainees such as Slahi finally
earned the right to petition federal courts for release on the ground
that they were being wrongfully imprisoned, based on the
constitutional guarantee of habeas
corpus.
Unlike
prior prisoner of war camps, filled with uniformed soldiers arrested
on a battlefield, Slahi, like so many War on Terror detainees, was
arrested at home, far from any war zone, as part of a “war” that
was widely recognized from the start would likely be eternal and
where the “battlefield” was designated as the entire planet.
Whatever one’s views of the War on Terror, indefinite
imprisonment under such circumstances was fundamentally different
from the traditional prisoner-of-war framework. Empowering a
government to detain, kidnap and imprison anyone it wants from
anywhere in the world obviously presents a whole new set of potential
abuses.
In
2010 — eight full years after he was first arrested and imprisoned
at the behest of the U.S. Government — Slahi was finally able to
have his day in court. In a meticulous review of the allegations and
evidence presented against him by the Obama DOJ, federal judge James
Robertson concluded that the evidence was insufficient to warrant his
ongoing detention. A major part of the ruling
was the U.S. Government’s own acknowledgement that many of the
statements on which it was relying were ones it extracted from Slahi
under torture:
There
is ample evidence in this record that Slahi was subjected to
extensive and severe mistreatment at Guantanamo from mid-June 2003 to
September 2003…. The government acknowledges that Slahi’s abusive
treatment could diminish the reliability of some of his statements.
The
huge irony of the government’s allegations that he was affiliated
with al-Qaida was that much of the case against him was based on his
decision to go to Afghanistan in 1990 to fight with the Mujahideen.
For more than a decade — including when Slahi went — the U.S.
Government was one of the prime allies and sponsors of this fighting
force, using it as a proxy army against the invading Soviet army in
Afghanistan and then, after the Soviet withdrawal, to topple the
communist government it left in place. Underscoring this irony is
that one of the first military guards at Guantánamo with whom Slahi
interacted was stationed at the same Mujahideen training camp in
Afghanistan where Slahi was first assigned upon his arrival there.
When
he decided to join the Mujahideen, Slahi was in West Germany, where
he had been given a scholarship to study engineering due to his
excelling academically as a teenager in Mauritania. When I asked him
what motivated him to leave his studies at the age of 21 to go fight
in Afghanistan, he explained that at the time the Mujahideen was
considered “cool” throughout the west, the way for young Muslim
men to fight against Soviet and imperialist domination. Indeed,
throughout the 1980s and into the early 1990s, Reagan, Bush 41 and
Clinton officials, as well as right-wing members of Congress,
frequently heralded the Mujahideen as heroic “freedom fighters,”
and were regarded by the west as important allies.
That
this
association
of Slahi’s from ten years earlier became the foundation of the U.S.
Government’s accusation that he was an anti-American terrorist who
must be imprisoned indefinitely highlighted the absurdity of U.S.
foreign policy and its arbitrary ability overnight to declare freedom
fighters to be terrorists, or allies to be monstrous enemies, and
vice-versa (similar to how Saddam’s “gassing of his own people”
became the 2002 mantra to justify regime change and war even though
Saddam’s chemical assault on the Kurds occurred when he was a close
U.S. ally).
Slahi
terminated his relationship with the Mujahideen when he left
Afghanistan in 1992, but various associations that he maintained, as
well a two-month stay in Canada in 1999, were used by the U.S.
Government to claim that he was still working on behalf of
“jihadists.” But the court found the evidence woefully inadequate
to justify the allegations:
A
habeas court may not permit a man to be held indefinitely upon
suspicion, or because of the government’s prediction that he may do
unlawful acts in the future – any more than a habeas court may rely
upon its prediction that a man will not be dangerous in the future
and order his release if he was lawfully detained in the first place.
The question, upon which the government had the burden of proof, was
whether, at the time of his capture, Slahi was a “part of”
al-Qaida. On the record before me, I cannot find that he was.
Despite
that resounding 2010 judicial exoneration, Slahi did not leave
Guantánamo until six
years later,
in 2016. In part that was because President Obama — who so
flamboyantly campaigned in 2008 on the promise to close the camp —
instead had his Justice Department appeal the ruling in Slahi’s
favor in order to keep him encaged. The appellate court then ruled in
favor of the Obama DOJ, concluding that there were flaws in the
process. The court ordered a new habeas
corpus review,
but it never came. Instead, a Pentagon review board concluded six
years later, in 2016, that he could be safely released.
Even
when he finally left the camp, after fourteen years in
due-process-free captivity, Slahi was not fully free. The U.S.
conditioned his release on the agreement of the compliant regime in
Mauritania that it would seize his passport and not permit him to
travel outside the country. As a result, almost twenty years after
his multi-nation nightmare began, his liberty is still radically
restricted despite never having been charged with, let alone
convicted of, any crime. His mother died while he was imprisoned, and
he has a young son in Germany who he cannot travel to see.
My
interview with Slahi, who I have found to be a fascinating person
since I first spoke with him several years ago, can be seen below. It
is part of the SYSTEM UPDATE YouTube program I launched last year but
put on hiatus while I built this platform. At the start of the video,
I spent roughly fifteen minutes discussing my reaction to the
discussion I had with him and the reasons I find his perspective so
important, so the interview itself begins at roughly the 15:00 mark.
For
reasons I cannot quite fathom, Slahi has managed to avoid a life
filled with bitterness, rage and a desire for vengeance over what was
done to him. He has started a family and re-created his life as a
father, a novelist, and an evangelist for humanitarianism and peace
in a way that is genuine, profound and inspiring: everything but
banal and contrived. Judge for yourself by listening to him. Among
other things, he established contact with an American guard he had
seen almost every day in the early years of his Guantánamo detention
and then befriended, and invited him to Mauritania where the two had
an unlikely but remarkable reunion.
I
believe as a general proposition that the more the world hears from
Slahi, the better (you can follow him on Twitter here).
But particularly now, with Democrats and their neocon allies who
spawned the first War on Terror eplicitly
plotting
how to launch a second one, this time with a domestic focus, it is
more important than ever to understand in the most visceral ways
possible how arbitrary power of this kind ends up at least as
dangerous and destructive as the enemy invoked to justify their
adoption in the first place.
=============================
* Zie: ‘Guantanamo Bay gevangene (onschuldig) schrijft brief aan VS president Biden‘
Zie ook: ‘Guantanamo Bay, de schande van de VS, 10 jaar na de belofte deze illegale gevangenis te sluiten‘
‘De roep om censuur na de stormloop op het Capitol zal ook links keihard treffen‘ (en zie de links in dat bericht, o.a. over de afbraak van burgerrechten door de Coronacrisis)
‘Guantanamo Bay, de schande van de VS, 10 jaar na de belofte deze illegale gevangenis te sluiten‘
‘9/11: de teller voor het aantal door VS/NAVO gedode mensen staat intussen op meer dan 2,5 miljoen‘
(en zie de links in dat bericht naar meer artikelen over 9/11) (de 2,5
miljoen vermoorde mensen vormen een oud cijfer dat na onderzoek intussen is
bijgesteld naar 5 miljoen…..)
‘BBC met uiterst hypocriete anti-Taliban propaganda‘ (en zie de links in dat bericht naar artikelen over westerse ‘moordpartijen’ in Afghanistan)
‘Roemenië en Litouwen faciliteerden geheime CIA gevangenis………‘
‘VS wordt eindelijk aangeklaagd voor oorlogsmisdaden bij Internationaal Strafhof (ICC)‘ (maar helaas…..)
En wat betreft de oorlog tegen terreur (war on terror) zie o.a.: ‘VS belastingbetalers geven per dag $ 250 miljoen uit aan ‘oorlog tegen terreur…..’ Daarom moeten wij meer uitgeven aan defensie………..‘ (!!!!)
Voor meer berichten over de oorlog tegen terreur (war on terror), klik op dat label, direct onder dit bericht.