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

Thursday, September 20, 2018

KEY WITNESS IN STUDENTS ABDUCTION CASE PETITIONS HRCSL, CLAIMS NAVY IS VICTIMISING HIM


Sri Lanka Brief20/09/2018

The key state witness in an abduction case has written to the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka, complaining that his employer, the Sri Lanka Navy, is victimising him and blocking his promotion. Lt. Cmdr. Krishan Welagedara is a leading witness in a Habeas Corpus application filed in respect of five young Sinhala, Tamil and Muslim men who have gone missing since 2008 (the total number who disappeared is 11). The case is being investigated by the Criminal Investigation Department (CID). Preliminary findings point towards an extortion racket; huge payments had been solicited from their next of kin in exchange for their safe return.

In statements to the CID and court, Lt. Cmdr. Welagedara claimed that he had seen the five men at the Trincomalee Navy Base in 2009 while he was stationed there as an intelligence officer. Among other things, he claimed that they had been beaten up and the victims had begged him to rescue them. He also traced their vehicles to various Navy locations.

Lt Cmdr Welagedara subsequently faced a Court Martial on the charge of going overseas without informing the Navy command and for bringing disrepute to the Navy. He was demoted but the punishment was annulled by President Maithripala Sirisena in July 2016 on an appeal. The only penalty that was imposed on him was the deduction of his salary for the period of absence.

But the Navy officer has told the HRCSL that the President’s directives are being ignored by the Navy which is allegedly blocking his promotion to the rank of Commander. The reason given to him by the Navy is that its legal officer, H M A W Weerasinghe, had committed an offence.

On this basis, the Navy has deducted 10 points from him under the promotion scheme for elevation to Commander, he complains. Since the President has annulled his punishment, this cannot be done, the officer argues.

“I would like to point out to you that as I am the main witness for the State in the abduction of 11 youths, the Navy is using any means necessary to intimidate me,” he says.

Lt Cmmdr Welagedara has appealed to the HRCSL to take note of the injustice he has faced and to help him gain his promotion to the rank of Commander on the basis of seniority.
ST


article_image

By Dr. Ranil Senanayake


There is a magic engine that produces one of the rarest substances in the known universe, free molecular Oxygen. Free molecular Oxygen or O2 is found in abundance only on one known planet, ours and it is produced by the engine that supports all life photosynthesis. The process of photosynthesis is one where the energy of the sun, streaming on our planet as sunlight, is captured by life and used to power all of its processes. The resulting formula stated as

CO2 + H2O + e => CxHxOx + O2

Where Carbon Dioxide combine with water and powered by sunlight produces solid organic matter (Carbohydrate) and free molecular Oxygen. This could very well be termed the ‘Creation Formula’, as it harnesses the power of the sun and is the basis of all life on this planet.

It is this simple action that we owe our lives and well-being to. On land, photosynthesis occurs within the leaves of plants in the oceans photosynthesis occurs within the phytoplankton. The work of which, over hundreds of million years, created our atmosphere, rich with free molecular Oxygen. The atmospheric concentration today is about 21.9%. This is an important figure as any reduction will have adverse effects on human well-being. Any loss of oxygen concentration to levels below 19% severely impacts human health. Impaired thinking and attention, reduced coordination and decreased ability for strenuous work, at levels below that there is permanent damage to heart and lungs, very poor judgement, emotional trauma. In many heavily industrialized and urbanized cities such as Mexico City or Delhi the Oxygen concentration regularly falls below the 19% threshold.

A new study by Princeton University shows Earth's oxygen levels are on the decline. By studying the Air bubbles trapped within ice, the time of "deposition" and can be analysed for paleo-oxygen levels. The study found that the amount of oxygen found in the atmosphere is decreasing steadily by 0.7% but over the last 100 years it has suddenly declined to a comparatively speedy 0.10%. Although this decline will not cause immediate health problems globally, areas of low concentration are now beginning to appear. In highly industrialized and urbanized cities like Mexico City or New Delhi, Oxygen concentrations as low as 17% have been recorded. Living in these ‘islands’ of low Oxygen concentration will impact individuals negatively. This reality is totally ignored in the process of ‘Urban Development’.

But it is the disappearance of Oxygen from the oceans, should ring alarm bells. Ocean dead zones with zero oxygen have quadrupled in size since 1950. Again, Climate change caused by fossil fuel burning is the cause of the large-scale deoxygenation, as warmer waters hold less oxygen

In coastal regions, fertiliser, manure and sewage pollution cause algal blooms and when the algae decompose oxygen is sucked out of the water. Oceanographer Dr. Diaz states "No other variable of such ecological importance to coastal ecosystems has changed so drastically in such a short period of time from human activities as dissolved oxygen."

But when it comes to Oxygen, The Ocean is even more efficient than the forests, accounting for about 70% of annual production of free molecular Oxygen, the bulk of which is released into the atmosphere. Thus the increase of ‘dead zones’ with no oxygen, not only impacts fisheries and food, it also impacts the presence of phytoplankton responsible for the massive amount of Oxygen released into the global commons. As this is the process that provides 60-70 % of the annual input of free Oxygen required to maintain our global stock at equilibrium, any increase of oceanic dead zones will mean reduction of Oxygen production provided to the atmospheric. Currently, Oxygen concentration in the atmosphere is 1.2x1015 ton (12,000,000,000,000,000 t), with a Turnover rate about 4000 years, whereby Oxygen from photosynthesis by plants are constantly added to the atmosphere so that a mean of 21.9 % in the atmosphere is maintained.

In the current use of Oxygen, supply is taken for granted with no investment nor responsibility for its replacement. The combined effects of respiration, fossil fuel combustion, deforestation and loss of oceanic production, has begun to affect the Global Commons of our atmosphere and are creating increasing events of reduced air quality and low atmospheric oxygen concentration. Already that effect is being felt as increases in lung disease and difficulty in breathing in many cities. Bringing into stark focus, the motto of the American Lung Association: "If you can’t breathe, nothing else matters."

So, while waiting for industry to become responsible and replace the atmospheric Oxygen that they consume, we should not be holding our breath. We should be working at initiatives that seek to build up the Photosynthetic Biomass stocks wherever possible. The most promising areas for development being the deforested and degraded lands. The most promising resource for implementation being the rural poor. Each tree estimated to produce over 150Kg of Oxygen per year. Each human being uses about 750 kg of Oxygen per year for breathing. Thus establishing 4-5 trees will compensate for the Oxygen we breathe from the Global Commons. But in the end, it is those who live in rural areas who will be able to help us by planting, looking after and protecting the trees we plant. It will be rural societies who can help us be responsible for the air we breathe. They could be empowered if those industrial users of atmospheric Oxygen like, chemical industries, internal combustion engines, jet engines and industrial use of atmospheric Oxygen that is being used furiously with not a penny paid to replace the Oxygen that our lungs require.

The magic engine of photosynthesis is being destroyed. The forests are disappearing for ‘fossil based development’ and the Oceans are dying due to ‘fossil based development’ as is the air, dying on the altar of ‘fossil based development’. This notion of ‘development’ has become an abused word used by political hacks to defend their greedy, self-centered actions. For how long can we allow them to destroy the very basis for life on their crooked altar?

The bald truth about fake news, etc.


 Friday, 21 September 2018 

logoIn its most innocent forms, we may all enjoy a bit of ‘fake news’ and go to bed with a lighter heart and clean conscience. A meme on Facebook urging social media consumers to caution – “You can’t believe everything you read on the internet – Abraham Lincoln” – is both funny and ironic. Or virtually any short piece by those pastmasters of parody, NewsCurry, would suffice to make the point to say nothing of alleviating mood. Note… it’s not quite satire, but who cares when it’s so hilarious!

There is a raft of issues associated with the fake news phenomenon, however. For starters, media literacy in general and social media savvy in particular is so egregious today that many a web surfer may well believe that Lincoln actually said it long ago. Or counter smartly that it was more readily attributable to Albert Einstein. Then again, the state of the nation is so parlous at times that what passes for satire or parody on NewsCurry swims perilously close to the true state of affairs. In any case, satire and parody don’t work in a country where impressive literacy levels simply mean that someone can write his or her name in a single language.

Of course, at its insidious worst, fake news takes more sinister forms. We all know or at least suspect that propagandistic posts on Facebook can set an entire province aflame, as recently evinced in the Kandy District. There was also the inane dissemination (no pun intended) of the pill that could render its consumers sterile. And the vernacular media’s insane engagement with the whole idea! That an ethnic minority community could be scandalised and scapegoated says less about the virulence of fake news than it does about the virility of national newspapers.

So a recent public seminar exploring the possibility of ‘immunising’ society from the scourge of fake news was both welcome and salutary. I reproduce in précis form some of the main ideas shared there this week, which struck me as apt. And then add some of my own understanding of the state of play.

State of play

The seminar suggested that are three main types of ‘information disorder’ (read: fake news).

# Misinformation: the accidental publication of something that is not true. (An ironic example of this was when participants at the seminar were directed to the wrong room. It served to illustrate the definition.)

# Disinformation: the deliberate publication of the same. Disinformation is misinformation that is deliberately disseminated in order to influence or confuse rivals (foreign enemies or business competitors etc.)

# Malinformation: the malicious publication of a falsehood.

To these I would add:

# Non-information: the meagre quantum of information given out by government departments – RTI or no RTI. (“All information is useless” – Keynes)

# Pseudo-information: the measly penny-pinching of triple bottom line reporting that masquerades as Corporate Social Responsibility in many an annual report. Even if theoreticians would quibble and assign the latter two types to one or more of the former three?

State of terror

Some presenters also noted that the employment of fake news as a political strategy is not new, citing the case of a US presidential race at the turn of the 19th century as an instance of a deliberate deployment of it. I think a careful scrutiny of Socrates’ trial, Plato’s “Republic” or Aristotle’s tall tales that had Alexander sighing for new worlds to conquer may yield many treasures. And perhaps Pontius Pilate was being less satirical and more media savvy when he had the headboard of a crucified Carpenter turned Cosmic Anarchist read ‘King of the Jews’ – an early attempt at irony or imperial Roman meme…

The use of propaganda for military purposes may have roots in Sun Tzu’s ‘Art of War’. But we know how martial propaganda has an afterlife in democratic-republics where whole virtually an entire nation has failed to successfully transition from a conflict-driven to post-war society. And despite the smiles that some parodists’ attempts bring to our faces as we scan their daily newspaper caricatures, there’s no denying that jingoistic or sabre-rattling fake news dominates the mindset of certain demographics on the internet as much as denizens who would set a country ablaze again in the name of ethnic exceptionalism.

State of nation

The forum also touched on the growing need to educate society in general and social media in particular about news in its many avatars and imitators. There is a place for satire and parody, perhaps beyond the bailiwick of those usual suspects: NewsCurry. That many readers are lazy and treat satire straight may account for the extraordinary popularity of shows such as the ‘Freddy’ franchise – where stand-up seems to be employed to the sterling end of critically engaging governance.

Then there is the awful majesty of the law, which has been missing in action – at least as far as curbing hate speech in the country is concerned. One panellist rued this abysmal lacuna, positing that its citizens can hardly trust a state to regulate fake news that did not arrest verbal arsonists and rabble-rousers inflaming communal tension. There was also an image conjured of civil society being like a hapless beast, cowering between the twin monsters of a State that wields terror over its citizens and Corporate Sri Lanka, which feeds its consumers arrant nonsense in the form and shape of commercial propaganda.

It is not only between this Scylla and Charybdis that Sri Lanka flounders. Civil society has foundered between the monstrous rock of governments that tolerate and even employ both hate speech and fake news, and the whirlpool of press releases, conferences, CSR projects and corporate awards that make a mockery of probity in the marketplace and public square.

So I’d agree with the presenter who advocated educating Sri Lanka on media and its uses, abuses, and misuses. I’d disabuse anyone of the notion that it’s going to be easy, because we – where once a nation of newspaper readers who took editorials as gospel – are now a state of social media gourmands with the least discerning of palates. And stalwart educators must do more than distinguish between news and nuance and nonsense, like bankers are trained to handle genuine currency in order to tell fake money apart from the real bills. They must champion media houses that base their business reputation on fact-checking; challenge fly-by-night operators with plain or obscure agendas who are economical with the truth; critique the powers that be and their laissez-faire, laissez-passer approach to information disorder; condemn chauvinistic propagandists in town hall and other public forums.

Of course, a witty meme I recently read on the internet somewhere brought me up short. It said: “In the old days, empires were run by emperors. Then we had kingdoms run by kings. And now we have countries…” – and it made me feel we didn’t need fake news to poke fun at these counts – for the country is being run so newsworthily that no amount of ‘mis’ or ‘dis’ would do more damage than the ‘mal’ we’re being dished out on a daily basis. That it was worse before under a previous dispensation is cold comfort and poor consolation, the last resort of cartoonists who have run out of fresh ideas and treat past sins as cannon-fodder to cover up present trespasses.

Roll over, fake news. The bald truth about the state of things is bad enough.
(Journalist | Editor-at-large of LMD | Writer #SpeakingTruthToPower)

Sarvodaya Has Launched A New National Awakening!

logo
Dr. Laksiri Fernando
Sarvodaya is celebrating its 60th Anniversary this year with various new activities and strengthening their old ones. One of the important initiatives is the launching of the country wide ‘Deshodaya’ or the ‘national awakening’ programme. Although the name or even the programme is not completely new, it has taken a new focus and direction with a view to resist and overturn the existing corrupt political system, political culture and practices.
The Founder of Sarvodaya, Dr A. T. Ariyaratne, still active and vibrant, identifies the present day rotten political-economy as the main reason for the widespread decline in the country. The key factor in this decline, in his opinion, is the (adversarial) political party system that has even destroyed the sovereignty of the people. One cannot agree more. 
He goes on saying, “Those who believe in political parties as religion, even indulge in crimes such as killings and destroying the environment, for the sake of achieving power, position, fame and money.” I am quoting and paraphrasing from his speech at the Deshodaya convention in June 2018. 
Sarvodaya Activities
Sarvodaya is not an unknown movement to anyone in the country and quite known among humanitarian organizations overseas for its good wok. I first remember its inauguration (in 1958) when it was reported in the newspapers that a teacher at Nalanda College founding a Shramadana(voluntary work or gifting-labour) movement when we were young (13 years in my case) and looking for good deeds to follow or admire. Three of our key icons at that time were E. W. Adikaram, A. T. Ariyaratne and Abraham T. Kovoor (followed by Carlo Fonseka) for different reasons and purposes.
The first act of Sarvodaya has gone into history, Ariyaratne taking forty students and twelve teachers from Nalanda College to the so-called outcaste (Rodiya) village at Kathaluwa, and helping the villagers to construct their dwellings, wells, toilets and roads. More importantly they were motivated and trained for cultivation and self-employment.
During a casual meeting with A. T. Ariyaratne recently he explained to me how he first ventured into ‘gifting his labour’ to others, when he started mathematics/science classes for his former fellow students at Gandara during weekends, where he was born, after he had the fortune to get admitted to the prestigious Mahinda College, Galle. His voice was eternally enthusiastic. Gifting labour is the meaning of Shramadana as he said. He didn’t fail to compliment Merrill J. Fernando (Dilmah company) who had gifted the first headquarters of Sarvodaya at Moratuwa. 
Perhaps the peak of Sarvodaya activities in recent decades had been the aftermath of Tsunami disaster in the country. However in overall, they have covered more than 15, 000 villages out 38,000, throughout the country in their work. The war undoubtedly hampered their work in the North and the East, yet the activities have now restarted. The organization claims the overall beneficiaries to be mora than 10 million. This is one of the prominent people’s organizations  working irrespective of caste, gender, ethnicity, religion, party or other distinctions.
Personal Experiences 
  • When I was living in Sri Lanka at Koswatta, Thalangama, before 2011, the first person I encountered early morning in my walks was an elderly woman selling Kola Kanda (herbal porridge) at a boutique sponsored by Sarvodaya. I used to patronize the business almost daily.
  • During some visits to the North-East during the temporary CFA period (2002-2005) for peace building work, I have met former Sarvodaya workers and seen dilapidated Sarvodaya name boards evidenced of their prominent presence there before the war.
  • This time in Colombo, when I was travelling in a taxi, conversing with the driver-owner, Upul, he told me the following story. His father had died when he was three years and his mother had to take a big economic burden with four children. It was Sarvodaya who had come to their rescue, giving her a job and looking after the family.
In explaining the philosophy of Sarvodaya, its Executive Director Dr Vinya Ariyaratne has given the following explanation.
Sarvodaya is a movement which promotes human development. The uniqueness of Sarvodaya lies in the fact that it promotes inner connections between people and communities which we call spirituality. That is the glue which keeps this holistic approach together.”

Read More

Wednesday, September 19, 2018

Israeli forces fatally shoot Palestinian teenager in Gaza


Mumin Abu Ayeda, 15, was participating in nightly protest in southern Gaza

Gaza protest targeted by Israeli tear gas (AFP/file photo)

Thursday 20 September 2018
Israeli forces fatally shot a Palestinian teenager in southern Gaza late on Wednesday, the health ministry in the besieged enclave said.
A spokesperson for the ministry identified the victim as 15-year-old Mumin Abu Ayeda.
Ayeda was participating in nighttime demonstrations as a part of the Great March of Return protest campaign. He was shot in the head.
The protests call for an end to the 11-year Israeli blockade on Gaza and for Palestinian refugees' right of return to the lands that their families fled during the establishment of the state of Israel in 1948.
Israeli forces have targeted protesters with tear gas and live ammunition, killing more than 184 Palestinians, including journalists and medics, since late March.
On Tuesday, two Palestinians were killed in Gaza during protests near the Erez crossing into Israel.
READ MORE► 
Israel maintains a crippling blockade of the Gaza Strip, which critics say amounts to collective punishment of the impoverished area's two million residents.
Israel's tactics against the protests have drawn international condemnation.
Still, Washington has backed its ally in accusing Hamas of staging the mass-mobilisation, a claim dismissed by the group and the protests' organisers.
UN and Egyptian mediators have been trying to reach a deal to calm Gaza, where Israel has waged three wars in the last decade. The brokering efforts have been complicated by Hamas's feuding with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, who has restricted funding to Gaza.

Trump official wants students prosecuted for Israel protests

Ali Abunimah- 19 September 2018

The Trump administration’s top civil rights enforcer at the US Department of Education wanted students who did nothing but hold a noisy protest in support of Palestinian rights to be criminally prosecuted.
Kenneth Marcus was captured on camera during a September 2016 meeting with an undercover reporter working on Al Jazeera’s explosive documentary about the US Israel lobby.
The documentary has never been broadcast due to censorship by Qatar, which funds Al Jazeera, following pressure from pro-Israel organizations.
The above video obtained by The Electronic Intifada is the latest excerpt to leak from the documentary. It shows Marcus speaking to the undercover reporter.
At the time, Marcus was director of the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law, an Israel lobby group unaffiliated with Brandeis University. The Brandeis Center specializes in lawfare – the use of legal proceedings to harass and silence Israel’s critics.
In that role, Marcus spearheaded the Israel lobby strategy of filing complaints to the Department of Education under Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, claiming that universities fail to protect Jewish students by not cracking down on Palestine solidarity activism.
In June, Marcus was confirmed as the director of the Office for Civil Rights at the US Department of Education. This means he is now in charge of investigating alleged violations of the civil rights law.
He has quickly fulfilled the worst fears of civil liberties defenders by reopening a bogus complaint against Rutgers University made by the Zionist Organization of America.
That complaint was thrown out by the Office for Civil Rights in 2014 for lack of evidence.
Marcus also informed the ZOA by letter that he has decided to enforce an official definition of anti-Semitism that conflates criticism of Israel and Zionism with anti-Jewish bigotry.
The move, made without public discussion or congressional notice, could have a profoundly chilling effect on academic freedom and free speech.

Demonizing campus activists

In the leaked video that can be watched at the top of this page, Marcus explains his lobby group’s strategy, which he is now using his government position to implement.
“Right now, the challenge is that there are people who say, ‘you know what, anti-Israel politics have nothing to do with anti-Semitism,’” Marcus states. “What you gotta show that they’re not the same, but they’re not entirely different either.”
“The goal is to have the federal government establish a definition of anti-Semitism that is parallel to the State Department definition,” Marcus adds.
The full documentary shows how Marcus’ organization aims to demonize campus groups like Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) that support BDS – boycott, divestment and sanctions – to hold Israel accountable.
“You have to show that they are racist hate groups, and that they are using intimidation to get funded, and to consistently portray them that way,” Marcus states.
The so-called State Department definition of anti-Semitism was originally adopted in 2010 and updated in early 2018.
It is substantially the same as the IHRA definition of anti-Semitism that Israel lobby groups pressured the UK’s Labour Party to adopt as part of their campaign to oust leader Jeremy Corbyn and curtail expressions of support for Palestinian rights.
The definition has been widely opposed for conflating criticism of Israel and Zionism, Israel’s state ideology, with anti-Jewish bigotry.
Even the definition’s lead author, former American Jewish Committee executive Kenneth Stern, strongly opposes efforts to enshrine the definition in legislation or university rule books, or to use it for enforcement, arguing that this would unconstitutionally infringe on free speech.

Criminal prosecution

Not all the footage of Marcus obtained by Al Jazeera’s undercover reporter has been included in the censored documentary.
A transcript of the full meeting seen by The Electronic Intifada shows that Marcus also spoke about a May 2016 protest at the University of California, Irvine.
The UC Irvine protest sparked accusations that students from groups including Students for Justice in Palestine had harassed, threatened and intimidated attendees at a campus film screening and discussion featuring a panel of Israeli soldiers.
The screening was co-sponsored by Students Supporting Israel, a chapter of a campus organization funded by anti-Palestinian financier Adam Milstein.
Earlier leaked footage from the censored Al Jazeera documentary published by The Electronic Intifada names Milstein as the secret funder of Canary Mission, the anonymous website that smears and harasses student activists, especially from Students for Justice in Palestine.
But after a three-month investigation, UC Irvine issued a 58-page report concluding that the most troubling allegations against the Palestine solidarity activists were untrue.

False accusations

Pro-Israel groups had claimed falsely that the protesters had blocked the exits to the screening room and denied people entry.
The investigation found that the doors were held shut from the inside, keeping out Students for Justice in Palestine members and at least one pro-Israel student.
As The Electronic Intifada reported at the time, the university investigation refuted claims made by Students Supporting Israel, the Orange County Hillel chapter, the Zionist Organization of America and Marcus’ Brandeis Center which tried to paint the protesters as threats to Jewish students on campus.
One of the most serious allegations Marcus repeats in the Al Jazeera transcript is that “a Jewish pro-Israel student was chased across campus when they saw that she was one of the pro-Israel students, and had to hide in a kitchen until security could come.”
But this lurid claim was also refuted by the university’s investigation. By her own account, that student had been denied access to the screening room because the door was being held shut from inside.
The students who allegedly “chased” her were simply trying to find another way into the screening room, the investigation concluded. In their effort to do so they entered an adjacent room several minutes after the pro-Israel student did and “were not chasing” her, the report states.
The only charge that the university substantiated was that the student protest had “more likely than not” generated so much noise as to disrupt the viewing of the film, a documentary about Israeli soldiers.
Making noise is inherent to speech and protest. But administrators found the protesters in violation of one policy on student conduct: “Obstruction or disruption of teaching, research, administration, disciplinary procedures, or other university activities.”
As a sanction, the university gave Students for Justice in Palestine a warning and an assignment to host an educational event.
Marcus told the undercover reporter that this sanction was “not enough.”
“I’d like to see the students prosecuted, but the DA [district attorney] has not been amenable,” Marcus said.
“But we’ll keep pushing them so that if we don’t get these students prosecuted this time, we’ll get the DA at least sensitized to the issue and [they] should know that there will be pressure on them next time.”
During the investigation, the Brandeis Center, the Zionist Organization of America and other pro-Israel groups wrote to UC Irvine administrators to find the protesters in violation of codes of conduct and to urge them to refer the incident to the Orange County District Attorney’s office for criminal prosecution.
The Zionist Organization of America cited as precedent the 2011 convictions of the Irvine 11 students for protesting a speech by Michael Oren when he was Israel’s ambassador in the United States. While the students could have faced prison time for disruption of a public meeting, they were sentenced to community service.
But as noted, Marcus spoke to Al Jazeera’s undercover reporter in September 2016 – more than a month after the UC Irvine investigation debunked the serious accusations against Students for Justice in Palestine members over the film screening protest.
Yet Marcus continued to advance false accusations and insist that students who did nothing more than hold a campus protest in support of Palestinian rights should face the full weight of the American criminal legal system.
Students across the United States now face the perverse and dangerous situation where the most senior federal official entrusted with protecting their civil rights may use his position – in the interests of a foreign state – to press for their criminal prosecution merely for exercising their First Amendment rights.
Asa Winstanley contributed research.
‘The Apprentice’ book excerpt: At CIA’s ‘Russia House,’ growing alarm about 2016 election interference

President Trump gives a speech at CIA headquarters on Jan. 21, 2017, in Langley, Va. 
The warren of cubicles was secured behind a metal door. The name on the hallway placard had changed often over the years, most recently designating the space as part of the Mission Center for Europe and Eurasia. But internally, the office was known by its unofficial title: “Russia House.”

The unit had for decades been the center of gravity at the CIA, an agency within the agency, locked in battle with the KGB for the duration of the Cold War. The department’s prestige had waned after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, and it was forced at one point to surrender space to counterterrorism officers.
But Russia House later reclaimed that real estate and began rebuilding, vaulting back to relevance as Moscow reasserted itself. Here, among a maze of desks, dozens of reports officers fielded encrypted cables from abroad, and “targeters” meticulously scoured data on Russian officials, agencies, businesses and communications networks the CIA might exploit for intelligence.

In the months leading up to the 2016 election, senior Russia House officials held a series of meetings in a conference room adorned with Stalin-era posters, seeking to make sense of disconcerting reports that Moscow had mounted a covert operation to upend the U.S. presidential race.

By early August, the sense of alarm had become so acute that CIA Director John Brennan called White House Chief of Staff Denis McDonough. “I need to get in to see the president,” Brennan said, with unusual urgency in his voice.

“The Apprentice: Trump, Russia and the Subversion of American Democracy” by Greg Miller (HarperCollins)

Brennan had just spent two days sequestered in his office reviewing a small mountain of material on Russia. The conference table at the center of the dark-paneled room was stacked with dozens of binders bearing stamps of TS/SCI — for “top secret, sensitive compartmented information” — and code words corresponding to collection platforms aimed at the Kremlin.

There were piles of finished assessments, but Brennan had also ordered up what agency veterans call the “raw stuff” — unprocessed material from informants, listening devices, computer implants and other sources. Clearing his schedule, Brennan pored over all of it, his door closed, staying so late that the glow through his office windows remained visible deep into the night from the darkened driveway that winds past the headquarters building’s main entrance.

The description of Brennan and this article is adapted from “The Apprentice: Trump, Russia and the Subversion of American Democracy,” a Washington Post book, which will be published Oct. 2 by Custom House.

A narrative history of Russia’s interference in the 2016 election and its fallout, the book is based on hundreds of interviews with people from Trump’s inner circle, current and former government officials, individuals with close ties to the White House, members of the law enforcement and the intelligence communities, foreign officials and confidential documents. Most people interviewed spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss classified or sensitive U.S. and foreign government deliberations.

At the time of Brennan’s request for a meeting with President Barack Obama, election anxiety about Russia was already surging. Weeks earlier, WikiLeaks had dumped nearly 20,000 emails stolen from Democratic Party computers, material from an audacious hack that authorities almost immediately traced to the Kremlin. Meanwhile, the Republican nominee, Donald Trump, was praising Russian President Vladimir Putin with inexplicable vigor and had even called on Russian spy agencies to hack his opponent.

Brennan’s review session occurred against the backdrop of these unsettling developments. But his call to the White House was driven by something else — extraordinary intelligence that had surfaced in late July and reached deep inside the Kremlin, showing that Putin was himself directing an “active measures” operation aimed not only at disrupting the U.S. presidential race but electing Trump.
Russia House was the point of origin for that assessment. Months later it became the consensus view of U.S. intelligence agencies, one of the core findings of a report released just weeks before Trump took office. It was a conclusion that would fuel investigations and infuriate the 45th president — who, on his second day as leader of the free world, was making his way to CIA headquarters.


John Brennan testifies before the Senate Intelligence Committee in 2013 during his confirmation hearings. As CIA director, his analysis of intelligence pushed him to sound the alarm on Russian interference in the 2016 election. (Melina Mara/The Washington Post)

The sting of a slur

President Trump had barely been in office 24 hours when his motorcade departed the White House grounds for the nine-mile trip to the CIA’s Northern Virginia campus. The clouds and cold that had dampened Inauguration Day lingered over a city littered with the debris of America’s post-election divide — pro-Trump memorabilia, inauguration programs and celebratory banners along the parade route; broken windows and burned vehicles on blocks where protesters had clashed with police in riot gear.

Trump’s arrival in the White House had been followed by a women’s march that drew a crowd three times larger than the inaugural audience, and now throngs of pink-clad activists watched the caravan accelerate through the D.C. streets. Their gestures toward the motorcade, countered by some salutes from Trump supporters wandering Washington, were reflected in the thick tinted glass of the president’s passing car.

The streetside crowds dissipated as the line of vehicles left downtown, crossed into Virginia, and followed the Potomac River north, turning onto the main route through the suburb of McLean and then past the zigzagging barricades that guard the entrance to the CIA.

The agency occupies a sprawling, leafy campus in Northern Virginia enclosed by miles of electrified fence. At the center of the property is a seven-story building with a row of glass doors opening onto an iconic marble lobby — with the CIA seal inlaid in the terrazzo floor — frequently depicted in movies.




Protesters demonstrate near the White House as President Trump returns from his CIA visit. (Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images)

The CIA welcome for Trump would be cordial, even warm, but it was by now well known that the agency was responsible for a series of highly classified reports that had helped trigger an FBI investigation of Russia’s interference into the election and any ties to associates of the president. And Trump had made no secret of his growing belief that the CIA and FBI were engaged in a coordinated effort to damage his presidency before it had even begun.

His blistering attacks on intelligence agencies had intensified as he prepared to take office. He disparaged their conclusions about Russia’s involvement in the election and accused them of deliberately sabotaging him by leaking a document that had come to be known as the “dossier.”

That collection of memos, compiled by a former British intelligence officer, contained dozens of unproven but explosive allegations about then-candidate Trump’s ties with Russia. Among the most salacious was that he had consorted with prostitutes during a 2013 trip to Moscow for the Miss Universe pageant, paying women to defile a hotel room where Obama had once stayed.

Those assertions had gone mostly unreported in the press until U.S. intelligence officials told Trump about the dossier two weeks before he was sworn in. When its contents were published on BuzzFeed, Trump lashed out on Twitter. “Intelligence agencies should never have allowed this fake news to ‘leak’ into the public,” he said. “One last shot at me. Are we living in Nazi Germany?”

The sting of that slur was acute. The CIA’s lineage traced to World War II and the creation of a spy service whose mission was to help Allied forces defeat the same Nazis that Trump now invoked. The agency’s precursor, the Office of Strategic Services, was disbanded after the war, but a statue of its founding director, Gen. William “Wild Bill” Donovan, still stands in the agency lobby.

Trump probably knew little of that history — or for that matter of the record of CIA abuses and corresponding reforms that had transpired during the intervening decades — and would never retract the insult. Many presidents had clashed with the CIA, but the relationship had never taken such an ugly turn before a commander in chief had even taken office.

No one knew what Trump would say when he arrived at the CIA and addressed the crowd that awaited him, but one thing was certain: He would not be brought into Russia House.
A hallowed backdrop

The Trump team hoped that the CIA visit could assure the GOP establishment that Trump would settle into office and be “presidential,” which for Republicans entailed being a staunch defender of national security institutions. His aides also hoped the gesture would help avert an unnecessary rift with an agency whose unique aura and authority had proved seductive to previous presidents but was also capable of fierce bureaucratic combat — even against occupants of the Oval Office.




Secret Service agents stand in front of a memorial for former CIA director Allen Dulles on Jan. 21, 2017. (Andrew Harnik/AP)

Trump stepped out of his armored car at 2:06 p.m. in an underground parking garage and was greeted by a CIA leadership team in flux. Brennan and his deputy had resigned once Trump took office, so Meroe Park, who had served for more than three years in the No. 3 role, was officially in charge of the agency and its 20,000 employees. Park (the first woman to hold the reins as director, albeit in an acting capacity) held the job for just three days — long enough for Trump’s pick as CIA chief, Republican Rep. Mike Pompeo, to be confirmed.

Park escorted the president into the Original Headquarters building, an H-shaped structure that opened when John F. Kennedy was president. Trump was then taken by golf cart to a futuristic command post that operatives of Kennedy’s era could hardly have imagined.

The CIA’s Predator operations floor is a dazzling theater of high-tech warfare. Concentric rows of computer terminals face a wall of high-definition video screens. The ambient lighting is darkened to allow analysts to focus on footage transmitted halfway around the world from aircraft (the early Predators now largely replaced with larger, more powerful Reapers) equipped with cameras and missiles but no cockpits.

The sight of missiles streaming toward a target is particularly adrenaline-inducing to the newly initiated, and the agency often brings those it most wants to impress to the Predator display, with highlights of successful strikes cued up. Trump appeared suitably enthused, though puzzled by what he regarded as undue restraint.

When told that the CIA flew surveillance flights over Syria but that only the military conducted strikes — an Obama policy meant to return the agency’s focus to its core espionage mission — Trump made clear he wanted those restrictions wiped away and for the agency to start firing. “If you can do it in 10 days, get it done,” he said, an edict that was ultimately implemented, though it took longer than he wished.

When the agency’s head of drone operations explained how the CIA had developed special munitions to limit civilian casualties, the president seemed nonplused. Shown a strike in which the CIA delayed firing until the target was a safe distance from a compound with other occupants, Trump asked, “Why did you wait?” And when Trump noticed that militants had scattered seconds before another drone attack, he said, “Can they hear the bombs coming? We should make the bombs silent so they can’t get away.”

Agency officials had been given just several days’ notice that Trump had planned to visit the CIA and would deliver remarks; they had scrambled to make preparations that typically take weeks. An email to the workforce had offered tickets to the first 400 employees to respond, a move that helped to ensure the new president would encounter a friendly crowd since the event was being held on a weekend.




President Trump, accompanied that day by his first pick to lead the CIA, called Mike Pompeo, left, “a total star.” (Andrew Harnik/AP)

The agency expected Trump to use a teleprompter, hoping the president would work from a prepared text. But the White House sent word at the last minute to scrap the screens — Trump would speak off the cuff.

There are numerous locations at CIA headquarters suitable for a speech, among them a cavernous hallway lined with past directors’ portraits and a semi-spherical auditorium known as the Bubble.
But the risers for Trump’s visit were placed before the agency’s most hallowed backdrop: a marble wall on the north side of the main lobby marked by six rows of hand-carved stars, 117 in total at that time, each representing an agency officer or contractor killed in the line of duty. The number had grown by at least 40 since the 9/11 attacks, reflecting the toll of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The constellation had gained three new hand-chiseled stars just months before Trump’s visit, commemorating a trio of paramilitary officers killed in eastern Afghanistan in 2016. The names of many of the dead are entered in a grim ledger that rests beneath the field of stars, protected by an inch-thick plate of glass; the goatskin-bound volume also contains blank spaces for those whose identities and CIA missions remain classified.

The wall is, to the CIA, Arlington National Cemetery in miniature, a sacred space. In addition to somber memorial services when new stars are unveiled, the setting has been used for ceremonies marking momentous agency events, including the culmination of the hunt for Osama bin Laden.
It has also been a backdrop for presidents. In 2009, Obama stood before the stars for a first visit that was also uncomfortable. As a presidential candidate, he had called the CIA’s post-9/11 interrogation methods torture. Once in office, he ordered the agency’s secret prisons dismantled and directed that the legal memos used to justify their operation be made public.

Obama defended those decisions to a wary audience that he acknowledged viewed him with “understandable anxiety and concern.” But he also spoke of employees’ sacrifice and courage, describing the stars behind him — 89 at the time — as “a testament to both the men and women of the CIA who gave their lives in service to their country.” Even those who considered Obama hostile to the agency (and there were many) respected his recognition of so many lives lost.




Acting CIA director Meroe Park speaks before President Trump’s remarks. “It means a great deal that you chose to come to CIA on your first full day as president,” she told him. (Andrew Harnik/AP)

As the ceremony for Trump got underway, Park was first to the lectern, telling the new president that “hundreds more” agency employees wished to attend but were turned away for lack of space. “It means a great deal that you chose to come to CIA on your first full day as president,” she said.

Vice President Pence was next to speak, and he hit all the politically expedient notes. It was “deeply humbling,” he said, to appear before “men and women of character who have sacrificed greatly and to stand before this hallowed wall, this memorial wall, where we remember 117 who paid the ultimate sacrifice for our freedom.” He then set the table for Trump, saying he knew the new president was “going to make America safe again” and that he had “never met anyone with a greater heart for those who every day, in diverse ways, protect the people of this nation through their character and their service and their sacrifice.”

Blind to the perils



President Trump speaks on Jan. 21, 2017 — the day after his inauguration — at CIA headquarters in Langley, Va. (Olivier Doulier/Pool/Getty Images)

Trump took the stage in a striped blue tie and, though indoors, a topcoat that fell below his knees. “There is nobody that feels stronger about the intelligence community and the CIA than Donald Trump,” he said as he stood facing the bronze gaze of Donovan’s statue.

The agency would get so much support under his administration, he said, that “maybe you’re going to say, ‘Please don’t give us so much backing.’ ” He vowed to rid the world of terrorist groups and assured employees that their new director, Pompeo, was a “total star.”

The speech to that point seemed on track. Park and other agency officials appeared to exhale, gaining confidence that their fears — a confrontation, an attack on the Russia analysts, another Nazi slur — would not materialize. Then midway through his 15-minute appearance, without any pause or outward sign, Trump changed course.

Abandoning discussion of anything relevant to the agency, he set off on a riff about how youthful he felt — “30, 35, 39” — and described the size of his crowds during the final days of the campaign — 25,000, 30,000, 15,000, 19,000.

He falsely claimed to hold the record for Time magazine covers and teased that he would help build a new room at the CIA so that “your thousands of other people that have been trying to come in” would have the privilege of seeing him next time.

Trump called members of the media “the most dishonest human beings on Earth” for refusing to acknowledge the “million, million and a half people” he said had attended his inauguration the previous day — an erroneous claim off by a factor of four.

Trump directed applause to two of his closest aides, both sitting in the front row. “General Flynn is right over here. Put up your hand. What a good guy,” Trump said of his national security adviser, Michael Flynn. A retired Army general who had been one of Trump’s most vocal campaign supporters, Flynn was by then already under FBI investigation for omitting large foreign payments from his financial disclosure forms.

Within days, he would also be questioned by FBI agents over his troubling post-election contacts with the Russian ambassador to the United States.

Next to get presidential praise was Reince Priebus: “Reince. He’s like this political guy that turned out to be a superstar, right?” Trump said of his chief of staff, who was already struggling to tame the chaos of the Trump White House and was soon, like Flynn, banished.

Absorbed in self-adulation and grievance, Trump was blind to a stunning array of problems, some in plain view from the CIA stage: the failings of a national security adviser he’d insisted on hiring despite warnings; the existence of a larger agency workforce beyond this clapping, self-selected crowd that would be profoundly disturbed by his vainglorious performance; the fragments of intelligence being assembled several floors directly above him in Russia House that would help expose a web of connections between his campaign and Moscow, and feed into investigations that would threaten his presidency.


President Trump waves as Vice President Pence, in the background, gives a thumbs-up upon exiting CIA headquarters. (Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images)

Trump’s ability to see these perils was impaired by his own unfamiliarity with the norms of governance, his insecurity and self-regard. Other presidents had varying levels of these traits, but none had ever possessed such a concentrated combination. These qualities had been on display from the start of his campaign. But now, against a backdrop that symbolized the profound burden of presidential responsibility, his shortcomings seemed suddenly and gravely consequential.

In the reality show that had propelled him to great fame, Trump was depicted as a business titan with peerless instincts — a consummate negotiator, a fearless dealmaker, and an unflinching evaluator of talent. Week after week, contestants competed for the chance to learn from a boardroom master — to be, as the show’s title put it, his apprentice.

In the reality that commenced with his inauguration, Trump seemed incapable of basic executive aspects of the job. His White House was consumed by dysfunction, with warring factions waiting for direction — or at least a coherent decision-making process — from the president.

His outbursts sent waves of panic through the West Wing, with aides scrambling to contain the president’s anger or divine some broader mandate from the latest 140-character blast. He made rash hiring decisions, installing Cabinet officials who seemed unfamiliar with the functions of their agencies, let alone their ethical and administrative requirements.

Decorated public servants were subjected to tirades in the Oval Office and humiliating dress-downs in public. White House documents were littered with typos and obvious mistakes. Senior aides showed up at meetings without the requisite security clearances — and sometimes stayed anyway.

Trump refused to read intelligence reports, and he grew so visibly bored during briefings that analysts took to reducing the world’s complexities to a collection of bullet points.

The supposedly accomplished mogul was the opposite of how he’d been presented on prime-time television. Now he was the one who was inexperienced, utterly unprepared, in dire need of a steadying hand. Now he was the apprentice.

The word, of course, has another connotation: an aspect of servility.
Getting to 98 percent certainty

How Trump fought the intelligence on Russia and left an election threat unchecked
Hacking Democracy