Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Friday, February 10, 2017

No budgetary allocation to implement RTI

No budgetary allocation to implement RTI
Feb 10, 2017
No budgetary allocation has been made for the implementation of the right to information act (RTI) that came into force on February 03, sources say. Finance minister Ravi Karunanayake has admitted that too.
Now, applications are being made requesting information. Within 14 working days of the submission of an application, the applicant will be informed if the information sought could be given. In the next 14 days, the information will be provided. If an application is rejected, an appeal can be made within two weeks. A further three weeks will be made available to deal with appeals. If that too, fails to gain a favourable response, the applicant can complain, within two months, to the RTI commission, which will investigate the reasons on behalf of the applicant for not providing the information sought. Accordingly, it is clear that if the application for information continued to be rejected, it will take two months and one week for the appeal to reach the RTI commission. The commission should deliver its ruling within one month.
Therefore, applications for information will flow in after the Sinhala Tamil New Year in April and the commission will have to employ a big staff after providing training for them. According to reports, the recruitment of staff to the commission will be gazetted in March. Therefore, it is a question if there will be time adequate to recruit and train the staff properly to ensure an efficient service. Institutions that deal with the RTI say a considerable funding will be needed.
Reports say trained officers have been appointed to divisional secretariats to provide information. However, no such appointments have been made to the police and many other institutions. The RTI act says in the absence of an appointed officer, the head of the institution should serve as the information officer. The government will announce if information officers have been appointed to public institutions.
The belief is that it will take six months for the RTI to become effective properly, and that is from August 03. Until then, there will be disruptions to the efficient provision of information due to a shortage of officials, restrictions in knowledge etc. However, the right to seek information for public good is available from February 03.
Globally, Sri Lanka had been in the 9th position on the availability of laws on right to information, but with the RTI, the country has advanced further. In the first place is Mexico.

Sri Lanka Jumps to Third Place Globally on the RTI Rating

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Posted on  by Admin
On 3 February 2017, just on the deadline for this, the government of Sri Lanka published a set of Regulations and Rules under the Right to Information Act in the Official Gazette. The combined effect of the Regulations (adopted by the Minister of Parliament Reforms and Mass Media) and the Rules (adopted by the oversight body, the Right to Information Commission) was to add a full ten points to Sri Lanka’s already strong score of 121 points out of a possible total of 150 on the RTI Rating. With its new score of 131 points, Sri Lanka boasts the third strongest legal framework for RTI in the world and the strongest in South Asia.
“Countries often go up a few points on the RTI Rating when they adopt rules and regulations”, said Toby Mendel, Executive Director of CLD. “But this is a impressive jump up for a country which already had a very strong score so both the Minister and the Commission deserve to be congratulated for their good work.”
Some of the key improvements, from the RTI Rating perspective, introduced by the Regulations and Rules are as follows:
• Public authorities are required to transfer requests to other authorities where they do not hold requested information.
• The rules on fees have been clarified and are, for the most part, progressive.
• Clear rules on open reuse of information have been introduced.
• The power of the Commission to order public authorities to take structural measures to improve their general responses to requests has been clarified.
• Public authorities are obliged to provide training to their information officers.
Sri Lanka now faces the challenging task of implementing its strong legal framework for the right to information. CLD calls on the Ministry, public authorities and the Commission to ensure that this happens, and notes that it remains willing to provide support for this process.
The country scores on the RTI Rating are available at: http://www.rti-rating.org/country-data/.

Public Perceptions of Police in Sri Lanka

With some 84,000 officers and about 450 Police stations around the country the nature of the relationship with the public should be one of trust. There are two basic duties and responsibilities: crime and maintenance of order.

by Victor Cherubim  -
( February 11, 2017, London, Sri Lanka Guardian) Who wants to be a Policeman? A Bobby in Britain is a treasured status, like a Constable in Ceylon some fifty odd years ago. Bereft of the criticism of “institutionalism,” the law enforcement authority is a respected profession.
What if any has changed perceptions in the intervening period in Sri Lanka? Two words, perhaps, could best summarise the difference – Police Conduct.
Several incidents of impunity, has posed the question whether the criminal law and the advancement or lack of justice has impinged on the conduct of the Police? We are used to high standards of conduct. These have perhaps been sacrificed at the altar of mediocrity and the real need to finance a war. We now need to bring back as a matter of priority, the   attainment of our high standards. There are still many Constables, men and women in Sri Lanka who would sacrifice their lives and conduct for the Force, who go by what they signed up in the Police Code. There is camaraderie, which enjoins every Policeman on the beat and privilege of status.
The most important of all standards is Public Confidence. This is trust and is affected by the behaviour of the Police, with the public expecting the service to protect them by upholding the law and providing a professional police service.
Our Criminal Procedure Code and the Police Ordinance lays down the powers of the Police. Standards are not intended to describe every situation but rather to set a framework which everyone can easily understand. They do not restrict the discretion of the police, but they define the parameters of conduct within which that discretion should be exercised.
Nature of relationship between Police and Public 
With some 84,000 officers and about 450 Police stations around the country the nature of the relationship with the public should be one of trust. There are two basic duties and responsibilities: crime and maintenance of order.
Over the years the burden on policing corruption has taken precedence. A variety of financial conduct investigation Departments have sprung up including PRECIFAC (Presidential Commission of Inquiry to Investigate and Inquire into serious acts of Fraud, Corruption and Abuse of Power, State Resources and Privileges) and FCID (Financial Corruption Investigations Dept.) among others.
Would it be any wonder that the Police services are under much strain with public pressure on delivery on time?
Strangely there is a different perception of the Prison Services in Sri Lanka, who seem to have won acclaim by their unscrupulous conduct. One politician on remand was heard to say:”If you respect people, they respect you, even if they are taking you into prison, not so with the FCID?”
We also hear the disenchantment at the slow investigative process in crime work, particularly corruption cases and bringing culprits to book. A culture of impunity has been entrenched and understandably not improved by either the quality of staff and/or numbers. Society perhaps, has put blame on the Police for the state of affairs the country is in?  Shaking off this image is difficult. If a Police officer is to be respected by the Public, he/she has to be paid a commiserate salary to fit in with the role, skills and status. Let us recruit staff, even from abroad to do what we find difficult to do and learn their skills?
Some accepted Standards of Professional Conduct
Honesty and Integrity – act accordingly and not abuse their power.
Authority, Respect and Courtesy –treating the public with respect, tolerance and courtesy.
Equality and Diversity – act with fairness and impartiality, without discrimination,
Use of restraint– as is necessary, proportionate and reasonable in all circumstances.
Abide by the Force policies/procedures and give and carry out reasonable instructions.
Work diligently in the exercise of duty and responsibility.
Confidentiality – treat all information with respect and discreet in disclosure.
Fitness– fit to carry out all their duties.
Undermining public confidence – by discernible conduct not acceptable in the service.
Challenging or taking action if conduct has fallen below the required standards.
Authority without accountability
Over the years many shades of government have come and gone, With a civil war extending nearly thirty out of 69 years since independence, the role of the Police and the role of the Military Forces have in some instances been blurred in civil operations causing disquiet, requiring clarity. Besides, Police morale was also low due to continued attacks by the LTTE in border Police stations, around the country. With the changing role of the Armed Forces after the end of the war in 2009, a new command and control structure for Community Police service has we are told been instigated and is now in operation.
Need of the hour
It is no longer acceptable for the Police Force to be one among many professions.   The Public now demands not standards but the highest standards of conduct for the Force in Sri Lanka. Officers of the Police have been sent abroad to upgrade their skills and particularly the Code of Behaviour. Further, we now have a Public Consultation on the dress sense – a change of the Police Uniform. The need of the hour is not only a change of Police Uniform but simultaneously project a different public image to upgrade the Code of Conduct.
Change in Policing practice
Change in policing practice in Sri Lanka will come about no doubt, with forces recruiting staff able to communicate in all three languages and commanding public support.
Change will come when policing standards are monitored and evaluated to the highest standard.  A Uniform Standard across different parts of the country consolidated to make measurements of practice less problematic is long overdue. The past has also seen many instances where the protection of civilians was sidelined for security and military purpose. The Police cannot be faulted for this policy.
Community Policing could take precedence in Sri Lanka like what happened in the Metropolitan Police London, with the near elimination of “Stop and Search” operations at random over the past 6 years, a sea change in this policy has seen the crime figures have incrementally reduced.
However, an implausible logic is for the Government to ask the Police to follow high standards of conduct and simultaneously dictate what it should and should not do? The Police Force needs space to follow its highest code of conduct all over the country for the public to respect its integrity. We need to show our neighbouring countries that our Police Force is among the best in the world, and nothing less.

SriLankan Airlines’ Breathalyzer Test Controversy: Pilot Who Questioned Testing Procedure Found Guilty


Colombo Telegraph
February 11, 2017
SriLankan Airlines Captain Sujith Jayasekara who challenged the hurriedly imposed and tainted breathalyzer test procedure prior to his departure to Bangkok in August of 2016, has been found guilty at the end of the lengthy eight month inquiry, Colombo Telegraph reliably learns.
Captain Jayasekara
The national carrier hurriedly organized breathalyzer tests to be carried out on their pilots in August 2016. This is after Capt. Upendra Ranaweera was earlier found to be under the influence of alcohol in Frankfurt, which resulted in the airline incurring a massive loss despite inconveniencing hundreds of its passengers.
However whilst departing to operate his flight UL 402 to Bangkok in August of last year, Capt. Jayasekara noticing a blatant violation in the breathalyzer test procedure, questioned the airline’s security personnel about the legitimacy in which they were carrying out the test. At the conclusion of their conversation and with no breathalyzer test being conducted the pilots were permitted to proceed and operate their flight.
Subsequently much after the aircraft departed the security personnel then informed the airline’s management that the two pilots had refused to undergo a breathalyzer test.
During the process of the ongoing inquiry, the management of SriLankan Airlines convened a meeting with both the Civil Aviation Authority of Sri Lanka and the Airline Pilots Guild of Sri Lanka and agreed on a legitimate breathalyzer test procedure which was subsequently enforced.
Meanwhile the Head of Flight Operations Capt.Rajind Ranatunga informed the Airline Pilots Guild of Sri Lanka that the inquiry has now been concluded and that Capt. Sujith Jayasekara has been found guilty.
Quoting the Head of Flight Operations, the APGSL President Capt. Venura Perera sent in a letter to airline’s Chairman Ajith Dias, blaming the faulty breathalyzer test procedure that was implemented at the time.
Capt. Perera blamed Chairman Dias for maintaining double standards in his decision making process and demanded that Capt. Jayasekara be reinstated with immediate effect.

More frauds connected with Bond scam surface


February 10, 2017

The bond scam committed when Mr. Arjun Mahendran was the Governor of Central Bank of Sri Lanka has made an uproar in the society. Details regarding another fraud committed by the former Governor have been revealed in an internal audit report of the Central Bank say reports.

According to this report Arjun Mahendran has committed another fraud of Rs. 323.6 million. According to ‘O’ paragraph of report and as stated in pages 19 to 20, Rs.323.6 has been transferred to another company owned by directors of Perpetual Treasuries in addition to the Rs. 12.89 billion received as illegal profit through Central Bank bond transaction.

The relevant extraction of the report:

PCHLi
Man shot dead in Nikaweratiya; body found with hands tied in Warakapola 


Man shot dead in Nikaweratiya; body found with hands tied in Warakapola
Police inspect body found with hands died in Athnawala, Warakapola.
logoFebruary 10, 2017
A person has been shot and killed in the Sirisethgama area in Nikaweratiya this evening. 
The deceased has been identified as Janaka Priyantha, a resident of Sirisethgama, Nalagamuwa. 
 Police have arrested a 43-year-old resident of the area in connection with the murder along with a firearm, believed to have been used to carry out the shooting. 
 Preliminary inquiries have uncovered that the murder occurred as a result of a financial dispute. 
 Body found with hands tied
 Meanwhile in a separate incident police discovered the body of an individual, with both hands tied and face covered, who is believed to have been assaulted and killed in Athnawala, Warakapola. 
 Upon searching the victim’s bag and personal belongings, police identified his as a 33-year-old resident of Katugastota. 
 Police suspect that he was murdered elsewhere and that the body was dumped at this location.
  Warakapola Police is conducting an investigation.  

Learning in the line of fire

Aerial view of a classroom with a hole in the roof and in one of the walls
A classroom at the Martyrs School in Khuzaa, which was damaged by Israeli shelling in the summer of 2014, as well as in previous assaults on Gaza, photographed in August 2015. Ashraf AmraAPA images

Sarah Algherbawi-8 February 2017

Wala, 16, always finds a seat away from the windows.

The girl is a student at the Hayel Abdul Hamid secondary school in Beit Hanoun, a United Nations facility in the northern Gaza Strip. She has developed a phobia of sitting next to windows, afraid, she told The Electronic Intifada, of stray bullets.

Her fear is well-founded. Beit Hanoun lies close to Gaza’s boundaries with Israel, and the concrete wall that marks the boundary is visible from Wala’s school. In such boundary areas Israeli gunfire is common and fatalities frequent. Mere closeness is a mortal danger as Israeli soldiers endeavor to keep quite expansive areas clear of residents, farmers or anyone else trying to get close.

When shooting near the boundary is especially fierce, Gaza’s ministry of education is forced to evacuate schools in the affected areas. According to Muhammad Nasser, who works at Gaza’s education ministry, in Beit Hanoun alone there are four schools, including the Hayel Abdul Hamid School, in so-called high-risk locations – within 1,000 meters of the boundary.

These are “Access Restricted Areas” – in the language of the UN – enforced by the Israeli military, usually with force.

Wala is also scarred by her experience during the Israeli military offensive of 2014 and the bombing of a Beit Hanoun primary school.

She and her family had taken refuge at the school administered by UNRWA, the UN agency for Palestine refugees, along with hundreds of other civilians from the area, when it was attacked on 24 July 2014.
“Every time I come to school I remember the fear I felt that day,” said Wala, for whom merely the sound of Israeli tanks moving in the distance makes her feel that “death is chasing me.”

The shelling was subsequently condemned as a “violation of the laws of war” by Human Rights Watch. Thirteen people were killed, including six children.

Rational fear

Samira al-Zaneen, Wala’s teacher, said the girl used to be a highly accomplished student but that her grades had suffered since that fatal day.

“Every time she hears gunfire, she starts crying and calling for her mother. We try to calm her, but in the end we have to send her home. She is regressing because of her fear of what the Israelis do on our borders.”

Muhanna al-Masri, a school counselor, has written and distributed an educational guide to help raise awareness among students and their families and help them cope with the fear and stress many suffer.

“The continuous bombings and shootings from Israel cause a lot of fear and stress among students,” said al-Masri. To address this, he has designed programs to help students cope in various ways, ranging from simple trips to the seaside to psychological support sessions.

Al-Masri was convinced that over time the school could help Wala relieve her symptoms. Of course, he added, there is only so much they can do: The fear is ultimately a rational one and related to the “constancy, frequency and severity of the Israeli violence” at the boundary.

Wala herself said the school’s support was helping. “I am starting to adapt,” she told The Electronic Intifada. Still, “Whenever I hear tanks moving, I begin to shake. And when the shooting starts, I can’t control my nerves. I don’t know why this happens to me.”

Proximity to Gaza’s boundaries and the violence there always has an effect on the young. But it is not always the same. A bit south of Beit Hanoun is Shujaiya, a Gaza City neighborhood close to the boundary and the site of one of the worst massacres of the 2014 assault.

Here, twin brothers Ahmad and Muhammad, 15, maintain excellent results at the Shujaiya Martyrs School even though their home was destroyed in the Israeli bombardment and the family of nine now lives in a rented accommodation.

Unlike Wala, these brothers are unfazed by the sounds of Israeli army tanks and jets. They are determined to carry on regardless of sound or impediment.

“If our insistence to get educated is disturbing the occupation, we will get educated to the highest level we can,” said Muhammad. “I hope to be an engineer to fight the occupation in my own way and to rebuild our destroyed house.”

Education in the line of fire

It’s an uphill struggle in more ways than one for the twins. Schools near Gaza’s boundaries cannot operate full time because they are forced to close during the frequent outbreaks of violence.

To compensate, Muhammad and Ahmad make sure they use those days to study at home and even stay in touch with their teachers to avoid too much disruption.

Schools also try to ensure disruption is minimal. Special programs have been designed to ensure student safety in times of emergency, said school director Abdullah Abd al-Jalil. These efforts involve both the ministry of education and the civil defense service.

“The programs educate students, parents and families about safety evacuation procedures.”

Such programs try to prepare students to anticipate the many variables during episodes of violence, including artillery and gunfire. The factors are multifold: windows shatter broken glass, water can be scarce when Israeli occupation forces on destructive rampages fire at water tanks on school roofs or damage wells and infrastructure, buildings can shake and walls crack and there is always the possibility of panic among students.

But there is only so much that can be done for a sector working under immense pressure and against the odds. During the Israeli offensive of 2014, more than 220 schools incurred damage – mostly government schools, but also some 70 UN schools – according to Ziad Thabet, a ministry of education official.
Twenty-six schools were completely destroyed in 2014, the official said, though they have since been rebuilt, having been deemed priorities for reconstruction, and in spite of Israeli restrictions on the entry of building materials.

Thousands of students remain homeless too, Thabet noted, especially in northern areas near Gaza’s boundaries, and all these factors have left the education sector under severe strain.

“We do what we can,” Thabet said. “We try to rebuild.”

In all, 85 schools are located in or near Gaza’s boundary areas, according to Muhammad Nasser, who heads the planning and studies department at the education ministry. Five of these are within 1,000 meters from the boundary and in high-risk areas.

Still aspiring

All these schools are subject to evacuation procedures, leaving the education of nearly 45,000 students subject to regular disruption. There are no prescribed conditions under which a given school will be closed or evacuated, Nasser told The Electronic Intifada. Decisions are entirely contingent upon any given day’s security situation.

Of the five high-risk schools, the Martyrs School in Khuzaa village near Khan Younis is perhaps the closest to the boundary, lying not 500 meters away.

The school has been damaged in previous Israeli assaults, but has been repaired sufficiently to reopen. Still, windows shattered by gunfire allow in the winter rains, and one student, Mariam, 16, is reduced to tears when her bag falls into a puddle of water in the classroom.

Replacing window panes is a common task for school administrators, though the damage to the walls and floors of classrooms themselves is less often addressed. Puddles of water are common, the school is cold and dampness is a problem.

Many teachers and pupils accuse the Israeli military of intentionally targeting the windows in winter precisely to disrupt school life.

There are 13 schools in the eastern districts of Khan Younis abutting the boundary zones, according to Said Harb of the Khan Younis education directorate. These serve more than 20 percent of the students in the district, or nearly 20,000 children, Harb said. Some of these areas – like al-Fukhara and Qarara – are sparsely built and have little vegetation offering limited protection from any shooting, Harb said.

Mariam has not let the precarious situation affect her grades. She continues to do well and works hard at her studies. Like Muhammad, one of the Shujaiya twins, she wants to become an engineer to rebuild Gaza.

“We’ll never give up and we’ll continue studying and struggling against the aggression, poverty and all other obstacles until we achieve our hopes and goals,” the youngster vowed.

Sarah Algherbawi is a freelance writer and translator from Gaza.

A Deadly Legacy: CIA’s Covert Laos War

The CIA’s covert war in Laos – in the 1950-60’s – has remained a model for U.S. proxy wars through today’s “war on terror,” but the forgotten lesson was the conflict’s destructive failure, recalls war correspondent Don North.


by Don North- 
( February 10, 2017, Boston, Sri Lanka Guardian) In the first of many mistakes of the Vietnam War, President Dwight Eisenhower said in 1954, “You have a row of dominoes set up, you knock over the first one, and what will happen to the last one is the certainty that it will go over quickly.”
By January 1961, Eisenhower had warned his successor John F. Kennedy that Laos was the most pressing foreign policy issue in the world and he had initiated Operation Momentum in Laos, for the CIA to train and arm a small force of Hmong tribesmen to fight the communist Pathet Lao and their North Vietnamese supporters.
But history would prove the “domino theory” in Southeast Asia was a misconception of tragic proportions. Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippines would all confidently resist communist influence and would have surely have done so without the bloodbath of millions of deaths across Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos.
As a young freelance journalist in 1965, I tried to cover the secret war in Laos. In the capital Vientiane, I encountered CIA pilots running supplies to the Hmong army in Long Chen and urged them, over many beers at the bar of the Continental Hotel, to take me along but without success.
Now, more than a half century later, author Joshua Kurlantzick, a senior fellow for Southeast Asia at the Council on Foreign Relations, has published a book, A Great Place to Have a War, based on recently declassified documents and interviews with major players behind the secret war in Laos.
He also analyzes how the conflict in Laos was the genesis of the CIA’s support for clandestine paramilitary operations around the world, a pattern that continues through today. He concludes that the strategy in Laos set a sinister precedent for American presidents to conduct war without congressional or media oversight.
Kurlantzick writes, “The Laos program would balloon in men and budget. It would grow into a massive undertaking run by CIA operatives. CIA leadership saw that an inexpensive proxy war could be a template for wars when U.S. presidents were looking for ways to continue the Cold War without going through Congress or committing ground troops. The CIA leadership thought that Laos was a great place to have a war.”
An army of hill tribes, mostly Hmong under the command of General Vang Pao, who initially led a ragged band of 5,000 guerrillas recruited and equipped by CIA officers. For 14 years, this irregular army fought the communists with Vang Pao’s guerrilla forces finally numbering 100,000 irregular troops.
Over those years, more bombs were dropped on Laos than were dropped on Japan and Germany during World War II. By the end of the Vietnam War in 1975, some 200,000 Laotians, both civilian and military had been killed, including at least 30,000 Hmong, with another 750,000 Laotians made homeless by the bombing. Some 700 Americans, mostly CIA officers, contractors and U.S. military also died in the Laos conflict, although those American deaths would not be revealed for decades.
Today, Laos is a failed country still strewn with landmines and other ordnance that take the limbs and lives of Laotians every day. Only 1 percent of the unexploded ordnance is believed to have been cleared and an estimated 20,000 Laotians have been killed or injured since the bombing ceased.
A Destructive Debacle
By most measures, the CIA’s war in Laos was a debacle that virtually destroyed a civilization. Plus, the war was “lost” from the U.S. government’s perspective when the country disappeared into the communist Vietnamese orbit. But by the CIA’s yardstick, it was a great success.
“In the opinion of many officers in the CIA Clandestine services, the paramilitary programs that the agency operated in Laos between 1963-71 were the most successful ever mounted,” according to a quote from newly declassified CIA records cited by author Kurlantzick. “Small in numbers of personnel and even smaller in relative dollar costs, the CIA Laos operations shone in contrast to the ponderous operations of the US military forces in Vietnam.”
CIA Director Richard Helms declared that the agency had proven itself in Laos and had tied down 70,000 North Vietnamese troops who might otherwise have fought Americans in Vietnam. Laos would become the template for a new type of large, secret war for decades to come.
In his book, Kurlantzick concentrates on four remarkable individuals who in partnership with the CIA would control the agency’s war in Laos. All four have died recently, but Kurlantzick interviewed three of them.
There was Bill Lair, an American veteran of the U.S. Army’s 3rd Division in World War II who joined the CIA in Bangkok to train Thai troops for a possible invasion by China. Lair, adept at the Thai and Lao languages, was later sent to Laos where he would become the first chief agent to deal with the Hmong warlord Vang Pao.
There was Vang Pao, who met Lair in January 1961 and promised that if Lair would provide weapons he would gather 10,000 men to be trained by the CIA. Vang Pao had a reputation of having a sharp mind but his rage, sadness and energy sometimes overtook his abilities and knowledge.
There was Ambassador William Sullivan, who took his post in Vientiane in 1964 and soon became the most powerful U.S. ambassador in the world, in charge of the secret war in Laos. Sullivan’s power encompassed far more than the usual duties of filing reports on the political situation and attending diplomatic receptions. He had a strong respect for the CIA, unlike many U.S. ambassadors.
Sullivan also had a close relationship with President Lyndon Johnson, which Sullivan felt gave him a free hand to run the war in Laos. Called to testify before Congress, Sullivan drew the ire of Sen. William Fulbright, the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, who complained: “We pretend Laos is a sovereign country. We are pretending we are not there? You are deceiving the American people and Congress.”
Sullivan, who didn’t mention that he had commanded nearly every aspect of the operation in Laos, later became National Security Advisor Henry Kissinger’s right-hand man at the Paris peace talks. (Sullivan was the only one of the four principals whom Kurlantzick did not interview.)
The fourth principal in the Laotian war was Tony Poe, who had experienced heavy combat with the U.S. Marines island-hopping across the Pacific during World War II. When the Korean War broke out in 1950, Poe signed up to train Korean saboteurs. In 1961, Poe arrived in Laos to help train the Hmong who had become the center of Operation Momentum.
Poe was a hard-drinking combat trainer who sought opportunities to fight with the troops he had trained. He had a reputation of ruthlessness that included tales of cutting heads off North Vietnamese troops and dropping them from a helicopter. He is said to have shipped bags of ears cut from enemy soldiers to the U.S. Embassy in Vientiane.
In the mountains with his private army and drinking heavily, many of Poe’s colleagues believed he had gone mad. However, in 1975, Poe was awarded a second CIA intelligence medal for “extraordinary heroism.” It is believed Poe was the model for Marlon Brando’s portrayal of Col. Kurtz in the film “Apocalypse Now.”
Enduring Lessons
The lessons from Laos had long-term effects on how the CIA would operate for years. After 1975, agents with Laos experience took over CIA stations all over the world and held senior jobs in agency headquarters. They brought with them a conviction the CIA could handle large-scale war fighting skills, reported Kurlantzick.
The secret war also had echoes up to the present. “The post-9/11 war on terror replicates the Laos war in other critical ways: CIA activities are totally unwatched by the public and the media. The strategies used to keep most of the war on terror secret … would have been completely familiar to the CIA operatives running the Laos war.”
In his last foreign trip, President Obama went to Laos, the first sitting U.S. president to ever do so. In a speech in Vientiane in September that got little notice back home, he offered no apologies, but pledged to increase funding for clearing unexploded bombs by $90 million over the next three years.
“Given our history here, the United States has a moral obligation to help Laos heal,” Obama said. “At the time the U.S. did not acknowledge America’s role. Even now, many Americans are not fully aware of this chapter in our history, and it’s important that we remember today.”
Kurlantzick didn’t complete the research and transcript for his book until October, before the election of Donald Trump as president, but in an article for the Washington Post’s Outlook section Jan. 22, he analyzed the new administration’s likely policy toward the CIA:
“The incoming President seems eager to cut some of the agency’s spies and analysts. Instead, power would flow to operatives in the field – those who help arm allied foreign military forces and manage drone strikes … the Trump administration is poised to accelerate a transformation that has been happening since the 1960’s, with the CIA becoming less focused on spying and more on paramilitary organizations with a central role in violent conflicts.”
The first secret counter-terrorism operation under Trump’s orders took place on Jan. 29 in Yemen against an “Al Qaeda affiliate” and appeared to have been a botched mission though the Trump administration hailed it as a success. It was reported to have been carried out by U.S. Special Operation Forces, with no mention of CIA participation.
A senior Navy Seal was killed during the raid and Yemeni officials reported 30 civilians also killed, mostly women and children. The New York Times said the civilian casualties triggered widespread anger across Yemen toward the U.S., adding to the tensions over President Trump’s entry ban on Yemeni citizens.
Kurlantzick’s A Great Place to Have a War could help Americans remember the chaos and destruction visited upon one of the world’s most primitive societies. Whether the book will influence the future history of America’s way of war remains to be seen.

Don North is a veteran war correspondent who covered the Vietnam War and many other conflicts around the world. He is the author of Inappropriate Conduct,  the story of a World War II correspondent whose career was crushed by the intrigue he uncovered. Here is  columnist for the consortiumnews.com, where this piece first appeared

Brazil threatens striking police with prosecution as death toll tops 120

Police officers carry a body during a military police strike in Vitoria, Espirito Santo, Brazil February 10, 2017. REUTERS/Paulo Whitaker
A policeman stands near a protest organised by family members of police officers in front of the entrance of a military police battalion in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil February 10, 2017. The banner reads: 'Without salary, without police'. REUTERS/Ricardo Moraes--Uniforms placed by family members of police officers in protest for better salaries, are pictured in front of the entrance of the military police battalion in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil February 10, 2017. REUTERS/Ricardo Moraes

By Paulo Whitaker and Pablo Garcia | VITORIA, BRAZIL-Sat Feb 11, 2017 

Authorities in the Brazilian state of Espirito Santo threatened striking police officers with criminal charges on Friday as the federal government sent in more troops to try to end a week of violent anarchy that has left more than 120 people dead.

Espirito Santo is one of several Brazilian states grappling with a budget crisis that is crippling essential public services for millions of citizens. The police strike during the past week, over pay, has left a security vacuum and led to rampant assaults, heists and looting, often in broad daylight.

Limited protests by police in nearby Rio de Janeiro alarmed many residents of the metropolitan area of 12 million people, many of whom live in fear of violence between rival drug gangs and other criminals. Some mayors in Rio de Janeiro state even announced plans to help make up for unpaid police salaries by using city finances to cover the state's shortfalls.

In Espirito Santo, a spokesman for a local police union said the death toll from a week of unrest had risen to 122. State officials have not officially confirmed the toll, but have said many of those killed are believed to come from competing gangs.

If accurate, the toll would be more than six times the average daily homicide rate in the state last year.
President Michel Temer, addressing the crisis publicly for the first time, in a statement Friday called the strike "illegal" and said that "the right to protest cannot take the Brazilian people hostage."

The federal government, he said, "will make every effort for Espirito Santo to return to normal as soon as possible."

States across Brazil are facing budget and debt problems after the country entered an ongoing recession that is now the country's worst on record. The federal government has negotiated debt relief with some states and now finds itself shoring up public security too.

Temer's comments came as the defence ministry mobilized hundreds more soldiers and federal police to help stem the chaos, focussed mostly in the metropolitan region of Vitoria, the state capital. After an initial deployment of 1,200 troops earlier in the week, the ministry on Thursday said as many as 3,000 would be in place by the weekend.

State officials said on Friday that more than 700 striking state officers, who in Brazil are organised with military-style ranks and rules, would be charged with rebellion.

Wives and family members who have blockaded police stations could also face fines and other penalties, they said.

"We will not be weak," said Andre Garcia, the secretary. "We will ensure that the rule of law is preserved."
SCHOOLS, SHOPS SHUT

Local officials have closed schools, clinics and public transportation, while shops and other businesses have remained shuttered, causing about $30 million in losses, according to a state retail association.

Meanwhile, in Rio, where the state government has been struggling to pay salaries, family members of some officers early on Friday blocked the entrance to a handful of local police stations in an effort to keep squad members from patrolling.

The tactic, which on a much larger scale has paralysed Espirito Santo, affected just a few districts. By Friday afternoon, no major problems had been reported.

The mayor of Niteroi, located across a long bay from state capital Rio, said his city would make a one-time payment of 3,500 reais ($1129) to police working there. The city of Macae, near Rio's offshore oil fields, said it would help cover the cost of a paycheck from last year that the state still owes.

State police officials, who said they detained one Rio officer for encouraging a strike online, said that 95 percent of the force was working.

The department tweeted photographs of patrol cars and officers at their posts across the city, Brazil's most popular destination for foreign tourists and famed around the world for its colourful Carnival celebration.

Social networks and messaging platforms in Rio have buzzed in recent days with rumours of a pending police shutdown, as Carnival looms at the end of the month. However, officials have said they do not expect a full-fledged strike.

In addition to late pay and budget cutbacks that have curtailed their ability to buy basic supplies, Rio's police have recently been clashing with protesters demonstrating against a push by the state government to cut costs and sell state assets, including the local water utility.

(Additional reporting by Paulo Prada; Editing by Daniel Flynn and Meredith Mazzilli)