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, May 23, 2019

America Loves Excusing Its War Criminals

Bitter memories of impunity for U.S. soldiers still rankle even close allies.

In this picture taken on March 15, 2018, local resident Truong Thi Hong, 76, looks at the names of relatives killed during the My Lai massacre at the war memorial museum in Son My village, Quang Ngai province.In this picture taken on March 15, 2018, local resident Truong Thi Hong, 76, looks at the names of relatives killed during the My Lai massacre at the war memorial museum in Son My village, Quang Ngai province. NHAC NGUYEN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

BY 
|  No photo description available.The report that U.S. President Donald Trump is preparing to pardon a number of U.S. war criminals, both accused and convicted, has sparked rightful outrage. These are not ambiguous cases: Seven former platoon members have accused one of the men, Navy SEAL Edward Gallagher, of routinely targeting women and children as a sniper in Iraq, as well as murdering a teenage captive in cold blood. Nicholas Slatten is a mercenary who is, so far, the only man convicted of a massacre of 14 Iraqi civilians in 2007. Trump has repeatedly expressed his support for torture and atrocity in war, though as with Trump’s previous pardons of murderers in uniform, many of those who, unlike the president, actually served in the military are particularly disgusted by the move.

But while the violence of Trump’s rhetoric is new, effective impunity for U.S. soldiers in foreign lands is not. Iraqis’ resentment of U.S. forces is obvious and violent, but the pardons will also further corrode U.S. credibility among its calmer allies. That’s especially true in East Asia, where the inequities of U.S. military justice have frequently riled locals. In South Korea, Japan, and the Philippines, among others, the perceived impunity of U.S. military personnel has turned residents against the presence of military bases, sparked mass protests, and strained diplomatic relations.

Individual violations of sovereignty, as protesters see it, drive these complaints—but they’re also tied to a wider anti-American tradition fueled by the United States’ own repeated failures to try its own soldiers fairly. Although these failures of justice took place in different countries, and at different times, they form a strong part of collective historical memory. South Korean protesters frequently refer to the U.S. massacres in Vietnam—where South Korean forces also committed atrocities —as well as to horrors committed during the Korean War itself. The gross failures of Iraq are a touchstone for those opposed to the U.S. presence across the world.

U.S. military training today goes out of its way to emphasize the laws of war and the necessity of disobeying illegal orders. Yet U.S. actions offer little reassurance that political attitudes have changed.U.S. politicians have repeatedly refused to accept the role of the International Criminal Court, and current Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has levied numerous threats against it. The arrogance, racism, and cheerleading for atrocity at the top of the U.S. government under Trump continue to negate any efforts to repair America’s reputation at the bottom.

None of this is the responsibility of U.S. soldiers as a group themselves, who are no better or worse than any other group of young people away from home. The root of the resentment is not their behavior but the agreements that protect them, and the frequent failure of U.S. military institutions to deliver justice. In Okinawa, the Japanese island that holds America’s key Pacific bases, they were immune from local justice until 1972 and rarely prosecuted by their own forces. “They would just hit somebody, and when they drove back to the base, through the gates, it was the same as going back to the USA,” one Okinawan told the Nation. “It’s so frustrating. You rape and kill or run over somebody and just go back?” That resentment formed the basis of a powerful anti-base movement on the island—despite the central Japanese government’s repeated attempts to crush it.

In both South Korea and Okinawa, the status of forces agreements today send U.S. personnel to military justice only when the alleged crimes are committed in performance of their duties. That has done little to dispel suspicions that the U.S. military protects its own. In Okinawa in 1995, a rape case—even though the accused were handed over to the Japanese authorities—instantly sparked rumors of a cover-up.

In South Korea in 2002, the deaths of two schoolgirls in a horrendous accident during U.S. military exercises, and the subsequent (and probably fair, from witness accounts) acquittal of the soldiers involved on negligent homicide charges by a military court, produced huge riots and a massive swelling of anti-American feeling. I was teaching in Seoul at the time, and my 10-year-old students would tell me they hated Americans because “Americans killed Shin Hyo-sun and Shim Mi-seon.”  The deaths are still commemorated by annual protests.

These emotions have practical consequences. Anti-Americanism remains a powerful force in South Korean politics, despite the looming threat of North Korea and the shield offered by U.S. troops. The building of U.S. bases on Okinawa has been frequently delayed or canceled due to opposition from locals. In the Philippines, U.S. forces were kicked out in 1991 and have been met with concerted protest and political opposition since their return in 1999.

Peacetime failures are serious enough but behind all this is also a long history of America’s failure to convict or punish its own personnel for war crimes in Asia. That goes back to the numerous atrocities committed during the occupation of the Philippines at the beginning of the 20th century. In 1902, Republican Sen. George Frisbie Hoar, a vehement anti-imperialist, condemned U.S. war crimes in the Senate: “You make the American flag in the eyes of a numerous people the emblem of sacrilege in Christian churches, and of the burning of human dwellings, and of the horror of the water torture.”
Yet the men responsible for mass murder and torture received little punishment. Jacob Hurd Smith, who had ordered the revenge killing of thousands of Filipinos after 48 U.S. troops were killed in an ambush, became infamous for his instructions to kill every man over the age of 10. But while he was court-martialed, the consequence was only a quiet retirement, and other high-level perpetuators went untouched.
Vietnam was little better. While war crimes were sometimes investigated, many were swept under the carpet. To be clear, these weren’t the high-level war crimes that critics of the Vietnam War accused Washington of pursuing, such as strategic bombing of civilians, but acts of rape and murder illegal under U.S. military law—but rarely prosecuted. The men of Tiger Force, an elite unit of the U.S. Army, murdered, tortured, and mutilated their way across Vietnam’s highlands; a four-year investigation by the Army confirmed the crimes but produced no prosecutions.

After the massacre at My Lai, exposed by whistleblowers after a year of cover-ups by the U.S. Army, many Americans cried for justice—but far more enthusiastically supported the men who had murdered more than 500 Vietnamese villagers, gangraping the women and mutilating the children.
Letters to the White House ran 100 to 1 in favor of the perpetrators, while polling showed 75 percent of the public backed them and just 17 percent disapproved of their actions. Twenty-six men were charged with crimes, but only one, Lt. William Calley, was convicted. Despite Calley originally receiving a life sentence, President Richard Nixon intervened to ensure he spent his time under cozy house arrest, until he finally received parole after just three and a half years in nominal confinement.

If Americans want to be seen as protectors, not oppressors, U.S. justice has to deliver in a way it has never managed in the past. Future leaders will have to seriously consider incorporating local courts into the military justice system—a solution that carries its own problems of cultural clashes and political biases, but that would go a long way to answering concerns. In the meantime, if Trump’s pardons happen, it will only reinforce the message already being heard by even America’s allies: U.S. troops can rape and murder in your country to their heart’s content, and U.S. leaders will defend them to the hilt over it.

German parliament smears quest for Palestinian rights as anti-Semitic

Hundreds of people march, some with signs that say "BDS"

Activists in the 2017 May Day march in Berlin demonstrate support for boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement for Palestinian rights.
 Keren ManorActiveStills
Riri Hylton-21 May 2019
In a symbolic move on Friday, the German parliament condemned the BDS – boycott, divest and sanctions – movement for Palestinian rights as anti-Semitic.
The Bundestag passed the motion “Resisting the BDS movement decisively – fighting anti-Semitism,” brought by Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union, the center-left Social Democratic Party, the Greens and the liberal Free Democrats.
Inspired by the tactics of the anti-apartheid struggle in South Africa, the BDS movement was founded by some 170 Palestinian civil society organizations in 2005 with the aim of pressuring Israel to respect Palestinian rights and international law.
It explicitly calls for Israel to end its occupation of Arab lands conquered during the 1967 war; abolish all discriminatory laws and policies against Palestinian citizens of Israel; and respect the rights of Palestinian refugees to return to their homes and properties as outlined in UN resolution 194.
Support for the movement has grown increasingly over the past years, attracting high-profile individuals such as South African anti-apartheid veteran Archbishop Desmond Tutu.

Smeared as Nazis

The BDS movement is explicitly anti-racist and targets institutional support for Israel’s practices.
Yet Friday’s motion claims without any basis that “the pattern of argument and methods of the BDS movement are anti-Semitic.”
It compares calls not to buy Israeli goods to the Nazi slogan “Don’t buy from Jews.”
It asserts that anyone who “questions the right of the Jewish and democratic state of Israel to exist or Israel’s right to defend itself will meet with our resolute resistance.”
This means, in effect, that anyone who argues that Israeli Jews and Palestinians should have full and equal rights in a single democratic state – similar to post-apartheid South Africa – is deemed an anti-Semite.
Axel Müller, a member of Merkel’s party, told the Bundestag that “the right of the state of Israel to exist is and remains for us a principle of our state.”
He claimed that “in social media, the BDS campaign unfortunately shows again and again that it is influenced by the propaganda of the Nazi dictatorship.”
Last month, the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) brought a separate motion calling for legislation ban the BDS movement outright, which failed.
The Left Party brought its own motion calling for the condemnation of any anti-Semitism in calls for BDS, which also failed.

“Outright lies”

The nonbinding motion calls for the withholding of funding from organizations that call into question Israel’s “right to exist,” organizations that advocate for the boycott of Israeli goods and groups that show support for the BDS movement.
The Palestinian Boycott Divestment and Sanctions National Committee (BNC) responded that “The German parliament’s equation of the nonviolent BDS movement for Palestinian rights with anti-Semitism is based on outright lies.”
“It’s not only anti-Palestinian McCarthyism, it is a betrayal of international law, German democracy and the fight against real anti-Jewish racism,” the BNC added.
The German parliament’s equation of the nonviolent BDS movement for Palestinian rights with anti-semitism is based on outright lies. It’s not only anti-Palestinian McCarthyism, it is a betrayal of international law, German democracy and the fight against real anti-Jewish racism.
“We call on people of conscience in Germany and beyond to defend the sanctity of universal human rights and freedom of expression by protecting the right to BDS,” the BNC stated, reaffirming that “the academic and cultural boycott of Israel is strictly institutional and does not target individual Israelis.”
More than 60 Jewish and Israeli academics critical of the move signed an open letter stating “we all reject the deceitful allegation that BDS as such is anti-Semitic.”
“The equation of BDS with anti-Semitism has been promoted by Israel’s most right-wing government in history,” the scholars add.
“It is part of persistent efforts to delegitimize any discourse about Palestinian rights and any international solidarity with the Palestinians suffering from military occupation and severe discrimination.”
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu welcomed the German parliament’s vote.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu:
I congratulate the German Bundestag on the important decision branding the boycott movement (BDS) as an anti-semitic movement and announcing that it is forbidden to fund it.
But Netanyahu mischaracterized the nonbinding motion as “legislation” that forbids funding of the BDS movement.
“I hope that this decision will bring about concrete steps and I call upon other countries to adopt similar legislation,” Netanyahu stated.
Berlin-based BDS activist Doris Ghannam told The Electronic Intifada, “it is nothing new that BDS is conflated with anti-Semitism, but to talk about BDS without mentioning Israel’s human rights violations – this is unbelievable.”
Activist Christoph Glanz, who won a two-year BDS court case against local authorities in Germany, told The Electronic Intifada that Israel lobbyists had “worked towards such a resolution for years.”
“They knew very well that they would not be able to find a legal basis to outlaw BDS – the European Court of Human Rights would have thwarted this for good – that’s why the resolution is a mere resolution and not a law.”

Anti-corruption officers in Scotland Yard investigated over allegations of rigging disciplinaries

The police drama Line of Duty was fiction. But this is fact. Not AC-12 but a real-life anti-corruption unit inside the largest force in the country.

-21 May 2019Senior Home Affairs Correspondent
The police drama Line of Duty was fiction. But this is fact. Not AC-12 but a real-life anti-corruption unit inside the largest force in the country.
The police drama Line of Duty was fiction. But this is fact. Not AC-12 but a real-life anti-corruption unit inside the largest force in the country.
Eight officers and one member of police staff in the Metropolitan Police’s Directorate of Professional Standards (DPS) are under suspicion of corruption.
For legal reasons I cannot go any further.
The police watchdog, the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) has told Channel 4 News that its inquiry is focusing on 21 allegations which include rigging disciplinary investigations.
All nine have been served notices they are under suspicion – but that doesn’t indicate misconduct proceedings will follow.
The watchdog has been trawling through five million emails following claims of malpractice from three whistle blowers in the DPS last year.
The police watchdog says the allegations include: interference in investigations to downgrade the severity of charges laid against an officer, failing to properly engage with evidence presented and abuse of process while conducting an investigation, and dropping an allegation of racist behaviour to protect the reputation of the Metropolitan Police.
IOPC director Steve Noon told Channel 4 News: “We are also considering the culture, disciplinary process and systems to help improve the MPS handling of internal investigation.”
The Met told me that none of the officers have been suspended, four of them remain within DPS on restricted duties, one of them has retired and the other three are working in other departments – but not as a result of this investigation, dubbed Operation Embley.

Iranians tense and apprehensive as whispers of war spread

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani delivers a speech during the ceremony of the National Army Day parade in Tehran, Iran April 18, 2019. Tasnim News Agency/via REUTERS/Files

Bozorgmehr Sharafedin-MAY 22, 2019

LONDON (Reuters) - Iranian and U.S. leaders have reassured their nations that they do not seek war. But among ordinary Iranians who already face hardship from tightening sanctions, nerves are being strained by worry that the situation could slip out of control.

In interviews conducted from outside the country by telephone and online, Iranians described heated discussions at home, on the streets and on social media.

The prospect of war was now the main topic of conversation in workplaces, taxis and buses, Nima Abdollahzade, a legal consultant at an Iranian startup company, told Reuters.

“Apart from the deterioration in the Iranian economy, I believe the most severe effect” of confrontation with the United States “is in the mental situation of ordinary Iranians,” he said. “They are sustaining a significant amount of stress.”

The United States pulled out of an agreement between Iran and world powers a year ago that limited Iran’s nuclear programme in return for lifting economic sanctions.

This month tensions have risen sharply, with Washington extending its sanctions to ban all countries from importing Iranian oil. A number of U.S. officials led by National Security Adviser John Bolton have made hawkish remarks, citing Iranian threats against U.S. interests. Trump himself tweeted: “If Iran wants to fight, that will be the official end of Iran.”

Iran has tended to dismiss the tough talk as a bluff - “psychological warfare” from a U.S. administration not ready for a fight. But some Iranians say the tension could have its own logic, raising the chance of a mistake leading to violence.

‘A DOG THAT WON’T BITE BARKS’

A labour activist who spent months in an Iranian jail for his activities and asked not to be identified, said: “War and sanctions are two sides of the same coin, designed by the (U.S.) capitalist system. The working class would bear brunt of the pressures.”

Some Iranians expect pressure to lead to negotiations, as when former President Barack Obama tightened sanctions that crippled the Iranian economy and led to the 2015 deal.

But others believe their leaders will never go back down that road following Trump’s reimposition of sanctions.

“Any politician who starts negotiations with America would make a fool of himself,” said a student who also asked not to be identified. “Even (Mohammad Javad) Zarif has given up on that,” she said, referring to Iran’s U.S.-educated foreign minister.

Zarif told CNN this week Iran had “acted in good faith” in negotiating the deal that Washington abandoned. “We are not willing to talk to people who have broken their promises.”

Trump has said Washington is not trying to set up talks but expects Tehran to call when it is ready. A U.S. official said last week Americans “were sitting by the phone”, but had received no call from Iran yet.

Foad Izadi, a political science professor at Tehran University, told Reuters that phone call is not coming.

“Iranian officials have come to this conclusion that Trump does not seek negotiations. He would like a phone call with Rouhani, even a meeting and a photo session, but that’s not a real negotiation,” Izadi said.


 
FILE PHOTO: An Iranian woman take selfies during a ceremony to mark the 40th anniversary of the Islamic Revolution in Tehran, Iran February 11, 2019. Vahid Ahmadi/Tasnim News Agency/via REUTERS/Files

Despite saying talks are now off the table, Iranian leaders still say war is unlikely. Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s highest authority, said the United States would not attack as “it’s not in their interests.”

The logic makes sense to Mohsen Mortazavi, a young cleric who graduated from a religious school in the city of Qom.

“There won’t be any war because a military confrontation will not resolve any of the U.S. problems, it will only add to them,” Mortazavi told Reuters. “Trump’s shouts and threats are a psychological war. A dog that cannot bite barks.”

But Izadi, the political science professor, disagrees. “A war is highly probable. There are officials in Washington who have planned for invading Iran for years,” he said.

STOCKPILING

Meanwhile, Iranians cope with the day-to-day implications of sanctions and tension. Worries over access to products have prompted some Iranians to stock up on rice, detergent and tinned food, residents and shopkeepers said.

An advertisement on state TV discourages stockpiling. A middle-aged man heading home after work is drawn to a supermarket when he sees people panic shopping. He buys anything he can put his hands on, causing shelves to be emptier.

Ali, an Iranian student in Tehran, told Reuters that unlike many, he was not against a U.S. military invasion, as he believed the fall of the Islamic Republic would be the only solution to the rising economic and political problems.

“My only hope is a war so I can take my revenge. I am telling my friends in the university that our only way is an armed struggle.... We have nothing to lose.”

Shahin Milani, a 38-year-old who tweets about Iranian politics to more than 7,000 followers on Twitter, believes military intervention could never bring democracy.

“The people should do it themselves ... If someone is truly worried about the threat of war, they should work to create a democratic, secular government in Iran ... As long as the Islamic Republic is in power, the shadow of war will loom over Iran.”

How Japan manages US trade pressure


Author: Aurelia George Mulgan, UNSW
East Asia Forum
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s administration is strikingly successful in deflecting pressure for a bilateral trade deal from US President Donald Trump. Some of the secrets to Abe’s success are obvious, others less so.
Among the former is Abe’s continuing charm offensive towards Trump and the direct communications pipeline that has developed between the two leaders. These underpin perhaps the most cordial relationship the President has with any world leader. The connection is invaluable to Abe given the power of personal relations to ‘trump’ other factors when dealing with the President.
Abe used a recent trip to Washington to his advantage, informing Trump of pending political events in Japan that constrain Abe’s policy options — namely impending upper and (possibly) lower house elections. But this is far from the whole story.
The Abe administration has also blunted the Trump trade offensive through massive weapons purchases from the United States and a large rise in Japanese investment in the US economy — including in key industries in states important to Trump. Substituting in other areas for concessions on market access is a long-standing tactic in Japan–US relations.
The Abe administration has also been able to take advantage of the Trump administration’s preoccupation with the escalating trade war with China. But it is well aware that Trump’s current frustrations with China might feed renewed pressure on Japan with the need for a quick victory on trade. Still, a proactive Abe administration policy of warming economic ties with China is designed to provide some insurance against protectionist retaliation from the United States.
Japan is also handling US trade pressure with less-obvious defensive manoeuvres that, so far, seem to be working.
First is Japan’s insistence on describing any negotiations for a bilateral trade agreement as leading only to ‘a trade agreement on goods’ in order to exclude currency matters.
Second, Japan is drawing on the success of its trade leadership in concluding the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) and the Japan–EU Economic Partnership Agreement (JEEPA), enabling it to enter negotiations with the United States with a firm limit set on any concessions. This principle seems to have been accepted by the United States — at least for now.
Third, these success stories are a powerful illustration of the benefits of ‘win–win’ agreements that are much touted by Abe — including to Trump — in contrast to the latter’s ‘win–lose’ model. Under the ‘win–win’ principle, each party trades some of its special interests for the benefits generated by the special interests sacrificed by the other side.
It is the principle behind Japan’s current resistance to agriculture being targeted ahead of a wider bilateral trade deal with the United States. Opening Japan’s market for US agricultural products in exchange for the Trump administration’s abandoning its threat to raise tariffs on Japanese cars and car parts is not ‘win–win’ — it represents negotiations under threat of retaliation. So does the possibility of Trump’s signing an executive order to impose a 25 per cent tariff on car imports from Japan in the event that it fails to ‘voluntarily’ limit car exports to the United States.
‘Win–win’ is flexible enough to be applied in bilateral, regional and multilateral agreements and it characterises preferential trade agreements such as the CPTPP and JEEPA. In the CPTPP, for example, the costs and benefits to participants can be spread across not only markets for goods, but also a broad range of other areas covered by the agreement — such as rules of origin, government procurement and competition policy. Although falling short of free trade, the CPTPP enables Japan’s farming sector to retain key protections while facilitating the expansion of Japan’s regional production networks.
Japan is not ’the flag-bearer of free trade’. Free trade certainly is vital to Japan in maximising access to global markets given its shrinking domestic market. But Japan implements deals that retain varying levels of import restrictions, including tariffs, particularly in sensitive areas.
Finally, some broader shifts in Japan’s trade and national security strategies are generating greater confidence in its handling of US–Japan trade issues. Under Abe, Japan is assuming a more independent role in regional economic and trade affairs in response to the US retreat from regional economic integration — and as a hedge against the political, economic and security uncertainties that the Trump administration is creating.
Japan’s rapprochement with China, for example, is not restricted to economic and trade ties. The realignment not only capitalises on plummeting economic relations between China and the United States but is also driven by common anxieties about Trump. The official restoration of normal relations includes closer diplomatic and even defence ties.
Similarly, Japan is building an autonomous political and economic relationship with Russia in the context of bilateral negotiations on the Northern Territories issue, while Abe is seeking to implement a direct engagement policy with North Korea. Abe wants summit talks with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un without preconditions, rather than continuing to rely solely on US mediation on the abductees issue.
Abe is a security realist, but also an ideological nationalist — a factor in the fine line he walks between solidifying US–Japan security ties and diversifying and deepening security links with other powers. The result is that Japan’s more independent standing as a regional and global actor is helping it to resist US pressure, which it no longer needs to stimulate domestic reform — a process it regards as virtually completed thanks to the CPTPP and JEEPA.
The balance of power is shifting in the US–Japan relationship and their positions in the region. Japan is becoming more influential as an independent actor while the United States is facing a loss of influence.
Aurelia George Mulgan is a Professor at the School of Humanities and Social Sciences, the University of New South Wales, Canberra.

Indonesian police fire tear gas to break up election protest


INDONESIAN police fired tear gas to disperse demonstrators in downtown Jakarta early Wednesday after a rally opposed to President Joko Widodo’s re-election, an AFP reporter said.
The country’s election commission on Tuesday released official results that confirmed Widodo, 57, had beaten retired military general Prabowo Subianto for the presidency in a poll held on April 17.
Subianto has said he would challenge the results in court, and warned that his claims of widespread cheating could spark street protests.
Several thousand people rallied in support of Subianto near the election supervisory agency office in the heart of the capital Jakarta on Tuesday.
The protest ended peacefully, but police in riot gear later fired tear gas at some demonstrators who refused to leave the area and hurled fireworks and other objects at police.
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Carcasses that were burned by the mob are seen during an overnight demonstration near by the Elections Oversight Body (Bawaslu) in Jakarta on May 22, 2019. Indonesian police fired tear gas to disperse demonstrators in downtown Jakarta early Wednesday after a rally opposed to President Joko Widodo’s re-election, an AFP reporter said. Source:
Bay Ismoyo/AFP
Earlier, some protesters had set market stalls on fire.
It was not immediately clear if any demonstrators or police were injured in the clash.
More than 30,000 troops were deployed across the capital in anticipation of protests after the official election results were published.
Tensions have also spiked since police said last week that they had arrested dozens of Islamic State-linked terror suspects who had planned to cause chaos by bombing post-election protests.
Last month, a record 245,000 candidates ran for public office in Indonesia’s elections, from the presidency and parliamentary seats to local positions — the first time all were held on the same day.

A conservative activist’s behind-the-scenescampaign to remake the nation’s courts


Leonard Leo helped conservative nonprofits raise $250 million from mostly undisclosed donors in recent years to promote conservative judges and causes



Leonard Leo stepped onto the stage in a darkened Florida ballroom, looked out at a gathering of some of the nation's most powerful conservative activists and told them they were on the cusp of fulfilling a long-sought dream.

For two decades, Leo has been on a mission to turn back the clock to a time before the U.S. Supreme Court routinely expanded the government’s authority and endorsed new rights such as abortion and same-sex marriage. Now, as President Trump’s unofficial judicial adviser, he told the audience at the closed-door event in February that they had to mobilize in “very unprecedented ways” to help finish the job.

Wednesday, May 22, 2019

Place of internet in Islamic radicalization



An American study of the role of the internet in Islamic radicalization finds that while the internet most certainly plays an important role, other factors do play an equal or even a greater role. The study conducted by Ines Von Behr, Anaïs Reding, Charlie Edwards, Luke Gribbon for RAND Corporation, and published in 2013, first lists the contribution of the internet to radicalization and then explains the role of off-line “real world” relations in radicalization. Its overall conclusion is that both have a critical role to play with off-line interactions having an edge.   

On-line role

21 May 2019

The study found that the internet opens up opportunities to radicalize a broader range of persons as compared to the Madrassas (traditional Islamic religious schools) and such other religious study groups. The internet obviates the need for infrastructure like classrooms and teachers. All it needs is a tabletop/laptop or a phone with internet connection. 
The internet does away with barriers that exist in the physical world. For example, in traditional societies or families, very young people and females are not allowed to participate in discussions on some topics on account of their age or gender. But they can interact with others on the internet without others noticing it and without venturing out of their homes or breaking social barriers in the public domain. 

In traditional Islamic families, women are not expected to interact with men other than close family members. But radicalizing teachers are mostly men. And radical groups are predominantly male. However, once on the internet, these barriers crumble. There is no face to face or personal, physical proximity once the conversation is on the net. The interaction is outside social purview and beyond censure. 

Young men as well as females may be forbidden to express certain thoughts in public in the “real” world but in cyber space these very thoughts can be expressed anonymously or under pseudonyms. Anonymity, which the internet confers, enables the communication of and conversation on forbidden, radical or dangerous ideas. Additionally, internet’s reach is world-wide. A young person sitting with a laptop in a small town in Sri Lanka can be radicalized by someone in the UK or Australia or Egypt. The authors point out that shy and timid persons who are unable to express themselves or ask questions in public or in a group can do so on the internet where their trepidation will not be noticed. 
In traditional Islamic families, women are not expected to interact with men other than close family members. But radicalizing teachers are mostly men. And radical groups are predominantly male. However, once on the internet, these barriers crumble
In the traditional Madrassa classroom, a Moulvi or teacher lectures and others merely listen. And in a typical traditional classroom, no discussion or interaction takes place. But on the internet, there is no such teacher-pupil distinction. The anonymity the internet gives makes interaction possible. Participants in an internet discussion have a sense of security which participants in a class room discussion do not or may not have. The authors of the paper say that the interactivity of the internet blurs the lines between “readership” and “authorship” that previous generations of terrorists and sympathizers experienced with pamphlets, newspapers and newsletters. 

“This blurring encourages people to more easily see themselves as part of broader jihadist movements and not just spectators,” it points out. Also, there is no one breathing down one’s neck on the internet unlike at the classroom or at home. This enables free expression of ideas, especially forbidden and radical ideas.

Offers an ‘Echo Chamber’

Internet chat rooms offer an “echo chamber”, the authors say. An “echo chamber” is an environment in which a person encounters only beliefs or opinions that coincide with his or her own, so that his existing views are reinforced and alternative ideas are not considered. 

The “echo chamber” is ideal for radicalization and sharpening of one’s beliefs. Groups formed in the internet act like echo chambers, the study says. 

The internet is a “One-Stop-Shop” of radical ideas. Through it, an immense range of journals, videos, articles, papers, websites and blogs on radical ideas can be accessed. The ease of getting material in support of one’s ideological inclination makes the internet an attractive source of information. Internet education appears to be better than class room education where the teacher’s limitations are a constraint. Internet learning is “instantaneous and continuous” in as much as people can interact with each other 24 hours and seven days in a week. And the interaction could be with anyone in the world just with a click of the mouse. 

“In the internet age, friendships, personal relationships and loyalty are no longer the sole preserve of the physical world, but also exist virtually (on the internet),” and these friendships could be as strong and as motivational as relationships in the physical world, the authors point out.
In the Sri Lankan case, many of the April 21 suicide bombers, who were well educated and wealthy, might have got motivated by stuff got from the internet, but it is undeniable that they were radicalized by personal interactions with persons like Zahran Hashim
Self-radicalization 

The internet makes “self-radicalization” possible. One does not need proximate physical presence of a motivator. With the internet, radicalization is “de-formalized” and accessible to all across class barriers. 

Importance of offline contact 

However, the RAND study says that “off-line” radicalization has been as important a factor as “on-line” radicalization. According to the study empirical evidence strongly suggests that offline factors play an important role in the radicalization process. Personal and physical contacts with inspiring figures and personal experience or knowledge of discrimination,or bad experiences with the hated group, could play a major part in radicalization. “Events and developments in the physical world feed into online behaviour and vice versa. This evidence suggests that the internet is not a substitute for, but rather complements, inter- person communication,” the authors say. 

A story in Bangladesh’s ‘The Daily Star’ says that a 19-year-old terrorist who was killed in Syria while fighting for the Islamic State (ISIS) used to ask his Belgian-Moroccan mother why he was being pulled out and questioned by the police for no fault of his, and why, with all his qualifications and knowledge of three languages, he was not getting a suitable job. Educated Muslims all over the world ask why the US is blindly supporting Israel which has seized Arablands in Palestine and why the US has destroyed prosperous Muslim countries like Libya and Iraq and why it cannot let poor Afghanistan to its own devices. Sensitive Muslims are also appalled by rampant Islamophobia in Europe. 

In the Sri Lankan case, many of the April 21 suicide bombers, who were well educated and wealthy, might have got motivated by stuff got from the internet, but it is undeniable that they were radicalized by personal interactions with persons like Zahran Hashim. Zahran did not have a formal education in English and perhaps knew only Tamil and Arabic, but he was known to be an attractive speaker and great motivator when he was running a Madrassa and a mosque in his native Kattankudy. 

The Dehiwela resort bomber, Abdul Lathief Jameel Mohamed, had studied in England and Australia were he was radicalized by close interaction with ISIS recruiter Neil Prakash, a Fijian-Indian convert to Islam. 

Family support and participation had also been a key factor. In the Sri Lankan case, two suicide bombers were brothers, Inshaf and Ilham Ibrahim. Their spice magnate father Mohammad Yusuf Ibrahim apparently let his property become a safe house for the bombers. His daughter-in-law, Fathima Ilham blew herself up when police raided her house.   
Educated Muslims all over the world ask why the US is blindly supporting Israel which has seized Arablands in Palestine and why the US has destroyed prosperous Muslim countries like Libya and Iraq and why it cannot let poor Afghanistan to its own devices
The Katuwapitiya St. Sebastian Church bomber Mohammad Hasthun, had the support of his wife, Pulasthini Rajendran alias Sarah, who was a Tamil Hindu convert to Islam. She is believed to have died in the Sainthamarudhu clash with the Security Forces. 

The brother of Kochchikade St. Anthony’s church attacker, Alludeen Ahmad Muwath, was arrested for assisting him. The wife of Dehiwela Tropical Inn bomber Abdul Latheef Jamil Mohammad, as well as her two brothers were arrested for complicity in his crime. 

Therefore, radicalization had found Asian families to be an ideal unit to work on as these tended to be close knit groups in which maintenance of secrecy could be assured. The involvement of whole or a part of families in extremist thinking and behaviour also shows the need for off-line interaction and off-line support for radicalization and terrorist actions.