Friday, November 6, 2009

The Curious Murder of CIA Contractor, William Bennett



By Jeff Stein | April 15, 2009 5:35 PM |

The case of former CIA contractor William Bennett, slain while out on a walk with his wife in rural Loudoun County, Va., gets interestinger and interestinger.

Bennett, it turns out, was involved in the disastrously mistaken, May 1999 bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade by NATO warplanes.

That, and other curious facets of the case, has prompted the attention of influential national security bloggers Laura Rozen, who writes The Cable for Foreign Policy.com, and Pat Lang, the former top Middle East analyst for the Defense Intelligence Agency.


Drawing on the reporting of the local Loudoun Independent's John L. Geddie and Jim Plowman, Lang tidily summed up the story so far in his eclectic "Sic Semper Tyrannis" blog.

"He and his wife were having a morning walk for exercise on a well known path when they apparently were set upon by several assailants reportedly armed with clubs.  Bennett was beaten to death and his wife left nearby in such a condition that the attackers must have anticipated her death.  As is recounted in this story, the sheriff of Loudon County is inclined to think this is the handiwork of gang members, perhaps in some bizarre initiation ritual," Lang wrote.   
"There are a lot of Central American immigrants in Virginia now and there have been incidents of violent criminality, usually among rival gang members.  Incidents against 'gringos' have been few.  To be fair, most Latino immigrants in Northern Virginia are hard working family people who contribute to the community.  To assume that immigrants are the killers seems a bit 'hasty' in the absence of evidence."
Bennett's widow Cynthia has recovered enough to begin talking with investigators, the Loudoun Indepedent reported last week. The FBI has also been called into the case.

Geddie said Wednesday investigators have confided to him that they have started to rule out an esoteric CIA connection to his death.

"That said," he told me, "there are very few unsolved murders in Loudoun County."

It was local NBC-4 reporter Matthew Stabley who revealed the Belgade factor:

Bennet was involved in a mistaken bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade on May 7, 1999, during the conflict with Kosovo, according to intelligence sources. . .Bennett was one of the officials who helped identify targets in Belgrade, according to a retired senior intelligence officer.

Geddie also confirmed Bennett's employment with the CIA as a contractor.

 Rozen expanded on the Belgrade connection in her April 4 blog.

"In 1999, sources bring to our attention, Bennett was a retired Army lieutenant colonel working at the CIA on contract as a targeter during the 78-day NATO air war on Kosovo. He was one of the people, according to a former U.S. intelligence source, found responsible by the Agency for feeding the target into the system that resulted in the May 7, 1999 NATO bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade."
"The former U.S. intelligence source," Rozen added, "says Bennett was fired as a consequence of the CIA investigation into how the Chinese embassy was targeted."

Lang brought up another fascinating angle:

"He is reported to have worked on the analytic problem of the reverse engineering of 'Patriot' missile technology by foreign companies.  The goal would have been for the country or company doing the reverse engineering to include that technology in missile systems or anti-missile defense system intended for export and sale on the international market.  He is reported to have had a good deal of success in this work."

As it stands now, no matter what police say, or whoever is arrested, the Belgrade-CIA factor is not likely to go away soon, if ever.

In that way, the case is reminiscent of two other curious deaths of CIA officials, both in the Chesapeake Bay.

One was that of ex-CIA Director William E. Colby, who drew the wrath of many longtime agency operatives for giving up the agency's "family jewels" - its secret covert action files, including coups d'etat and assassination plots - to congressional investigators in the mid-1970s.

Colby died in 1996 "from drowning and hypothermia after apparently collapsing from a heart attack or stroke and falling out of his canoe," the Maryland state's medical examiner said in news reports.

Even more improbable was the 1978 boating accident death of John Paisley, who had been the CIA's liaison to the so-called White House Plumbers, the former CIA agents arrested in the Watergate offices of the Democratic National Committee, among other controversial roles.

The body of Paisley, whose widow was convinced foul play was involved, was never convincingly identified. Investigators ruled it a suicide, despite contradictory evidence. His yacht was found adrift with advanced radio equipment on board. No one was arrested in connection with his death.

It's inevitable that the CIA connection of William Bennett will loom larger with every day that his murderer remains at large.
Let The Sun Shine In......

Goldman Sachs Stocks Up....On H1N1 Vaccinations

This is beyond outrageous. Pregnant women and children with respiratory problems struggle to get access to scarce doses of the H1N1 vaccine. But according to NBC News, bankers at Goldman Sachs enjoy a stockpile of 200 doses of the vaccine -- the same as allotted to Lenox Hill Hospital in New York.

With hospitals, schools and community health clinics in desperate need of the H1N1 vaccine, it's unconscionable that Wall Street can just cut in line and secure scarce doses for bankers.

Goldman Sachs received over $1 billion in taxpayer bailouts during the financial meltdown. But that's not all. It was the single-largest recipient of taxpayer money in the AIG bailout, receiving almost $13 billion once AIG's positions were unwound.

And now, analysts predict Goldman Sachs could give its bankers as much as $23 billion in bonuses, while the rest of country struggles through the jobless "recovery."

NBC chief medical correspondent Nancy Snyderman has suggested that Goldman donate its doses to Lenox Hill Hospital. I agree, that's the least they can do.

I just told Goldman Sachs: Donate your H1N1 vaccine doses to Lenox Hill Hospital. Your at-risk employees should go wait in the same line with the taxpayers who bailed you out.

I hope you will, too. Please have a look and take action.

http://act.credoaction.com/campaign/h1n1_vaccine/?r_by=6596-1852929-1X0rEEx&rc=paste1
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Let The Sun Shine In......

Glenny and His Little Red Phone

A tale for children of all ages:

Thomas Frank asserts Beck's red phone "really symbolizes a new kind of ignorance"

http://mediamatters.org/items/200911040001

From Frank's November 3 Wall Street Journal column:
Glenn Beck, the popular Fox News host, has a red telephone on his desk that never seems to ring. Every now and then, in a moment of acute frustration, he will pick it up and give the camera his trademark pleading-puppy look.
(Does that "look" make anyone else think of a puppy, pleading or otherwise? I love puppies. I would never think of harming a puppy or even wishing that harm would come his way. As a matter of fact, I would rescue every puppy I see,  if I could make his or her life better. This man, Beck,  does not remind me of a puppy, no matter his expression. I don't care what happens to him, I just wish it didn't have to happen on live television.) 

What Mr. Beck wants to hear from the phone are answers, and he wants to hear them from the highest authority in the land: the phone, he says, is "a dedicated line right to the White House." And when Mr. Beck gets things wrong, he wants his antagonists on Pennsylvania Avenue to correct him. But "They don't call. They're not going to call."

(Of course not. Does anyone relish the idea of calling crazy Aunt Matilda at the local macadamia ranch. In all seriousness, why on earth would anyone expect that the White House would publicly call someone who a majority of people believe is either demented or a damn good actor.)

Consider a few of the other grand assertions tossed out by the panic-peddling host last week: that the cause of last year's financial crisis was pressure exerted by Acorn and "the people in Washington" on otherwise-reluctant mortgage lenders; that the cause of the inflation of the 1970s was President Jimmy Carter's quest for a "socialist utopia."

(Say what? Damn! I can't even follow that "logic," having actually lived though the period he mentions in a fairly conscious state.)
These are postulates that it is only possible to believe after you have utterly closed yourself off to conventional ways of knowing, after you have decided that the reporting and analysis and scholarship on these subjects are not worth reading, and that you will choose ideological fairy tales over reality until the day a magical phone call comes from on high.

  
What Mr. Beck's silent phone really symbolizes is a new kind of ignorance, a coming high-tech dark age in which people can choose to blow off professional standards of inquiry; in which they can wall themselves off with cable TV and friendly Web sites, dismiss what displeases as liberal bias, and demand that any contrary view be transmitted to them via telephone call from the president himself.

Yep, and this is no laughing matter, unlike Mr. Beck is, from time to time. It will be interesting, indeed, to see how America deals with containing two entirely different realities. I certainly hope that the powers-that-be do not over-react and try to start controlling everything, especially the Internet. No doubt, this is a dangerous time in this country and, let's face it, the world-at-large is not all that safe. Not only does Beck's phone represent a new kind of "chosen" ignorance, but an ignorant, narcissistic sense of entitlement that, I'm afraid, doesn't stop with Beck. 


Why not let Mr. Beck and his viewers have their fun? Because ideas have consequences. Maybe, as many believe, Glenn Beck is indeed the future of the conservative movement. From tea parties to town-hall meetings, thousands are signing up and fitting themselves out with their very own hotline to nowhere.

I have yet to figure out what Beck's ideas are. Of course, I must admit that I cannot watch much of his shtick. From what I have been able to deduce; Acorn is responsible for every bad thing that has happened to the country since Blacks got the vote, or something like that. Barack Obama is connected to Acorn somehow....Acorn in Indonesia? . He had it all on a magnetic board one day when I happened by. That board was such a hideous mess by the time I tuned in, I could not make heads or tails of it. Is this what the guy's brain looks like on a Pet Scan, I wondered?

From what I can tell, his ideology goes something like this: All things Democratic are evil, corrupt and dark (one can take that last one anyway one wants and they will be correct). If God, itself, spoke from the heavens and, in a booming voice heard round the world, anointed Obama has his sacred messenger, Beck would declare him the anti-christ and the battle would be joined for Armageddon. Beck has no sense of history at all from what I can tell, not unlike the mouthpieces of the last administration.

He seems to believe that Democrats are the spiritual sons and daughters of Stalin and Lenin. He seems to not know what socialism, communism and Marxism are, let alone understand the role of authoritarianism in some of the greatest and most damaging crack-ups in history. Does he not understand that Stalin no more represented what Marx had in mind than Beck, himself, represents what any rational person means by "fair and balanced." or  just balanced, for that matter.

I imagine that he is a huge fan of unfettered capitalism since it is this system which allows him to be paid a huge salary to seemingly have a slow psychic meltdown on Teevee for everyone to see. Hey, reality teevee sells and it's cheap to produce. Old Rupert knows what sells. It's all to be expected in anything-for-a-buck America.


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Let The Sun Shine In......

Translating Way Off-year Election Results

In the run up to yesterday's off-year elections, conservatives sought to cast the high-profile contests as a referendum on President Obama's first year in office. "These are bellwether races -- not just as a referendum on this administration, but on our party as well," said Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele. "

And it just gets worse from there....

So is this really a referendum on Obama, or is this just the political tide changing?" Fox News' Sean Hannity asked former Bush adviser Karl Rove. "Well, I think it's both," replied Rove.

However:

Despite the fact that Obama's party lost control of the governor's mansions in both Virginia and New Jersey, claims of a referendum do not pan out. While the two governorships have gone to the party not in control of the White House in every election since 1989, the results have not correlated with presidential approval, indicating that they are not a referendum on presidential leadership. "The Democratic losses of these two governorships should not be interpreted as a significant blow to President Obama," writes CNN Political Editor Mark Preston, noting that 56 percent of Virginians said in exit polls that the President was not a factor in their vote, while 60 percent of New Jersey voters said the same. In fact, "just under half the voters in Virginia, 48 percent, approved of the way Obama is handling his job, rising to 57 percent in New Jersey."

And Then There Is This:

Additionally, Democrat Bill Owens' victory over Conservative Party candidate Doug Hoffman in New York's 23rd district -- where Hoffman's third-party candidacy became the vessel for a Republican Party civil war -- dealt "a major setback to conservative organizations."

Note from the Pelican Editor of the day: I don't see this as a set back for real conservatives. It may be yet another blow for the citizens of Wingnuttia, whose queen Winkidink swooped in by Face book and backed Hoffman, who, from what I can tell, is slightly to the right of Attila the Hun. Nevertheless, one can never right off the wing-nuts. Apparently they never grow weary of being used and abused by the other GOPers, like the real true believers; Capitalists-on-steroids or people who think they have enough money to be republican, until they are disabused of that notion by foreclosure, collapse of business or one of several hundred really bad nightmares caused by the really bad, but practically, unchallenged policies of the last administration, the Neocons, who can make some of the more hilarious jokes about the Zionist Christians and other religious whack-jobs, but remain no laughing matter, themselves. They haven't gone anywhere and, yes, they are ideologically dangerous.

What remains to be seen is if the results of this little congressional race in nowhere N.Y. will be enough to stop the republican civil war in its tracks. It may well do just that, making the demise of the GOP and all of its constituents greatly exaggerated by a number of commentators.

Still, while yesterday's election was not a referendum on the President, the tea leaves do highlight challenges for the administration going forward as "a vast 89 percent in New Jersey and 85 percent in Virginia said they were worried about the direction of the nation's economy in the next year."


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Let The Sun Shine In......

Monday, November 2, 2009

Obama Using Bush's States Secrets B.S. (WTF?)

What was once depicted as a grave act of lawlessness -- Bush's NSA program -- is now deemed a vital state secret.

The Obama administration has, yet again, asserted the broadest and most radical version of the "state 
secrets" privilege -- which previously caused so much controversy and turmoil among loyal Democrats (when used by Bush/Cheney) -- to attempt to block courts from ruling on the legality of the government's domestic surveillance activities.  Obama did so again this past Friday -- just six weeks after the DOJ announced voluntary new internal guidelines which, it insisted, would prevent abuses of the state secrets privilege.  Instead -- as predicted -- the DOJ continues to embrace the very same "state secrets" theories of the Bush administration -- which Democrats generally and Barack Obama specifically once vehemently condemned -- and is doing so in order literally to shield the President from judicial review or accountability when he is accused of breaking the law.

The case of Shubert v. Bush is one of several litigations challenging the legality of the NSA program, of which the Electronic Frontier Foundation is lead coordinating counsel. The Shubert plaintiffs are numerous American citizens suing individual Bush officials, alleging that the Bush administration instituted a massive "dragnet" surveillance program whereby "the NSA intercepted (and continues to intercept) millions of phone calls and emails of ordinary Americans, with no connection to Al Qaeda, terrorism, or any foreign government" and that "the program monitors millions of calls and emails . . . entirely in the United States . . . without a warrant" (page 4).  The lawsuit's central allegation is that the officials responsible for this program violated the Fourth Amendment and FISA and can be held accountable under the law for those illegal actions.
Rather than respond to the substance of the allegations, the Obama DOJ is instead insisting that courts are barred from considering the claims at all.  Why?  Because -- it asserted in a Motion to Dismiss it filed on Friday -- to allow the lawsuit to proceed under any circumstances -- no matter the safeguards imposed or specific documents excluded -- "would require the disclosure of highly classified NSA sources and methods about the TSP [Terrorist Surveillance Program] and other NSA activities" (page 8).  According to the Obama administration, what were once leading examples of Bush's lawlessness and contempt for the Constitution -- namely, his illegal, warrantless domestic spying programs -- are now vital "state secrets" in America's War on Terror, such that courts are prohibited even from considering whether the Government was engaging in crimes when spying on Americans.
That was the principal authoritarian instrument used by Bush/Cheney to shield itself from judicial accountability, and it is now the instrument used by the Obama DOJ to do the same.  Initially, consider this:  if Obama's argument is true -- that national security would be severely damaged from any disclosures about the government's surveillance activities, even when criminal -- doesn't that mean that the Bush administration and its right-wing followers were correct all along when they insisted that The New York Times had damaged American national security by revealing the existence of the illegal NSA program?  Isn't that the logical conclusion from Obama's claim that no court can adjudicate the legality of the program without making us Unsafe?
Beyond that, just consider the broader implications of what is going on here.   Even after they announced their new internal guidelines with great fanfare, the Obama administration is explicitly arguing that the President can break the law with impunity -- can commit crimes -- when it comes to domestic surveillance because our surveillance programs are so secret that national security will be harmed if courts are permitted to adjudicate their legality.  As the plaintiffs' lawyers put it last July (emphasis in original), government officials:

seek to transform a limited, common law evidentiaryprivilege  into sweeping immunity for their own unlawful conduct. . . . [They] would sweep away these vital constitutional principles with the stroke of a declaration, arrogating to themselves the right to immunize any criminal or unconstitutional conduct in the name of national security. . . .
For that reason, as they pointedly noted the last time the Obama DOJ sought to compel dismissal based on this claim:  "defendants' motion is even more frightening than the conduct alleged in the Amended Complaint."  Think about that argument:  the Obama DOJ's secrecy and immunity theories are even more threatening than the illegal domestic spying programs they seek to protect.  Why?  As the plaintiffs explains (click image to enlarge)


Can anyone deny that's true?  If the President can simply use "secrecy" claims to block courts from ruling on whether he broke the law, then what checks or limits exist on the President's power to spy illegally on Americans or commit other crimes in a classified setting?  By definition, there are none.  That's what made this distortion of the "state secrets" privilege so dangerous when Bush used it, and it's what makes it so dangerous now.  Back in April, 2006 -- a mere four months after the illegal NSA program was first revealed, and right after Bush had asserted "state secrets" to block any judicial inquiry into the NSA program -- here is what I wrote about the Bush administration's use of the "state secrets" privilege as a means of blocking entire lawsuits rather than limiting the use of specific classified documents:

[Q]uite unsurprisingly, the Bush administration loves this doctrine, as it is so consistent with its monarchical view of presidential infallibility, and the administration has become the most aggressive and enthusiastic user of this doctrine . . . . As the Chicago Tribune detailed last year, the administration has also used this doctrine repeatedly to obstruct any judicial proceedings designed to investigate its torture and rendition policies, among others . . . . This administration endlessly searches out obscure legal doctrines or new legal theories which have one purpose -- to eradicate limits on presidential power and to increase the President's ability to prevent disclosure of all but the most innocuous and meaningless information.
That was the prevailing, consensus view at the time among Democrats, progressives and civil libertarians regarding Bush's use of the state secrets privilege:  that the privilege was being used to exclude the President from the rule of law by seeking to preclude judicial examination of his conduct.  Plainly, Obama is now doing the same exact thing -- not just to shield domestic surveillance programs from judicial review but also torture and renditions.  Is there any conceivable, rational reason to view this differently?  None that I can see.
Note, too, how this latest episode eviscerates many of the excuses made earlier this year by Obama supporters to justify this conduct.  It was frequently claimed that these arguments were likely asserted by holdover Bush DOJ lawyers without the involvement of Obama officials -- but under the new DOJ guidelines, the Attorney General must personally approve of any state secrets assertions, and Eric Holder himself confirmed in a Press Release on Friday that he did so here.  Alternatively, it was often claimed that Obama was only asserting these Bush-replicating theories because he secretly hoped to lose in court and thus magnanimously gift us with good precedent -- but the Obama administration has repeatedly lost in court on these theories and then engaged in extraordinary efforts to destroy those good precedents, including by inducing the full appellate court to vacate the decisions or even threatening to defy the court orders compelling disclosure.  In light of this behavior, no rational person can continue to maintain those excuses.
Is there any doubt at this point that, as TalkingPointsMemo put it in a headline:  "Obama Mimics Bush on State Secrets"?  Or can anyone dispute what EFF's Kevin Bankston told ABC News after the latest filing from the Obama DOJ:

The Obama administration has essentially adopted the position of the Bush administration in these cases, even though candidate Obama was incredibly critical of both the warrantless wiretapping program and the Bush administration's abuse of the state secrets privilege.
Extreme secrecy wasn't an ancillary aspect of the progressive critique of Bush/Cheney; it was central, as it was secrecy that enabled all the other abuses.  More to the point, the secrecy claims being asserted here are not merely about hiding illegal government conduct; worse, they are designed to shield executive officials from accountability for lawbreaking.  As the ACLU's Ben Wizner put it about the Obama DOJ's attempt to use the doctrine to bar torture victims from having a day in court:  "This case is not about secrecy. It's about immunity from accountability."  That's what Obama is supporting:  "immunity from accountability."

What makes this most recent episode particularly appalling is that the program which Obama is seeking to protect here -- the illegal Bush/Cheney NSA surveillance scheme -- was once depicted as a grave threat to the Constitution and the ultimate expression of lawlessness.  Yet now, Obama insists that the very same program is such an important "state secret" that no court can even adjudicate whether the law was broken.  When Democrats voted to immunize lawbreaking telecoms last year, they repeatedly justified that by stressing that Bush officials themselves were not immunized and would therefore remain accountable under the law.  Obama himself, when trying to placate angry supporters over his vote for telecom immunity, said this about the bill he supported:

I wouldn't have drafted the legislation like this, and it does not resolve all of the concerns that we have about President Bush's abuse of executive power. It grants retroactive immunity to telecommunications companies that may have violated the law by cooperating with the Bush administration's program of warrantless wiretapping. This potentially weakens the deterrent effect of the law and removes an important tool for the American people to demand accountability for past abuses.
Yet here is Obama doing exactly the opposite of those claims and assurances:  namely, he's now (a) seeking to immunize not only telecoms, but also Bush officials, from judicial review; (b) demanding that courts be barred from considering the legality of NSA surveillance programs under any circumstances; and (c) attempting to institutionalize the broadest claims of presidential immunity imaginable via radically broad secrecy claims.   To do so, he's violating virtually everything he ever said about such matters when he was Senator Obama and Candidate Obama.  And he's relying on the very same theories of executive immunity and secrecy that -- under a Republican President -- sparked so much purported outrage.  If nothing else, this latest episode underscores the ongoing need for Congressional Democrats to proceed with proposed legislation to impose meaningful limits and oversight on the President's ability to use this power, as this President, just like the last one, has left no doubt about his willingness to abuse it for ignoble ends.
 
Continue Reading


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Let The Sun Shine In......