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The Politics of Embarrassment
Tonya Morton
I
was disappointed, if not surprised, by the recent resignation of US
State Department official P. J. Crowley, who grabbed headlines with
his statements that Bradley Manning's treatment at the hands of the
Quantico Detention Center has been both "ridiculous" and "stupid—light
words, really, compared to "torture," the word chosen by Manning's
lawyer and Amnesty International. But what disappoints me most isn't
that Crowley was fired for expressing a reasonable opinion. What
disappoints me is that he was forced to resign because, by expressing
his opinion, he unwittingly exposed his boss—the president—supporting
policies that any layperson could see are patently "ridiculous" and
"stupid". He was fired
parently
had the gumption to describe details to the same reporter of the USA's
practice of using extraordinary rendition to cover up illegal
detentions of prisoners of war. What will be Sterling's prize for all
that honesty? Sterling faces up to 120 years in prison and $2.5 million
in fines. The punishment for the men who sold nuclear secrets to Iran
and broke international law with regard to prisoners of war? Nada.
The
Obama administration doesn't seem particularly interested in war
crimes. They seem to stifle a big yawn at corruption and government
malfeasance. What really ticks them off, the real crime, is bringing
illegal activities to light and em-
for
making clear to the world that the Obama administration supports
certain policies in private that it doesn't want to have to admit to
supporting in public.
The
only thing that seems to register with this administration lately is
embarrassment—not to be confused with shame, which would be the
logical response to admitting they had acted inappropriately or
supported mor-
barrassing
the administration. Who could be more deserving of incarceration, for
instance, than the Apache helicopter pilots who mowed down two Reuters
journalists and numerous civilians without a hint of remorse? And who
deserves to sit naked and blind, stripped of both clothes and glasses,
in a solitary cell at Quantico more than the men who gave the orders
to cover up
ally
unsound policies. The administration has shown no signs of being
ashamed, for instance, about selling British nuclear secrets to Russia
in order to speed through negotiations of the recent arms treaty. And
they weren't ashamed about the secret war they've been conducting in
Pakistan, about sending CIA operatives and mercenaries into a country
with which we're supposedly allied. They weren't ashamed at all. They
were just angry and embarrassed at being caught.
civilian
deaths and the torture of detainees? The answer, according to the Obama
administration, is that Bradley Manning, who exposed the actions of the
Apache pilots and the corrupt officials, is more deserving. Yes,
clearly Manning and his ilk—not forgetting P.J. Crowley, who had the
nerve to call Manning's detention "stupid"—are what's wrong with
America.
The
most striking element of all these charges, as far as I can see, is the
crimi-nalization of an informed citizenry. Who was the target, really,
of Bradley Manning's leaked information? No one has been able to point
out a single case in which Manning's information helped Al Qaeda or the
Taliban. No one is claiming that the information is bolstering the
spirits of the Iranians. The target of Manning's leak was the American
news media, and by extension, the American people. In each case listed
above, the intended recipient of the leaked information wasn't a
foreign government or a terrorist organization. It was the press. The
target was Americans. And so when Manning is charged with "aiding the
enemy" and Thomas Drake is charged with "espionage," one has to wonder
who that "enemy" really is? If these cases are any clue, the enemy is
us.
Daniel
Ellsberg, who released the Pentagon Papers in 1971, detailing US
malfeasance in Vietnam, and who was charged and later released on
charges under the Espionage Act of 1917, is a man uniquely qualified to
speak on matters of government transparency. In a recent interview with
a Politico reporter, Ellsberg said Obama's "campaign against
whistleblowers" is "unprecedented." In a separate interview with
Spiegel, he called Obama, with regard to whistleblowers, "worse than
Bush." That isn't high praise from a man who once claimed George W.
Bush had aspirations to dictatorship. As Ellsberg's own history shows,
an attack on government whistleblowers is an attack on the American
public's right to know. It should be of grave concern to anyone fond of
his own freedom that the Obama administration is more upset about
looking bad in front of America than it is concerned with the fact that
its government is supporting corrupt and criminal behavior.
And
who can provide the best indictment of Obama the President of 2011?
Why, that would be Obama the candidate of 2008, who said, "Government
whistleblowers are part of a healthy democracy and must be protected
from reprisal." In the same campaign, Obama described instances of
whistleblowing as "acts of courage and patriotism, which can sometimes
save lives and often save taxpayer dollars." I wonder if Obama
remembered those words from his younger, more idealistic self as he
signed off on P.J. Crowley's resignation. Or whether he felt the
lingering stabs of conscience as he defended the detention procedures
used on Bradley Manning as "appropriate." How would Obama respond to
that younger version of himself, who supported the courageous over the
cowardly? It's just too bad that "courage" and "patriotism" aren't as
much fun when you're the one with egg on your face.
It should be of grave concern to anyone
fond of his own freedom that
the Obama administration
is more upset about looking bad in front of America
than it is concerned with the fact that its government
is supporting corrupt and criminal behavior.
Crowley
is lucky to have gotten off with just a forced resignation. The Obama
administration has taken such a harsh line on whistleblowers and
muckrackers lately, he shouldn't have been surprised to find himself in
jail. Right now, Stephen Kim, a Korean-born analyst and one of
Crowley's colleagues in the State Department, is currently under
indictment for "compromising national security." And to which
terrorist organization did his pass his top-secret information? Fox
News. Kim gave a wholly unremarkable interview with the cable news
network in which he expressed his opinions on how North Korea would
react to economic sanctions. Apparently that's now grounds for serving
10 years.
But
that isn't nearly as terrible as what's happened to Thomas Drake, a
former senior executive at the National Security Agency. When Drake
felt that his employer, the NSA, had passed up numerous opportunities
to instate an accountable, and legal, means of routing out terrorism
in favor of an illegal, inefficient and dangerous program of
warrantless wiretapping and surveillance, he turned to a reporter at
the Baltimore Sun. Using Drake's information, the reporter publicly
exposed the mismanagement and the illegality of the NSAs actions. Drake
has now been indicted, like Daniel Ellsberg before him, under the
Espionage Act of 1917. He faces up to 35 years in jail.
It
seems to be a theme of this administration: when the government lies
and commits crimes against its own citizens, the blame doesn't fall on
the lawbreakers; the blame falls on the guy who told. Take, for
instance, the case of the U.S. covert spy war in Iran. It turns out
that U.S. officials, in an idiotic attempt to foil Iran's nuclear
ambitions, actually provided nuclear design plans to the Iranians.
While the plans supposedly contained one flaw which would keep the
nuclear bombs from working, officials later admitted that the flaw was
a rather obvious one and that the rest of the design was entirely
correct. In fact, they admitted, they had provided the Iranians with a
precise roadmap for nuclear development. And which government official
will be going to jail as a result of this complete bungling of national
security?
The
answer: Jeffrey Sterling, a former CIA officer, who was uninvolved in
the plan. Sterling has not been arraigned for selling nuclear secrets
to Iran; but rather for tipping off a reporter to the details of the
fiasco. Further, Sterling ap-
Tonya Morton is a regular contributor to The Zephyr.
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