Here it comes: with the bizarre "rape-no rape" charges against
Julian Assange, the War Machine's assault against Wikileaks has now
begun in earnest.
These days, the powers-that-be don't go straight to the shiv in the
back or the poison in the drink or the faked suicide or the tragic car
accident on a dark road; no, today we are a bit more circumspect in
taking down high-profile irritants of empire. The modern way is to begin
the takedown with a smear campaign -- preferably some sort of ""moral
turpitude" to sully their public image and discredit their entire cause.
And so on late Friday we had the announcement that Swedish
authorities had issued an arrest warrant for Wikileaks founder Julian
Assange on charges of rape and molestation. This was followed a few
hours later -- after Wikileaks mounted a ferocious defense against the
charges, and promised to carry on with its work regardless -- by a
sudden decision to withdraw the warrant, with officials now saying the
rape charge was unfounded -- although they said nothing about the lesser
charge of molestation, leaving that vague but turpitudishly resonant
charge hanging in the air for the moment.
This rigmarole is about as blatant a smear as can be imagined,
coming as it does just after the Obama Administration has been caught
out in an outright lie about Wikileaks attempts to redact its next
release of classified war documents to ensure that no Afghans named in
the papers will be put at risk. Not only has the Peace Laureate's
minions been lying about Wikileaks' earnest efforts in the regard, but
this deceit has been actively abetted by the New York Times, whose own
reporter passed along Wikileaks' offer to the Pentagon -- then publicly
dismissed the claim that Wikileaks had made the good-faith offer. (Glenn Greenwald has the story on this
egregious -- if depressingly standard -- malefaction by the imperial
servitors in the media.)
Wikileaks made the offer to ward off the criticism it received after
the last release; i.e., that it had "blood on its hands" because Afghan
insurgents would strike at any Afghans named in the documents as
cooperating with the occupation forces. This "blood libel" was trumpeted
all over the media by Obama officials -- while their own hands were
absolutely pouring with the blood of innocent Afghans murdered at their
command. The fact is, of course, that not a single case of such
retribution has been reported; and the charge itself is based on the
ludicrous assumption that the Taliban does not already know who is
cooperating with the occupation forces. (In any case, many if not most
Afghans cooperating with Americans do it quite openly, as part of the
Afghan government, for example, or in liaising with military commanders
in their region, or working for the occupation's vast base-building
projects, distribution networks and reconstruction programs, etc.)
Indeed, many of the proponents of Obama's "surge" in assassination
liken it -- favorably! -- to the murderous Phoenix Program in Vietnam directed by
the CIA, which killed at least 20,000 people, by the Agency's own
admission. (Other, more independent examinations put the the true death
count of those slaughtered in these non-combat, "extrajudicial killings"
at in the range of 40,000 to 70,000. For more on the Phoenix Program,
and on Obama's grand "continuity" with imperial atrocities past, see here.) As Chatterjee notes:
President Obama has, by all accounts, expanded military intelligence gathering and “capture/kill” programs globally in tandem with an escalation of drone-strike operations by the CIA.
There are quite a few outspoken supporters of the “capture/kill” doctrine. Columbia University Professor Austin Long is one academic who has jumped on the F3EA bandwagon. Noting its similarity to the Phoenix assassination program, responsible for tens of thousands of deaths during the U.S. war in Vietnam (which he defends), he has called for a shrinking of the U.S. military “footprint” in Afghanistan to 13,000 Special Forces troops who would focus exclusively on counter-terrorism, particularly assassination operations. “Phoenix suggests that intelligence coordination and the integration of intelligence with an action arm can have a powerful effect on even extremely large and capable armed groups,” he and his co-author William Rosenau wrote in a July 2009 Rand Institute monograph entitled” “The Phoenix Program and Contemporary Counterinsurgency.”
Others are even more aggressively inclined. Lieutenant George Crawford, who retired from the position of “lead strategist” for the Special Forces Command to go work for Archimedes Global, Inc., a Washington consulting firm, has suggested that F3EA be replaced by one term: “Manhunting.” In a monograph published by the Joint Special Operations University in September 2009, “Manhunting: Counter-Network Organization for Irregular Warfare,” Crawford spells out “how to best address the responsibility to develop manhunting as a capability for American national security.”
This then is where we are. We have the President of the United States --
who has already openly proclaimed his "right" to assassinate anyone
on earth, including American citizens, without the slightest due
process of law, simply at his arbitrary command -- now feverishly
expanding the use of death squads, whose stealthy night raids on
sleeping villages have already killed a vast number of innocent
civilians in Afghanistan (as the Wikileaks documents show). This same
administration is now running "black ops," secret armies, proxy wars and
other covert activities in more than 75 countries around the world.
That is to say, the Obama Administration is now murdering people in
their beds, fomenting bloody ethnic conflict, supporting and/or carrying
out acts of terrorism, spreading corruption, assisting dictators,
arming warlords, spreading hate and suffering all over the world -- and
doing it knowingly, proudly. ("Evil in broad daylight" indeed, as Arthur Silber details here.)
And these are the moral paragons who have now turned their
machinery of lies and smears against Wikileaks. For make no mistake;
although the rape charges were manufactured in Sweden -- which,
incidentally, is where some of Wikileaks' servers are located -- they
emanate from the proud deathlords in Washington. Indeed, didn't we hear
just a few weeks ago that the Peace Laureate's people had launched a
campaign of pressuring foreign governments to put fetters on Assange and
his organization? Now Sweden's center-right government -- no, Rush,
Sweden is no longer the super-socialist fairyland of your nightmares --
has obviously hearkened to the master's voice.
But although this first foray has been rebuffed, it is certain that
what we are seeing is the beginning of a concerted effort to destroy
Assange as a public figure and thereby discredit the work of Wikileaks
-- and by extension, the truth of its revelations.
And smearing, of course, is just the first step. If that doesn't
work ... well, the avowed and openly proclaimed proponents of
assassination certainly have other, more "prejudicial" methods at their disposal,
nicht war?
II.
John Pilger, writing before this latest assault, speaks
strongly about the need to defend and support Wikileaks' mission. Of
course, no one has spoken more eloquently, insightfully and to the point
on this issue than Arthur Silber, whose multi-part series on the manifold
implications of Wikileaks' efforts is absolutely essential reading. (See
also here and here.)
I'd like to take this chance to say that I now believe that my
initial response to Wikileaks' Afghan Papers release (see here) was almost entirely wrong. I
fell into the all-too-common trap of discussing the issue in the terms
that power itself had set: i.e, how the revelations could be spun by the
War Machine for its advantage, instead of standing back and seeing the
larger picture of just what such an act of defiance -- unstoppable due
to its invisible dissemination via the internet -- really meant. Yet
Silber wisely pointed out a salient fact of our time: that our warlords
will use anything and everything -- and nothing at all -- to
advance their agenda. The substance of any given story doesn't matter to
them: they will spin it into a reason to continue the Terror War and
the agenda of domination. But this basic truth somehow escaped me.
I seized upon the very first stories in the mainstream press about
the leaks, noting -- with righteous fury -- that they told us nothing we
had not already heard before. I was writing literally within a
couple of hours of the first look at a gargantuan storehouse of 92,000
documents -- yet I was certain that I knew just what the trove
contained, and what it meant. I downplayed their significance, tossing
off the "savvy" observation that these were "no Pentagon Papers." But
scant hours after this confident proclamation, there was the man behind
the Pentagon Papers himself, Daniel Ellsberg, making precisely that
comparison.
With a hasty, thoughtless rush to judgment -- and with a focus far
too fixed on the "media narrative," and on the need to get my uniformed
opinion out there -- I did what I now feel was a great disservice to an
event that was in fact a significant blow against the empire; a
significance confirmed by the empire's panicked reaction to it.
It is easy to sit on the sidelines and pontificate. Over the years,
I've spoken out as forthrightly as I know how, but I'm no activist, I
haven't risked much; all it has cost me is a few journalism gigs. But
the people at Wikileaks are putting their liberties -- and their lives
-- on the line, to take practical action to try to bring some of the
horrors of the Terror War to an end. It's not a question of
romanticizing any one organization, or any one man, seeing them as
paragons whose every action or statement is sacrosanct; nobody needs
that, and it never accomplishes anything. It just gets in the way of the
task at hand.
But when people are putting everything on the line to stand up
against the ravages of power -- against war, against aggression, against
assassination and atrocity -- then I want to stand with those people,
and stand by those people. As the old gospel song says, "I want
to be there in that number."
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