“It Wasn’t Me”

As part of his increasingly Spinal Tap-esque “Legacy Tour” ( Who does he think he is, Eric bloody Clapton? I bet he’s even had a tour t-shirt made.) Tony Blair made a speech on a naval ship my hometown yesterday in which he blamed, in front of an invited audience of military, academics (and for some obscure reason 30 local schoolchildren, who must’ve been bored out of their poor little skulls) everyone in Britain but himself for the inescapable fact that his illegal war in Iraq is one supersized clusterfuck and his tenure as Prime Minister a complete disaster for the country.

Somehow he managed to do all this without mentioning Iraq or his host city’s increasing toll of local military war dead even once. The grim faces of his audience on the video say all you need to know about how it was received, yet to read the local rag, the execrably bad Evening Herald, you’d never know it – the Herald never ever questions the staus quo unless it’s to complain about bus lanes or old dears slipping on dogshit – for instance you’d think a picture of Blair and the local Labour MP and professional sycophant and busybody Linda Gilroy, snogging, would be front page news:

But no, that would be hoping for too much. Evening Herald? News and comment? Don’t make me laugh.

Luckily The Independent has parsed Blair’s speech for us so we don’t have to read the whole self-justifying, narcissistic transccript at No 10’s webiste:

Tony Blair’s spin unspun

By Colin Brown

* BLAIR SAYS: “The parody of people in my position is of leaders who, gung-ho, launch their nations into ill-advised adventures without a thought for the consequences.”

ANALYSIS: No amount of lectures will erase the fact that Iraq is now a mess because of the failure to plan for the peace after Saddam was toppled, and it has made Iran the dominant force in the region.

* BLAIR SAYS: “Public opinion … will be constantly bombarded by the propaganda of the enemy … to the effect that it’s really all “our”, that is the West’s, fault.”

ANALYSIS: Mr Blair is losing the propaganda war over Iraq, but blaming the media for covering the reporting of the horror of daily life in Baghdad is a sign of his desperation.

* BLAIR SAYS: “The risk here – and in the US where the future danger is one of isolationism not adventurism – is that the politicians decide it’s all too difficult and default to an unstated, passive disengagement, that doing the right thing slips almost unconsciously into doing the easy thing.”

ANALYSIS: Mr Blair appears worried that after handing over power to Gordon Brown, his successor may come under pressure to do the “easy thing” and bring the troops home before the ‘job is done’.

* BLAIR SAYS: “The extraordinary job that servicemen do needs to be reflected in the quality of accommodation provided for them and their families, at home or abroad. So much of what is written distorts the truth.”

ANALYSIS: Mr Blair is clearly irritated not only at the media but also at defence chiefs for criticisms of the “overstretch” of the armed forces.

* BLAIR SAYS: “September 11 wasn’t the incredible action of an isolated group. It was the product rather of a worldwide movement, with an ideology based on a misreading of Islam.”

ANALYSIS: Mr Blair still linked September 11 with the overthrow of Saddam Hussein. But there is no evidence that Iraq was used as a training ground for terrorism. It is now.

If you watch the video you can see with your own eyes the depths of delusion and head-in-the sand-ism Blair has sunk to. He’s gone beyond self-parody and way off into total denial of reality territory and he’s becoming increasingy shrill, nervy and twitchy with it.

This is a man who looks temperamentally and psychologically unsafe to be in control of a car, let alone a country.

Read more: UK politics, Blair, Linda Gilroy, Defence speech, Plymouth

The Wheels Of Justice Grind Exceeding Slow, But Exceeding Fine

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Members of the CIA and Bush administration had better think twice about setting foot in Europe: EU warrants have been issued for CIA agents involved in renditions in Italy, according to Der Spiegel:

MILAN’S EXTRAORDINARY RENDITIONS CASE

The CIA in the Dock

By Georg Mascolo and Matthias Gebauer

A Milan prosecutor is making the CIA nervous. Despite the opposition of his own government he wants to indict 26 US agents and five Italian secret agents for the kidnapping of a terror suspect. Rome and Washington would prefer that the embarrassing trial would just go away.

The extraordinary renditions program is turning into an embarassment for the CIA

The proceedings in Milan’s historic Palace of Justice on Tuesday morning were kept under tight wraps. Judge Caterina Interlandi was holding court on the seventh floor, behind closed doors — and only lawyers directly involved with the case were allowed to enter. The governments in Rome and Washington would have preferred if the hearing had not taken place at all.

However they had not reckoned with Armando Spataro. Without the lively Milan prosecutor, who is balding and has a moustache, things would never have got quite so far.

The case being heard behind the court’s doors could turn out to be highly unpleasant for Washington and Rome. Judge Interlandi must determine whether 26 CIA agents and five Italian secret service agents are to be indicted for one of the boldest kidnappings of a terror suspect to happen yet. If the court takes the case, it would be the first time anyone has been tried in connection with the CIA’s controversial “extraordinary renditions” program. Under the secret renditions program, suspected terrorists were kidnapped and interrogated at secret “black” sites.

There was no immediate result after the hearing on Tuesday, except the announcement that the case was adjourned until the end of January.

The statements afterwards were nevertheless revealing. For example, Daria Pesce, the lawyer representing former Milan CIA bureau chief Robert Seldon Lady said she was withdrawing from the case. “Robert Seldon Lady said that a political and not legal solution should be found.” Her client, she said, would prefer “an agreement between Italy and the US” to a trial.

Pesce described her client as “disappointed” by the Italian officers because they revealed details of the operation they had sworn to keep secret. “He feels betrayed because he is still convinced he did the right thing for the US and all the other countries fighting international Islamism,” she said.

Lady’s position is understandable, because the case is an embarrassment. The fate of the Egyptian imam Osama Moustafa Hassan Nasr, better known as Abu Omar, is one of the best-documented cases of the controversial abductions by the US. In February 2003, a CIA team kidnapped the radical cleric in Milan as he was on his way to his mosque. From the point of view of the US investigators Abu Omar was a suspect who could have knowledge of the activities of jihadists in Europe — perhaps.

Osama Moustafa Hassan Nasr, also known as Abu Omar, who allegedly was kidnapped in Milan by the CIA.

In these kinds of situations, things are rarely done gently. Drugged and tied-up, Abu Omar was bundled into a white mini-van and taken to the US base at Aviano, and then by jet via the US airbase in Ramstein, Germany more or less directly to an Egyptian jail. During his weeks of interrogation there, Abu Omar claims to have been tortured by the local officials. In a letter that was smuggled out of the jail, he reports of electrical shocks and writes that his face has been disfigured by these methods. He is being held in a jail in Alexandria to this day.

It is now known that in the fight against international terror following the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks this was common CIA practice — something the US has indirectly admitted, without expressing any regret. Instead of waiting for the necessary due process, the agency preferred to kidnap those it had decided were suspects. Instead of placing them in US jails they were stuck in holes somewhere in countries that were known for torture and therefore speedy interrogation results. It is precisely these practices that are now the subject of several investigations in EU countries.

During their tough actions the bosses back home in the US probably never expected that they would ever have someone like prosecutor Spatoro spying on them in turn. He has impressive evidence in dozens of files. He knows the names of the CIA agents. He knows when and where they travelled to Italy, who they called and when, in order to kidnap Abu Omar. Even their fondness for luxury hotels is in the files — and that they collected valuable frequent flyer miles. There is no point talking about a secret operation any more.

No other case has caused so much internal disquiet in the CIA as the arrest warrants from Italy. Even if the White House has promised that there is no need to fear prosecution or extradition, there is concern in the agency about what will happen after President Bush leaves office. The Democrats now control Congress and hearings about the CIA program are looming. Legal insurance has been the hot topic among CIA agents for months. The agents are aware that the small fry are always the first to be sacrificed.

In the case of the kidnapping in Italy, this concern is well founded. After all it is the names of the CIA worker ants that appear in the indictments. Due to Spataro’s tireless efforts they will also be issued arrest warrants in the European Union. From now on the agents will have to worry about possible arrest during any future foreign visit — even if one of them just wants to visit Florence instead of Florida with his wife. However the Italian Foreign Ministry never sent the prosecutor’s extradition warrant — out of loyalty to its partner, the US.

The dark prediction of Cofer Black, the CIA’s former head of counter-terrorism, is being remembered in corridors of the agency these days: “One day we will all be in court for what we are doing now.” At the same time, the agents of what is supposedly the best secret service in the world didn’t act particularly clandestinely in Milan. Many now shake their head in disbelief that it only takes a few Google searches to find the first traces of the CIA’s aircraft. The term “secret flights” is long obsolete.

Even the agents were not much of a secret. Of the first 13 suspects public prosecutor Spataro was able to identify, 11 were easily traced back to the CIA. The insurance numbers and post office boxes they kept in Virginia revealed more than they hid.

And even though it is now clear that the CIA acted carelessly in Italy, the fact that high-level agents in Rome gave their nod of approval to the operation has only served to increase anger over their negligence. “It’s not only bad tradecraft, but it’s stupid,” commented Richard Stolz, a former CIA deputy director of operations.

Even for the renditions program, the action in Italy was highly unusual — and also particularly risky. In most operations, countries arrested suspected terrorists and then turned them over to the United States. But in Italy, the CIA chief in Rome was looking to achieve his own success, and insiders believe that goes a long way towards explaining why the CIA there played a direct role in the kidnapping. “If I had taken a plan to my bosses to kidnap someone in Europe, it better have been Osama himself, and I doubt I would have gotten permission even then,” said Michael Scheuer, former head of the CIA program.

There’s more to the Milan case than simply a suit against CIA agents (who wouldn’t even be present in the Milan Palace of Justice if it were to be heard). Instead, it is the Italian secret service and the former government of Silvio Berlusconi who will be placed in the political dock. Berlusconi routinely swears that Italy never would have permitted or provided help for any operation like this. But few believe him these days. In fact, it appears unlikely that the operation would even have been possible without logistical aid from the US’s close partner.

,P>The most extensive testimony could come from a former Italian agent who also now stands as a defendant. For months, former Italian top spy Nicolo Pollari refused to testify. Now he is threatening what could be an almost “spontaneous defense.” But his lawyer says he would only be willing to do so if Berlusconi and the current prime minister, Romano Prodi, also appeared in court. For the time being, the main issue is to lift the veil of secrecy that had initially been imposed on the Abu Omar case. Still, uncomfortable questions would likely be directed at the top politicians.

It’s still impossible to tell if the Milan trial will even open. Nevertheless, through sheer persistence, Prosecutor Spataro has already cut his way through considerable political resistance. At the end of the day, the decision will lie with the judge, who is under enormous pressure. So far, the judge has held up well under pressure — so much so that German Prosecutor Eberhard Bayer has described his colleague’s work as “excellent.” Bayer has often met with Spataro and spoken to him on the telephone because he is currently investigating CIA planes that landed in Germany and were involved in Abu Omar’s kidnapping.

However, it is unlikely that Bayer’s case will ever progress as far as the Milan investigation. “We’ve hit a dead end because the Americans aren’t providing us with any information,” Bayer said. But Bayer does know that Abu Omar was taken to Egypt on a flight that also landed at the US air base in Ramstein, Germany, which is also under his prosecutorial jurisdiction. Each time he contacts the base, authorities tell him politely but firmly that Washington has instructed them to provide no information whatsoever. “To be honest, we’re at our wits end,” Bayer said.

But prosecutors in Germany are following the progress in Milan with great interest. Privately, they hope the trial will open — almost more because of the hard work of their colleague than because of their hopes for a public tribunal against the CIA.

“Of course it’s true that we’re dealing with big political issues here,” says Bayer, deliberately speaking in abstract terms. “But even if a crime is a political one, it still remains a crime.”

We’ll get these bastards in the end, legally, and when we do they’ll sing like canaries about their bosses just to save their miserable slimy hides, no rendition or torture required.

Cartoon copyright Martin Rowson, The Guardian

Read more: War On Terror, US, Europe, Italy, CIA, Rendition, Kidnap, Prosecutions, Arrests

Don’t Be Fooled By Cuddly Dave

It’s hard not to like UK Conservative party leader David Cameron. On the face of it he’s a very nice man: clever, personable, young; an iPod-loving, soaps-watching Head Boy who appeals to grandmas and skateboarders alike.

Call-me-Dave smiles a lot, his wife is pretty, he makes all the right cuddly noises, he talks about caring and sharing and children and the internet and the NHS and his disabled son and is swiftly becoming what many of his antediluvian colleagues would call ‘the housewives choice’.

Under Cameron the outward, media-facing aspect of the Tories has changed drastically – these days they even have a British Asian (I’ll leave others to dispute which of those descriptors takes precedence) party vice-chair.

This and their more principled, dare we even say liberal, stands on torture and civil liberties have won them many admirers amongst the non-aligned and Labour-loathers alike, as have Cameron’s own carefully calibrated public statements on Blair’s Iraq excursion.

He’s good on his feet too: even I’ve caught myself egging him on against Blair at Prime Minister’s Question Time. (video)

So far, so according to plan:

Party bosses want people to recognise, approve of and ultimately buy the Cameron brand first.

They will then glue that branding all over the old Conservative Party and, so, transform it into something the public will like and vote for again. It’s called brand extension in the trade.

All this niceness and market manipulation has led the Tories to poll consistently higher than Labour when voters are asked which party they’d vote for in a Cameron v Brown contest, something that common wisdom would’ve formerly have dismissed. But apparently the Tories are no longer percieved as the Nasty Party – indeed they’ve become so nice that some of their more rabid shire Tories have decamped to UKIP.

Not bad work for a lightweight former PR man.

But is there really change? Is Cuddly Dave just the palatable froth on top of the same old poisonous brew of Thatcherite free marketeers, neocon wannabes and bigoted Little Englanders as before?

In short, is Cameron lipstick on a pig?

Let’s look at foreign policy. The Tory party is as hawkish, belligerent and in thrall to the illusory ‘special relationship as they ever were. Doesn’t really square with the new emollient Cameron image, does it?

Tories back US action on Iran

By Colin Brown, Deputy Political Editor

Published: 10 January 2007

Liam Fox, the shadow Defence Secretary, has backed hawks in the White House by calling for “nothing to be ruled out” to stop Iran acquiring a nuclear weapon.

Mr Fox gave the clearest signal yet that the Conservatives would support military action, including the use of nuclear strikes by the US or Israel, to halt the alleged production of a nuclear weapon by Iran.

“I am a hawk on Iran,” said Mr Fox. “We should rule absolutely nothing out when it comes to Iran.

“They are notoriously good poker players and it is a very high stakes game they are playing.”

His remarks follow reports in the USthat Israel is ready to use nuclear “bunker buster” bombs to knock out the Iranian nuclear plants.

More….

But let’s give Cuddly Dave the benefit of the doubt rather than immediately cry hypocrisy. Maybe Liam Fox is a just a loose cannon. Maybe the disconnect between public utterances and policy means Cameron has lost control over his his historically backstabbing party’s policy and shadow cabinet (if he ever had it) and they’re all going off half-cocked in the media.

But no. There is no disconnect on policy and no difference between Fox’ and Cameron’s foreign policy views.

Neoconnery is Conservative party policy and Cameron policy too according to Dr Brendan Simms of the Henry Jackson Society , who ought to know it when he sees it:

[…]

His close allies and contemporaries, the new shadow minister for housing, Michael Gove, his shadow Chancellor, George Osborne, and Ed Vaizey all describe themselves as neoconservatives.

The new shadow cabinet is a clear sign of the way the wind is blowing on foreign and security policy. Some Conservative leaning observers had wondered whether Cameron might resile to classic foreign-policy “realists”, such as the sometime foreign ministers Sir Malcolm Rifkind, and Lord Hurd. Both of them had strongly opposed the Iraq war. In fact, Cameron recalled the former conservative leader William Hague – who was and remains an unyielding supporter of the war – to the front bench as shadow foreign secretary. Rifkind thereupon resigned his shadow post as work and pensions secretary in a huff.

In terms of the American party-political spectrum, all this places Cameron well to the “right” of most Democrats and many Republicans, who have gone cold on the Iraq war, but well to the “left” of the President himself. The closest match with Cameron is probably Senator McCain, whose staunch support for the democratic transformation of Iraq, and principled stand against torture makes him the least bland of American politicians. By contrast, the Democratic mainstream, and even its left-liberal grass roots, is now firmly “realist” in its scepticism about the democratic transformation of the Middle East. This means that if the British Labour Party goes the way of the Democrats, which is by no means certain, the best hope for progressives in foreign policy on both sides of the Atlantic will be on the (party-political) right.

Anyone who votes Tory in the coming local, Scots and NI Assembly elections on the grounds that they’re not Labour and Cameron isn’t Brown is being wilfully blind. All the obfuscatory talk in the media – that the Conservatives have no policies yet, that Cameron is a nice man but an unknown quantity – it’s all PR spin meant to mask the Tories’ real agenda.

Cameron is no cipher. He’s a known quantity; a rightwing libertarian hawk who is committed to the same imperialistic, ‘freedom’-spreading principles as Richard Perle, Paul Wolfowitz and all the other architects of the destruction of Iraq and promoters of worldwide cultural war.

Cameron’s not the lipstick on the pig, he’s the pig’s lips.

Read more: UK politics, Tory party, David Cameron, Local elections, Neocons, Middle East, Iraq, Iran

Why Can’t Life Imitate Art?

I’d’ve posted this yesterday, but Blogger was playing silly buggers with Blogger Beta again and was completely inaccessible. (We have the blog all set up on typepad and ready to switch, but it just takes the will. Honestly we will do it. Soon.)

Anyhow I did a double-take when I saw this headline from from yesterday’s Evening Standard:

Blair in the dock for TV war crimes ‘trial’

By Alexa Baracaia, Evening Standard 09.01.07

Trials and tribulations: Robert Lindsay as Tony Blair

Channel 4 is to screen a hardhitting drama which portrays Tony Blair facing an international tribunal charged with war crimes. Robert Lindsay plays the Prime Minister, who is shown becoming increasingly unhinged.

In dramatic scenes shown at a private screening today Mr Blair hallucinates about dead Iraqi children, sees the coffin of a British soldier on his kitchen table and believes he is to be murdered by a suicide bomber.

The Prime Minister has a waking nightmare that he is found dead. In sinister echoes of Dr David Kelly’s death, he hallucinates that a newsreader announces that “it appears the former Prime Minister had gone for a walk on his own”.

The 72-minute film The Trial Of Tony Blair will be screened on Monday on digital channel More4.

Written by Alistair Beaton, who also wrote A Very Social Secretary about David Blunkett, it opens in 2010 with the vision of a distressed Blair, having converted to Catholicism, about to make confession for his “mortal sins””.

In Beaton’s account, the US and British forces have declared war on Iran, there has been a second terror attack in London and George Bush, deposed by Hillary Clinton, has entered rehab after being found comatose on his ranch.

Today, Beaton insisted he had no qualms about screening a film which could affect public opinion while a leader of state is still in power.

He said: That would be terrific if I’d contributed to the public perception of Blair having done something he must pay a price for.

I did set out, however, from the position of Blair as being fundamentally a man who cares but whose decisions have backfired and he is struggling to live with that.””

I really really want to see this, if only for the vicarious satisfaction of watching a fictional Blair getting his comeuppance. Bittorrenters and YouTubers, those of us without More4 are relying on you; don’t let us down.

Read more: UK, TV, Drama, Channel 4, Tony Blair, Iraq War Crimes Trial

Stating The Utterly Bleeding Obvious Or Necessary Truths ?

I’m Spartacus, you’re Spartacus, we’re all bloody Spartacus, blah blah blah. Nonagenarian former actor Kirk Douglas, of all people, is attempting to rally world youth to sort out the mess his generation created:

Kirk Douglas calls on youth to stand up and be counted

Dan Glaister in Los Angeles
Monday December 11, 2006
The Guardian

The cleft chin may be familiar to some. But others may have difficulty placing the ageing Hollywood star.

“You may know me,” he writes in an open letter published last Saturday. “If you don’t … Google me. I was a movie star and I’m Michael Douglas’s dad, Catherine Zeta-Jones’s father-in-law, and the grandparents of their two children. Today I celebrate my 90th birthday.”

But Kirk Douglas has loftier things on his mind than summoning up the wind to blow out 90 candles. The man who led the slaves to revolt as Spartacus, the man who embodied the suffering of Van Gogh’s art in Lust For Life is turning his attention to the fate of the planet.

“Let’s face it,” he writes to “America’s young people”, “THE WORLD IS IN A MESS and you are inheriting it.

“Generation Y, you are on the cusp. You are the group facing many problems: abject poverty, global warming, genocide, Aids, and suicide bombers to name a few. These problems exist, and the world is silent. We have done very little to solve these problems. Now, we leave it to you. You have to fix it because the situation is intolerable.”

[..]

Cheers for pointing that out Grandad, we’d never have noticed if you hadn’t said.

I had similar feelings at first on reading recent Digby and Hilzoy posts. Shorter Digby: “America has a class system that’s wrecking the country.” Wow, I thought, who knew? So that’s what all those ads and movies and tv shows are about. Shorter Hilzoy: “The methods used to produce chocolate, gold, diamonds and many other commodities produce human misery and ecological disaster.” Do they really? Well, fancy. Oh, OK, that’s why all those Africans are running away from that misery as fast as they can and making new lives in Europe…

Now I was quite peeved. None of these issues are new or unknown or hidden – anyone outside the US with half a brain and a smidgen of conscience who’s followed current events knows these things, even if not in detail. They’ve been out in the open for a long time in the rest of the world, but Americans are acting as though it’s something newly-dicovered! What do you think all the European and S. American leftists have been telling you all this time? Argh, why are you all so stupid?

I was getting a good head of outraged steam up at this point.

But then I thought, am I just being horribly snotty here? It’s that ‘outside the US’ that makes all the difference in perception. To so many US readers who are just switching on to the liberating idea of online dissenting and blogs the idea that by eating a candy bar they are supporting slavery, for example, must be deeply shocking new information which must challenge their view of themselves and their nation’s way of living in some pretty basic ways.

Similarly the truth about their government’s complicity in the torture and murder of thousands in Chile is shocking the US public following Augusto Pinochet‘s death. The information about how the coup was engineered by Kissinger and other neocons and how Pinochet’s murderous regime was supported by the US is something which has, again, been common knowledge for a long time elsewhere, even in the most remote of places. For example the woman doctor who ran the hospice in Devon where my mother died was raped and tortured by Pinochet’s thugs while working in Chile in the seventies. As a result the US’ role in Chile had massive coverage locally.

But at a national and international level coverage of even the most egregious excesses of the Pinochet regime was constantly downplayed, excused and finessed by the US and UK government/media complex particularly so in the US. American Journalists who didn’t sing the right tune were even disappeared themselves, so it’s not surprising that this is all coming as a bit of a shock to many in Leftpondia.

There are many more such shocks to come too, as the citizenry realises the facts are out there, if you only care to look – take Guatemala, Afghanistan, The Marianas, Diego Garcia or East Timor to name just a few- it’s all there for the knowing. There is a whole other mass of people apart from the liberal left blogerati who can only now, because of the wonders of the internet, find out what has been kept from them for so long. Viewed from this standpoint Digby’s and Hilzoy’s posts are objective, trustworthy and essential guides for people to know where to find what’s been hidden in plain sight, rather than just restatements of received wisdom.

So from my initial irritation and snark I’ve changed my position. Rather than being such a horribly European elitist leftist snot I really should be jubilant to find that after all the chipping away at the tunnel face that others have been chipping away on the other side and we’re about to meet in the middle.

In that light even Kirk Douglas’ slightly bizarre call to arms is actually quite laudable – rarely does someone of his generation actually say ‘Sorry, we were wrong’ and make an attempt, however lame, to put it right.

As my son constantly tells me, it’s all good.

Read more: US media, US politics, Blogs, Kirk Douglas, Augusto Pinochet, Chile, Guatemala, Afghanistan, The Marianas, Diego Garcia, East Timor