Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Bahrain protests: Will the house of Khalifa fall like a house of cards?


Bahrain protests: Will the house of Khalifa fall like a house of cards?

Anti-government protesters holding Bahraini flags march along the streets of the village of Saar during an anti-government protest, west of Manama, August 14, 2013 (Reuters / Hamad I Mohammed)
Anti-government protesters holding Bahraini flags march along the streets of the village of Saar during an anti-government protest, west of Manama, August 14, 2013 (Reuters / Hamad I Mohammed)

Mass protests in Bahrain are by no means a sectarian conflict, though they threaten to further entrench political polarization and serve as an ugly thorn in the Bahraini monarchy’s side unless they hear the popular calls for constitutional reform.
Despite Bahraini PM Sheikh al-Khalifa’s warning to pro-democracy activists that they face longer prison sentences and the stripping of their citizenship if they take part in August 14’s scheduled opposition rally, protesters are expected to take to the streets en masse. 
The tiny island nation has seen near-daily protests and skirmishes between demonstrators and security forces since the regional Arab Spring protests in 2011, and the US-allied monarchy has responded with draconian measures that ban public demonstrations in the capital, Manama. The ongoing protest movement, which has been secular and largely peaceful, brought more than half the country’s 535,000 citizens onto the streets at its peak, but attracted minimal levels of attention from international media outlets. The scant coverage of the subsequent crackdown by Bahraini authorities, which included the military occupation of a public hospital and the arrest of doctors who treated injured protesters, has led many to suggest that Western and Gulf media outlets have been complicit in the monarchy’s efforts to suppress news of protests coming out of the country. 
The brute heavy-handedness of the monarchy, which led to the deaths of some 80 people since 2011, may have driven people into their homes and discouraged them from speaking out, but public animosity toward the reactionary regime shows no sign of letting up. 
The 229-year-old royal dynasty was so shaken to its core by the groundswell of Arab Spring protests that it declared an 11-week-long period of martial law, and called upon Saudi Arabia to militarily intervene under the banner of the GCC Peninsula Shield Force, which sent 1,500 troops into Bahrain to crush the pro-democracy rallies. 
Reports issued by the US State Department, as well as Bahrain’s own Independent Commission of Inquiry – commissioned by King Hamad Khalifa –  confirm that peaceful protesters were subjected to unwarranted detention and torture while in custody . To get an idea of just what kind of regime this is, reports also indicate that members of the royal family directly took part in torturing activists. Protesters have reportedly cited the recent toppling of Mohamad Morsi in Egypt as a source of inspiration for the August 14 rally, which merits a closer look at the two main lines of thinking among Bahrain’s opposition.

Constitutional monarchy vs. Republic

Worsening social and political conditions have fuelled the momentum for change, and while the royal establishment owns some $40 billion in public assets and lives in grandeur, the majority of the population face a stagnate economic climate with limited job opportunities. 
Around 70 percent of the population follows the Shia sect of Islam, while the royalty are minority Sunnis, and much like other Arab Spring protests, the youth that took to the streets are Internet-savvy, largely unaffiliated to political parties, and evenly composed of both Shia and Sunnis despite the monarchy’s assertions that the demonstrations were a seditious Shia plot to grab power. 
The opposition body with the highest levels of public support is the al-Wifaq National Islamic Society, which controls 17 out of 40 seats in the Bahraini parliament (the lower half of parliament is elected while the King appoints the upper half.) Al-Wifaq seeks to adopt a new constitution that would transform Bahrain into a constitutional monarchy that elects its decision makers by the ballot box, and although the leaders of the group are Shia, both Sunni and Shia, along with men and women from all walks of life have supported the group.
Alternatively, the Coalition for a Republic aims to totally dismantle the royal hereditary establishment and install a republic, which is much less likely to happen given the regime’s monopoly over the use of force. 
What both blocs have in common is the desire to restructure the long existing sectarian political arrangement that allows the Shia majority to be ruled by the Sunni minority. 
However, this is by no means a sectarian conflict on the ground, in fact it is much to the contrary. Protesters have popularly rejected sectarian divisions and many Sunnis have also taken part in demonstrations – common Bahraini national identity is a more significant unifying factor among the people. 
Though sectarian differences are not a huge factor in streets, much of the Shia majority have fallen victim to a two-tier citizenship system that gives Sunnis preferential treatment in terms of employment, allowing them to ascend the economic ladder with greater ease. The monarchy has taken advantage of the protests to crack down on Shia clerics and destroy dozens of Shia places of worship, which has been met with acquiescence in the West due to the US-educated King Hamad playing up the ‘Iranian threat’.
An armoured personnel carrier is seen by the side of a road during the early hours of the evening in Manama August 13, 2013 (Reuters / Hamad I Mohammed)
An armoured personnel carrier is seen by the side of a road during the early hours of the evening in Manama August 13, 2013 (Reuters / Hamad I Mohammed)

King Hamad’s geopolitical trump card

The way the United States makes its foreign policy decisions has a lot to do with where each individual country stands on the question of US dominance: countries that oppose a US military presence on their territory and reject the unregulated brand of capitalism espoused by Washington will likely see their human rights abuses make headlines, and their leaders characterized in a derogatory way. Countries that do their part to enable US interests and acquiesce to the Washington consensus, meanwhile, are usually given immunity when they commit human rights abuses, and protection from being toppled. 
King Hamad knows the rules of the game, and he’s playing them well – the next-in-line “reformist” Crown Prince Salman bin Issa has already taken the initiative by championing the normalization of ties with Israel. Bahrain hosts the headquarters of the US Fifth Fleet, has a free trade agreement with the US, and is a vital geopolitical access point and oil transit hub that Washington isn’t going to risk losing. The main reason the Western media has been so quiet about Bahrain is because a new regime would engender huge strategic risks for Washington and the entire GCC.
The main fear is that if the al-Wifaq National Islamic Society or any other Shi’a majority body came to power, Bahrain would drift into Iran’s orbit, thereby undermining the Sunni-monarchies in the GCC and tilting the geopolitical balance of the region in Tehran’s favor. Al-Wifaq’s spiritual leader, Ayatollah Sheikh Issa Qassim, spent time studying in Iran’s holy city Qom and there is little doubt that the Shia clerical establishment would back Tehran if it gained greater influence over the political direction of the country. Saudi Arabia, which has invested billions into little Bahrain, isn’t going to let such a shift take place. For royalty in the Persian Gulf, the anti-monarchy Iranian Revolution is an anathema, and if one of the GCC countries sent its monarchy packing, the fear is that it would inspire a domino effect, especially in eastern Saudi Arabia’s oil-rich Shia-majority province. 
The irony is that while King Hamad and the royal establishment has been crying foul over covert Iranian attempts to destabilize the monarchy, Bahrain’s own Independent Commission of Inquiry report explicitly notes the lack of evidence to implicate Iran in fomenting or assisting any demonstrations that have taken place.

Learning from the past

Bahrain was rocked by similar protests throughout the 1990s; the aim at that time was the reinstatement of parliament, which had been dissolved since 1975, and the restoration of the national assembly. The reactionary monarchy sluggishly refused even the slightest modicum of reform, and ruled with impunity by subjecting any dissenters to indefinite detention. It was only until critical mass built that King Hamad, who was new at the time, made political reforms and eventually passed the National Action Charter, a document that returned the country to constitutional rule, modestly lifted the security apparatus, and allowed for members of the lower parliament to be elected. 
The unexceptional series of reforms still granted absolute power to the king, but they stabilized the country and satisfied the people’s demands for a time. The current climate in Bahrain is such that making popular reforms in-line with a constitutional monarchy would actually be in the regime’s interests, because continuing an unpopular political regime that the majority of citizens reject will only threaten the economy and long-term stability in the country. It would be great if hereditary rule came to an end in Bahrain, but incremental moves toward a constitutional monarchy is the only realistic direction that one could expect. So far, there is no indication that the regime will yield, and every reason to expect that the next wave of protests will see unwarranted mass arrests, torture, and probably some casualties – and Uncle Sam’s lips will be sealed. 
The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.

‘Unprecedented’ Israeli settlement expansion could sink Palestinian peace talks

‘Unprecedented’ Israeli settlement expansion could sink Palestinian peace talks

A labourer works on a construction site in Pisgat Zeev, an urban settlement in an area Israel annexed to Jerusalem after capturing it in the 1967 Middle East war August 12, 2013.(Reuters / Amir Cohen)
A labourer works on a construction site in Pisgat Zeev, an urban settlement in an area Israel annexed to Jerusalem after capturing it in the 1967 Middle East war August 12, 2013.(Reuters / Amir Cohen)

Israel has released 26 Palestinian prisoners on the eve of renewed Middle East peace negotiations. But Israel’s earlier announcement of new settlements for the West Bank and east Jerusalem challenges the outcome of the US-backed talks.
Israel released 26 Palestinian prisoners Tuesday night, as a sign of good will. Eleven men were transported to the West Bank and 15 to Gaza. The buses bound for the Palestinian territories were greeted by thousands of supporters. 
Celebrations in honor of the prisoners exploded in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, where crowds gathered to greet their heroes. Fireworks erupted in Gaza, where both Hamas and Fatah supporters, danced and drummed the night away.

Ramallah too became a huge scene for celebration where the released prisoners were greeted by Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas at the presidential compound.  The men also laid a wreath at the resting place of Palestinian President Yasser Arafat. 
Palestinians prisoners released by Israel are greeted by relatives at the Palestinian President's headquarters in the West Bank city of Ramallah, August 14, 2013. (AFP Photo / Ahmad Gharabli)
Palestinians prisoners released by Israel are greeted by relatives at the Palestinian President's headquarters in the West Bank city of Ramallah, August 14, 2013. (AFP Photo / Ahmad Gharabli)

Abbas addressed the crowds and congratulated the prisoners saying that he will "not rest until they are all released." There are about 4,500 Palestinians in Israeli jails, of which Israel promised to release 104 people. "You are just the beginning and the rest will come," Abbas said.
Palestinian prisoners freed from Israeli detention are greeted in the city of Ramallah on August 14, 2013. (AFP Photo / Abbas Momani)
Palestinian prisoners freed from Israeli detention are greeted in the city of Ramallah on August 14, 2013. (AFP Photo / Abbas Momani)

In other key developments US Secretary of State John Kerry, one of the architect of the negotiations, said he had “frank and open” discussions over the phone about settlements with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
US chief diplomat urged Israel not to make settlements announcements while diplomatic process is underway but he doesn't think they threaten the second round of talks scheduled for Wednesday in Jerusalem.

Speaking at a press conference in Brazil, Kerry also said that Palestinian Authority President, Mahmoud Abbas “is committed to continuing to come to the negotiation because he believes that negotiation is what will resolve this issue."

"Let me make it clear. The policy of the United States with respect to all settlements, is that they are illegitimate,"
 Kerry said, adding that “Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was completely up front with me and with president Abbas that he would be announcing some additional (settlement) building in places that will not affect the peace map, that will not have any impact on the capacity to have a peace agreement," the US chief diplomat said.

Earlier, a senior Palestinian authority member cautioned the Israeli plans for more housing units on Palestinian claimed land, warning that talks could collapse.

“Settlement expansion goes against the US administration's pledges and threatens to cause the negotiations' collapse,” Yasser Abed Rabbo told AFP. 
Laborers work at the construction site of a new housing project at the Jewish settlement of Gilo in Israeli annexed Arab east Jerusalem on August 12, 2013. (AFP Photo / Menahem Kahana)
Laborers work at the construction site of a new housing project at the Jewish settlement of Gilo in Israeli annexed Arab east Jerusalem on August 12, 2013. (AFP Photo / Menahem Kahana)

Abed Rabbo’s comment comes shortly after Israel’s approval of over 2,000 new settlement units on land claimed by the Palestinians as part of their future state. 
Earlier in the week, the Israeli government backed the construction of nearly 1,200 new apartments for Jewish settlements in East Jerusalem and the West Bank. On Tuesday - just a day before the scheduled new round of face-to-face talks between Israelis and Palestinians – Jerusalem’s municipality approved the construction of 942 other settlement units on the lands occupied by Israelis since the 1967 Six-Day War.

“This settlement expansion is unprecedented,” Abed Rabbo stated, adding that “it threatens to make talks fail even before they've started.”

Another Palestinian official familiar with the negotiations labeled the decision to approve “such a massive number of housing units” days before the planned gathering “as sick’’. The unnamed source, who spoke earlier with The Christian Science Monitor, added that the Palestinians “may not come” to the talks.

Three years ago, it was the dispute over the settlement building in the occupied West Bank and Jerusalem that derailed the last round of direct Israeli-Palestinian talks.

As key preconditions for the resumption of the face-to-face talks, the Palestinian leadership had demanded a halt to the settlement program and, also, the release of hundreds of inmates, many of whom have been in Israeli jails since before the 1993 Oslo Peace accords.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu rejected the full freeze. But after months of pressure from US diplomacy, Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas agreed to drop this as a condition for the resumption of peace talks, while Israel agreed to release 104 Palestinian prisoners serving long sentences. 
Protesters hold placards during a demonstration calling for the release of Israeli prisoners in response to Israel's expected release of Palestinian prisoners, outside the Ayalon prison in the city of Ramle near Tel Aviv August 13, 2013.(Reuters / Amir Cohen)
Protesters hold placards during a demonstration calling for the release of Israeli prisoners in response to Israel's expected release of Palestinian prisoners, outside the Ayalon prison in the city of Ramle near Tel Aviv August 13, 2013.(Reuters / Amir Cohen)

The decision to free the prisoners is unpopular in the country, as many of them are considered terrorists in Israel. The announcement was followed by two days of protests by victims’ relatives outside the Defense Ministry in Tel Aviv. According to Haaretz, 21 in the group were convicted of killing Israelis or collaborating with Palestinian militants, while others were involved in attempted murder or kidnapping.   
In their homeland, by contrast, the convicts are seen as heroes and their release scores political points to Abbas. However, the Palestinian leadership is reportedly not completely satisfied with the decision.  

Abbas and Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat were particularly angered by reports in the Israeli media that because of their perceived security risk, some of the prisoners released in the next three phases will be deported to the Gaza Strip or abroad and not allowed to return to their homes in the West Bank, Haaretz writes. The paper, citing senior Israeli and Palestinian officials, writes that the Palestinian leadership told the US they would not agree to the deportation.

The direct Israeli-Palestinian talks are expected to start on Wednesday, with Israeli Justice Minister Tzipi Livni meeting Palestinian Erekat in Jerusalem's King David Hotel. The talks will be moderated by US envoy Martin Indyk. 



No to killer drones: UN chief calls for UAV surveillance use only

No to killer drones: UN chief calls for UAV surveillance use only

A Pakistani youth holds a banner as he protests against US drone strikes. (AFP Photo / Arif Ali)
A Pakistani youth holds a banner as he protests against US drone strikes. (AFP Photo / Arif Ali)

UN chief Ban Ki-moon said drones should be used for surveillance only, and those countries using armed UAVs must act within international law. Ban delivered his comments in Pakistan, where US drone strikes have killed thousands, including many civilians.
“The only goal of unarmed aircrafts is photography. Their use as a weapon must be subject to international humanitarian law,” the UN Secretary General was quoted as saying on Tuesday by AFP.

He noted that his words represented a “very clear position” from the UN, stressing that the organization expects those countries deploying drones to follow the law.

“Every effort should be made to avoid mistakes and civilian casualties,” he added.

Ban addressed the controversial aircraft while visiting the National University of Science and Technology in Islamabad, where he cut a symbolic ribbon opening the university-based International Center for Peace and Stability.

Ban’s words were met with applause, as Pakistani officials and activists have repeatedly condemned drone strikes on the country’s territory as a violation of its sovereignty and international law. A high court in Pakistan decided in May that the US-launched attacks should be considered war crimes and advised the country’s Foreign Ministry to file a resolution against them in the UN.
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon (C) is flanked by Pakistan's army chief General Ashfaq Kayani (L) and Pakistan's Adviser for National Security and Foreign Affairs, Sartaj Aziz in Islamabad on August 13, 2013. (AFP Photo / Aamir Qureshi)
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon (C) is flanked by Pakistan's army chief General Ashfaq Kayani (L) and Pakistan's Adviser for National Security and Foreign Affairs, Sartaj Aziz in Islamabad on August 13, 2013. (AFP Photo / Aamir Qureshi)

The strikes, hundreds of which have been carried out by the CIA since 2004, are viewed by Washington as an important tool in the fight against Al-Qaeda and Taliban militants. The US has long claimed that such targeted assassinations result in “exceedingly rare” civilian fatalities.

But a recent report by the British Bureau of Investigative Journalism, which is said to be based on a leaked data from internal documents compiled by Pakistani officials, has revealed that one in five victims of US precision strikes in the period from 2006 to 2009 were confirmed as civilians.

The leaked classified data builds upon 75 CIA drone strikes in northwest Pakistan, stating that of 746 people killed in those strikes, 147 were identified as civilian victims, including 94 children.

The US Secretary of State John Kerry on August 1 said that President Obama has “a very real timeline”of drone strikes in Pakistan, adding that he hopes the attacks will soon end. Earlier this year, a senior US senator Lindsey Graham admitted that about 4,700 people have been killed in American targeted killings, not specifying the extent of civilian casualties.

Meanwhile, Ban Ki-moon’s visit also came amid heightened tensions between Pakistan and India over the disputed territory of Kashmir and reports of clashes along the Line of Control – the de facto border monitored by UN observers that divides the region.

While Pakistan and India have been trading accusations of cross-border fire, Sharif also attempted to lower the temperature of previously published statements, calling on his neighbor for a “new beginning” in relations.
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon cuts the ribbon during the Inauguration Ceremony of the Centre for International Peace and Stability at the National University of Sciences and Techonology in Islamabad on August 13, 2013.(AFP Photo / Aamir Qureshi)
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon cuts the ribbon during the Inauguration Ceremony of the Centre for International Peace and Stability at the National University of Sciences and Techonology in Islamabad on August 13, 2013.(AFP Photo / Aamir Qureshi)

‘Climate of Islamophobia’: Two attackers rip veil off French girl

‘Climate of Islamophobia’: Two attackers rip veil off French girl

AFP Photo / Bertrand Langlois

A 16-year old girl was attacked in Paris suburb and had the Islamic veil she was wearing torn from her face. As anti-Islamic attacks in France soar, a French Muslim leader condemned the ‘climate of Islamophobia’ and urged the government to act.
The teenager was leaving a friend’s house in Trappes at about 5:45 pm, when she was attacked by two “European looking” men, one of whom was also described as having a shaven head.   
Her assailants then shouted anti-Muslim and racist abuse at her while brandishing a box cutter, before tearing off her veil, pushing her to the ground and hitting her. 
A third man intervened saving the girl and the attackers fled by car. The victim was driven to hospital in Trappes, the same blighted suburb of Paris that saw violent clashes between police and mainly Muslim youths last month. 
A source told the newspaper le Parisien that she was treated for “light scratch marks” on her face and throat. She reported the incident to the police on Tuesday. 
The French Interior Minister Manuel Valls was quick to condemn the attack.
“I severely condemn this newest demonstration of anti-Muslim hatred and intolerance. Police services have been fully mobilized so that the authors of this unacceptable attack are identified, found, arrested and handed over to the courts,” he said. 
This latest attack is one of many anti-Muslim incidents in France, which have risen by 60% in recent months. 
There were two days of rioting in Trappes in July after a woman in full Islamic head gear was stopped by police. While in June, a Muslim woman allegedly had a miscarriage after being assaulted by skinheads in Argenteuil, although it was not clear if the attack was the direct cause of the loss of her baby. This came just three weeks after another attack on a veiled woman in Argenteuil.  
French policemen from the anti-crime unit (BAC) patrol in the streets on July 20, 2013 in Trappes, a suburb of Paris. Violent clashes erupted between citizens and French police late on July 18, 2013 after police officers carried out an identity check on a full-face veiled woman and her husband. (AFP Photo / Miguel Medina)
French policemen from the anti-crime unit (BAC) patrol in the streets on July 20, 2013 in Trappes, a suburb of Paris. Violent clashes erupted between citizens and French police late on July 18, 2013 after police officers carried out an identity check on a full-face veiled woman and her husband. (AFP Photo / Miguel Medina)

Also on Tuesday a man was arrested in the southern city of Avignon for writing anti-Islamic slogans on several buildings including the Palais des Papes, a Unesco World heritage Site. 
The spike in hate crimes against Muslims in France has led to Kamel Kabtane, the rector of the Grand mosque in Lyon, to urge the government of President Francoise Hollande to take “serious measures” to counter the rising tide of Islamophobia in France. 
Addressing over 100 supporters who were gathered outside the Forkane mosque in Venissieux, a suburb of Lyon, he spoke of his extreme concern for the arrest of a soldier, who was detained at the Mont Verdan airbase last Wednesday for allegedly planning a series of terrorist attacks against the Forkane mosque. 
“The fact that a soldier has been arrested for a terrorist plot shows a climate of Islamophoboia reigns in France today, we cannot deny it." 
He added that the presence of such “back sheep” in the army was proof that it has been “infected” by the extreme right. 
The vice president of the far right party the National Front was quick to contradict the Muslim cleric’s words. 
He said on the French TV that Kabtane’s comments “didn’t make sense.”
“Does this mean that one day the French people woke up and said ‘today I will be intolerant?’” he said, adding that the French “are a welcoming people but we hate communitarianism,” in an apparent reference to minority groups in French society.
Rabia, 17, a veiled woman victim of agression in the street on May 20, speaks during a press conference on June 22, 2013 in Argenteuil, Paris suburb. (AFP Photo / Miguel Medina)
Rabia, 17, a veiled woman victim of agression in the street on May 20, speaks during a press conference on June 22, 2013 in Argenteuil, Paris suburb. (AFP Photo / Miguel Medina)

Gunboat diplomacy: How US military support aids Bahrain’s dictatorship

Gunboat diplomacy: How US military support aids Bahrain’s dictatorship


For now, Bahrain is where America wants to stay, crushing the hopes and dreams of anyone wanting an “Arab Spring” in the Persian Gulf.
One of the largest warships in the world, the USS Nimitz, docked in the Persian Gulf country of Bahrain in the past few days. The timing is instructive – pro-democracy protestors are preparing to demonstrate for human rights in the capital, Manama. The Nimitz, lead Flat-top of President Obama’s Carrier Strike Group 11, rolled into harbor as if to say out loud: “The United States will not tolerate democracy in this island kingdom, home to the US Fifth Fleet. The USA supports the dictatorship installed here in the 18th century.” 
Confident of American support, the dictatorial Bahraini regime soon prepared deportation orders for an American human rights activist, Erin Kilbride. This month, Bahrain’s King introduced new legislation to stifle dissent. Amnesty International called the decrees “draconian measures [that] will be used in an attempt to legitimize state violence as new protests are being planned for 14 August.”
It is no surprise that US President Barack Obama continues to support anti-democratic regimes: the hallmark of his presidency has been double talk. For his political base, there is rhetorical flourish penned by his speechwriters – usually paeans to the virtues of democracy. Yet simultaneously, Obama uses federal agencies to fight unconstitutional wars against Americans and ever more brutal terror abroad against the weak, the poor and those fighting for democracy. The result of foreign policy made by Democrats in the 21st century Oval Office is clear to see: America had to shut down around 20 of its embassies for fear of attack from Al-Qaeda – groups that the USA has given succor to, via their military policies in Syria, Pakistan, Yemen and Afghanistan. 
It is now well known – except perhaps to the media-tranquilized swathes of America’s heartland – that US policy consistently supports nebulous militancy under the banner of Al Qaeda. And it has done so since the 1980s. But President Obama’s de facto support for Al-Qaeda today has reached new dimensions. Washington is now not only recruitment sergeant for the perpetrators of 9/11, it is now active in doing the public relations, strategic planning and even resource provision for “Al Qaeda,” too. As the USA, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and Qatar attempt to destabilize the secular government of Syria, so do their weapons end up in the hands of those who wish to do harm to America and Americans. That is why so many US ambassadors had to run for the hills in the past few days.
As yet, there is no provision for “pivoting” US policy away from supporting those who wish for either an international Caliphate or perpetual royal dictatorships in the energy-rich Middle East. There are now no moves to reposition the US Fifth Fleet base. And while Bahrain’s people may weep, it is at least a bonus for Africa. For some time now, Obama’s neocon National Security Advisor Susan Rice has cast a shadow over Africa, with rumored plans of the Fifth Fleet boosting the Italian-based Sixth Fleet. The intention was to prop up Washington’s continuing destabilization efforts courtesy of US Africa Command (AFRICOM). But for now, Bahrain is where America wants to stay, crushing the hopes and dreams of anyone wanting an “Arab Spring” in the Persian Gulf.
Reuters / Hamad I Mohammed
Reuters / Hamad I Mohammed

Anti-apartheid comparisons

So what should Bahrainis, targeted by massive US military might, do to free their country from dictatorship? So far, they have opted for largely peaceful protest as their main strategy. Should they become more violent?
Peaceful protest was the strategy of the pre-Nelson Mandela African National Congress in South Africa during the fight against US- and Israeli-backed apartheid. There are parallels because South Africa had a non-white majority and Bahrain has a majority opposed to its US-backed dictators. Mandela, however, championed violence as the way to break apartheid in marked contrast to the liberal left who favored peaceful protest and trade union strike action. The rationale of the anti-apartheid protest movement before Mandela’s call to arms was that a non-white majority in South Africa could win because the people were with them. With Mandela’s rise, the armed struggle involved the killing of civilians and collaborators, employing a “by any means necessary” approach to revolution against US-backed injustice. 
Given the routine arrest, imprisonment, kidnapping and torture of Bahrainis, the tactics of the Persian Gulf’s revolutionaries are in the spotlight. Today, if Obama did not aid Bahrain’s killers, a peaceful strategy would surely still be an option. But there was a US-backed mass murder of protesters in the capital Manama in February 2011. We know from a report commissioned by the Bahraini dictatorship itself that arrests in the wake of pro-democracy protests demonstrated a pattern of behavior "designed to inspire terror in the arrested persons." 
Unsurprisingly, given US (and British) support for the killing, the report outlined the use of torture to extract confessions. Torture – as we know from the case of whistleblower Bradley Manning – is becoming a hallmark of the Obama administration. 
An unnamed former US government official quoted by the Reuters news agency has said that the military aid package Obama signed last year tends to communicate "business as usual" to Bahrain’s dictators. What does business as usual mean? Well, the US State Department said one year ago that exports of materiel to kill people in Bahrain totaled $1.4 billion since the beginning of 2000.
Since the protests began, Bernie Ecclestone’s Formula 1 Grand Prix races have been held on the island and as for Bahrain’s dictators, they were welcomed on the international stage at the White House and at Buckingham Palace.  August 14th 2013 may be one of the last times that peaceful protest can be tried as a means of catalyzing a democratic revolution in Bahrain. If the protestors are met with the violence of old then an urgent re-evaluation of the tactics of those fighting for liberty and revolution in Bahrain must surely be in order. If it is not violent insurrection, before all the country’s human rights leaders are killed or detained it might be sensible to apply a campaign of naming and shaming Bahrain’s Western friends.
Those wanting to see democracy in Bahrain could do worse than study those Western companies being paid by the regime to launder the nation’s reputation so that no one ever hears about this ongoing struggle. According to Bahrain Watch (https://bahrainwatch.org/pr/) run by Bahraini activists, since February 2011, the following firms have helped sanitize the slaughter: In London - Bell Pottinger, Cloud Media Entertainment, G3, Mark Stewart Productions, M&C Saatchi, New Century Media, Olton; In Washington - BGR Group, Hill + Knowlton Strategies, Joe Trippi & Associates, Potomac Square Group, Qorvis Communications, Sanitas International and Sorini, Samet & Associates. 
The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.

White House denies DNI Clapper will head ‘independent’ NSA review group

White House denies DNI Clapper will head ‘independent’ NSA review group

US Director of National Intelligence James Clapper.(AFP Photo / Saul Loeb)
US Director of National Intelligence James Clapper.(AFP Photo / Saul Loeb)

After insisting that the government’s unprecedented capability to monitor communications must be assessed by an independent panel with regards to maintaining the trust of Americans, President Barack Obama has announced the formation of a new review group.
A memo issued Monday by the White House said James Clapper, the United States director of national intelligence, is to form a review group tasked to determine if the US “employs its technical collection capabilities in a manner that optimally protects our national security and advances our foreign policy while appropriately accounting for other policy considerations, such as the risk of unauthorized disclosure and our need to maintain the public trust.” 
However, in a confusing turnabout, the White House said on Tuesday that Clapper is not heading the independent review.
"Director Clapper will not be a part of the group, and is not leading or directing the group’s efforts," Caitlin Hayden, a White House spokeswoman, told The Hill newspaper on Tuesday.
"The White House is selecting the members of the Review Group, consulting appropriately with the Intelligence Community," added Hayden.
Comments by the White House seemed to be aimed at distancing the review from criticism lobbed at Clapper's influence over the NSA review process despite the fact that Monday's memo indicated the report would come "through the director of national intelligence. 
The decision to formalize the board and seemingly appoint Mr. Clapper as its head comes three days after Pres. Obama called for its creation during a rare press conference and two months after National Security Agency documents were leaked to the media disclosing the NSA’s deployment of vast surveillance operations to collect data on the everyday communications of American citizens.
That revelation, attributed to former intelligence contractor Edward Snowden, initiated widespreaddiscussion in America and abroad about balancing national security with personal privacy.
But at the same time, Mr. Snowden’s disclosures also contradicted a statement made earlier this year by Clapper, which in turn prompted the director of national intelligence to issue a formal apology to high-ranking lawmaker Sen. Dianne Feinstein for lying to Congress.
During a March 2013 hearing, Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Oregon) asked DNI Clapper, “Does the NSA collect any type of data at all on millions or hundreds of millions of Americans?” Clapper responded in the negative, but was forced to correct himself when Mr. Snowden’s revelations three months later proved otherwise. The Guardian newspaper published a leaked NSA document on June 5 suggesting that millions of Americans fall subject to government surveillance on a daily basis through a program that regularly collects call records, or “telephony metadata,” for entire populations. On June 21, DNI Clapper wrote Feinstein, the chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, to apologize for his “clearly erroneous” statement on Capitol Hill.
As a result of that gaffe, Rep. Justin Amash (R-Michigan) called for Clapper’s resignation. Sen. Rand Paul (R-Kentucky) said the director broke the law, and Sen. Wyden said in a statement, “This job cannot be done responsibly if senators aren’t getting straight answers to direct questions.”
But while Clapper escaped more-or-less unscathed from what could have ended in his termination or even prosecution for perjury, his appointment to oversee a review board assigned to guide a group investigating the very topic he lied about is quickly rekindling criticism. During Friday’s presser, Mr. Obama said that in addition to establishing the review group he’d be opening up the NSA’s surveillance programs to more transparency and suggested minor reforms. The administration later published documents showing supposed legal justification for the collection of Americans’ phone records, including one white paper that claimed “the collection of bulk data is relevant to FBI investigations of international terrorism.”
Only in DC,” Guardian journalist Glenn Greenwald tweeted Monday, “James Clapper, instead of being prosecuted or fired for lying to Congress, will now lead the review of the programs he lied about.”
Jameel Jaffer, an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union and a co-plaintiff in a federal lawsuit against the government’s spy programs, tweeted the “New oversight board will be ‘independent’ in the same sense that the collected metadata is ‘relevant.’”
According to the president’s directive — signed and ordered during while he vacations at Martha’s Vineyard — DNI Clapper will report back to the White House in 60 days to presenting the findings of the review board and their recommendations.
Recent years have brought unprecedented and rapid advancements in communications technologies, particularly with respect to global telecommunications,” wrote the president. “These technological advances have brought with them both great opportunities and significant risks for our Intelligence Community: opportunity in the form of enhanced technical capabilities that can more precisely and readily identify threats to our security, and risks in the form of insider and cyber threats.”
I believe it is important to take stock of how these technological advances alter the environment in which we conduct our intelligence mission,” Obama said.
Mr. Clapper confirmed his new position through a statement issued Monday as well. 

Anti-government protests begin in Bahrain amidst tight security

Anti-government protests begin in Bahrain amidst tight security


Anti-government protesters holding Bahraini flags march along the streets of the village of Saar during an anti-government protest, west of Manama, August 14, 2013 (Reuters / Hamad I Mohammed)

Police have reportedly used tear gas to contain long-planned protests in the Gulf State of Bahrain. The country’s Shi’ite majority is demanding a greater say in the political decisions of the Sunni-ruled country.
The long-planned protests mark two-and-a-half years since the unsuccessful uprising in the oil-rich state during which protesters called for the abdication of King Hamad, who has been in power since 1999. 

Despite government threats to use force ahead of what they claim to be foreign-backed "riots" many in the villages outside capital Manama protested by organizing sit-ins outside their houses. Eyewitnesses say police have cordoned off some Shi'ite villages and forced the demonstrators inside their houses. 
Security forces in the eastern city of Sitra have been patrolling empty streets, with most of the residents apparently hiding in their apartment blocks. 
Unlike in Egypt, where protesters against the recently ousted Muslim Brotherhood government were backed by the military, Bahrain's security forces remain loyal to the government. 
Authorities warned they would "forcefully confront'' any large demonstrations. Concrete barriers lined major streets in the capital, Manama, and security checkpoints surrounded by barbed wire guarded roads leading to the city from majority Shiite neighborhoods. 
"Based on what we are following in the field, the government violence against protesters is inevitable,'' a spokesman for the group organizing the rallies, Hussain Yousif, told AP. "But we need to go ahead and show the world and the government that the Bahraini people have the right to express their political demands,''  he added. 

While protesters insist they'll remain peaceful and defiant, there have been attacks in recent weeks around Bahrain, including some from bombs made with natural gas canisters. 

Citing the fear of violence, the US temporarily closed its embassy in Bahrain on Wednesday after activists called on people to meet nearby. The kingdom is home to the US Navy's 5th Fleet, and is the Pentagon's main base to counter Iran's expanding military presence in the Gulf and protect oil shipping lanes through the Gulf of Hormuz. 
The protests have been organized by the Tamarod Bahrain campaign, which features several opposition groups and has adopted the name of Egypt's Tamarod movement. They are expected to stage nonviolent protests in nine areas of the country, with the largest expected in Manama. Wednesday coincides with the 42nd anniversary of Bahrain's independence from Britain. It also marks 2 1/2 years since the current wave of unrest started.
Members of police stand at a security checkpoint set up on a road leading out of Bilad al-Qadeem village during the early hours of the evening in Manama August 13, 2013 (Reuters / Hamad I Mohammed)
Members of police stand at a security checkpoint set up on a road leading out of Bilad al-Qadeem village during the early hours of the evening in Manama August 13, 2013 (Reuters / Hamad I Mohammed)

"The government will forcefully confront the suspicious calls to violate law and order and those who stand behind them through decisive measures,'' Prime Minister Prince Khalifa bin Salman Al Khalifa told the official Bahrain News Agency on Monday. 
Meanwhile, Bahrain's largest opposition group, the Islamist al Wefaq Society, said it was not planning to join the protesters, but made it clear it supported the right to hold peaceful demonstrations. 
RT correspondent Lucy Kafanov says that the Bahrain government has dealt with all protests firmly in the country, since the beginning of the Arab Spring. "Bahrain has been rocked by political unrest since 2011. For the past two years the majority Shiite opposition has been pushing for democratic reforms, but those demands have been met with an iron fist," Kafanov said.
The opposition is demanding a constitutional monarchy with a government chosen from within a democratically elected parliament. It claims there is discrimination against majority Shiites in areas such as employment and public services. The government has denied any discrimination. 
"There have been lots of violations in Bahrain, but unfortunately there's rarely anything in the Western media regarding all the violations. Torture is a daily act," Jalal Fairooz, former opposition MP from the Wefaq Party, told RT.
"Over the past week three major human groups, including Amnesty International, have issued a very strong urging for the UK government and other foreign governments to stop supporting the dictator and try to enforce respect of human rights,” Fairooz said. “But unfortunately the money and petrodollars talk louder than principles in the West.”
A riot police officer stands on the side of a highway as patrol vehicles, including an armoured personnel carrier, are seen behind him during early hours of the evening in Manama August 13, 2013 (Reuters / Hamad I Mohammed)
A riot police officer stands on the side of a highway as patrol vehicles, including an armoured personnel carrier, are seen behind him during early hours of the evening in Manama August 13, 2013 (Reuters / Hamad I Mohammed)

While there is no clear epicenter of revolt in Bahrain's uprising history, like Egypt's Tahrir Square, the capital's Pearl Square was cleared by police raids and sealed off from the public in the early weeks of the unrest. The organizers of the nationwide protests have called instead on Bahrain residents to flood the streets. The Tamarod campaign leaders have urged workers to join in a general strike and for shop owners to close their businesses. The Bahrain Chamber of Commerce and Industry has called on workers and business owners to ignore the protests. 
Clashes have calmed down in recent months after the ruling family introduced some reforms, including giving the elected parliament more oversight powers and promising deeper investigations into alleged abuses by security forces. Many Shiites have dismissed the reforms as window dressing, however, saying that the monarchy is still in control of all key decision-making. 
Bahrain's parliament has passed strict new laws to curb opposition activists, including banning protests in the capital and giving authorities the right to remove citizenship from those convicted of violence. 
Courts also have jailed prominent opposition figures and others, including some with alleged links to Iranian-backed groups such as Lebanon's Hezbollah.  Bahrain and other Gulf states claim that Iran, a majority Shiite country, has a hand in the protests. Iran denies the claim. 
Joe Stork, deputy director of Human Rights Watch's Middle East and North Africa office, said Bahrain should allow the protests to take place. 
"The fact that some protesters perpetrate acts of violence in some demonstrations does not justify a blanket ban on demonstrations and protests in the capital city,'' Stork said. "Bahrain's total ban on protests clearly violates the right of citizens and residents to come together to raise political demands peacefully.'' 

Google: Gmail users ‘have no legitimate expectation of privacy’

Google: Gmail users ‘have no legitimate expectation of privacy’

Image by Google
As tensions worsen among privacy-focused email users amid the escalating scandal surrounding government surveillance, a brief filed by attorneys for Google has surfaced showing that Gmail users should never expect their communications to be kept secret.
Consumer Watchdog has unearthed a July 13, 2013 motion filed by Google’s attorneys with regards to ongoing litigation challenging how the Silicon Valley giant operates its highly popular free email service.
The motion, penned in hopes of having the United States District Court for the Northern District of California dismiss a class action complaint against the company, says Gmail users should assume that any electronic correspondence that's passed through Google’s servers can be accessed and used for an array of options, such as selling ads to customers.
"Just as a sender of a letter to a business colleague cannot be surprised that the recipient's assistant opens the letter, people who use Web-based email today cannot be surprised if their emails are processed by the recipient's [email provider] in the course of delivery,” the motion reads in part. “Indeed, 'a person has no legitimate expectation of privacy in information he voluntarily turns over to third parties.’" 
Elsewhere, Google’s legal counsel says the plaintiffs are attempting “to criminalize ordinary business practices” that the company has implemented for nearly a decade, specifically the automated scanning of emails.
According to Google, federal wiretap laws provide third-party email providers with liability from litigation if their practices are done “in their ordinary course of business.” An Electronic Communication Service (ECS) such as Gmail must scan emails sent to and from their systems, says Google, as part of providing the services they offer.
While plaintiffs go to great lengths to portray Google in a sinister light, the complaint actually confirms that the automated processes at issue are Google’s ordinary business practices implemented as part of providing the free Gmail service to the public. This is fatal to plaintiffs’ claims,” the attorneys write.
Plaintiffs claim that an illegal interception is committed each time an email sent to or from a Gmail account is scanned, but the company counters that claim by saying the automated scanning is not only outlined in the Terms of Service agreement, but necessary for the product to function in the way it does. 
Gmail customers, the company claims, “are contractually bound to Google’s terms. Indeed, they devote much of the Complaint to attacking the disclosures in the TOS and Privacy Policy in an effort to avoid this express contractual consent.”
In short, there is no illegal ‘interception’ here because Plaintiffs’ own allegations confirm that the alleged practices at issue are part of Google’s ordinary course of business,” attorneys write.
In practice, plaintiffs’ theory would prevent ECS providers from providing a host of normal services that Congress could not possibly have intended to criminalize as an illegal interception,’” they continue. “For example, an ECS provider could not allow users to sort their emails using automated filters because any such system would require scanning the contents of the emails being delivered to the user, thus running afoul of plaintiffs’ theory. Nor could an ECS provider provide even basic features like allowing users to search their own emails for particular key terms because doing so would, again, involve the scanning of email content
Google is now asking for the court to reject the plaintiffs’ claims because their interpretation of what constitutes an illegal interception would make it “virtually impossible” for any email company to provide normal services. By saying customers lack no right to privacy, however, Consumer Watchdog is up in arms.
"Google has finally admitted they don't respect privacy," John M. Simpson, Consumer Watchdog's Privacy Project director, said in a statement "People should take them at their word; if you care about your email correspondents' privacy don't use Gmail."
"Google's brief uses a wrong-headed analogy; sending an email is like giving a letter to the Post Office," added Simpson. "I expect the Post Office to deliver the letter based on the address written on the envelope. I don't expect the mail carrier to open my letter and read it. Similarly when I send an email, I expect it to be delivered to the intended recipient with a Gmail account based on the email address; why would I expect its content will be intercepted by Google and read?"
News of Google’s motion to dismiss the complaint comes just days after two pay-for-use providers of highly encrypted and seemingly secure email services announced they’d be calling it quits. Vaguely citing a federal investigation, Texas-based Lavabit said on Thursday last week that they’re shutting down its email service, reportedly used by National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden. Hours later, competitor Silent Circle said they’d be doing the same.
I feel like there is a rising tide of surveillance out there, and we need to push back against it,” Silent Circle COO Vic Hyder told RT this week.