Fortress Britain
by Muhammad Idrees Ahmad
www.dissidentvoice.org, June 27th,
2008
"The public has to be more alert",
warned one "international terrorism expert" in the Daily
Mail late last year, because Scotland "is set to become another
Israel within five years". "[A]nti-terror measures will
soon become a common feature of life", he assured the audience,
and called for "routine arming of police officers" and
increasing children's "awareness of the dangers of terrorism"
and for them to be "encouraged" to report anything "out
of the ordinary".
The oracle of doom was one Amnon Maor,
identified as the head instructor of counter-terrorism for the
IDF and Israeli border police.1 Maor is working with security
firm 360 Defence, based near Glasgow, which is "training
Scottish police, military and civilians in security techniques".
This wouldn't be the first time the British police benefits from
Israeli anti-terror expertise. The police squad that carried out
the extrajudicial execution of the young Brazilian electrician
Jean-Charles de Menezes in the London underground had received
similar training.
In the post-September 11 world, Naomi
Klein writes, Israel has pitched its "uprooting, occupation
and containment of the Palestinian people as a half-century head
start in the 'global war on terror'". Britain has since been
furnished with its own unpopular occupation of Arab land - and
the lessons from Israel are not lost on its architects. In disaster
lies opportunity - and the only thing more useful than a thing
to fear is fear itself. The give away line in Maor's prescription
above is his offer to increase children's awareness of the dangers
of terrorism - absent the real thing, fear should suffice. The
Prime Minister may not have many achievements to his name, but
he can claim patents to 'Fortress Britain', whose battlements
sit on a foundation of fear.
The Power of Nightmares
In October 2001 it was revealed that the
Pentagon was consulting Hollywood writers and producers specializing
in spy thrillers and disaster flicks to imagine future attacks
in order to best prepare for them. Developments such as the colour-coded
threat alerts that change hue at the Department of Homeland Security's
caprice have alarmed even cold war hawks like Zbigniew Brzezinski
enough to lament this 'culture of fear':
Fear obscures reason, intensifies emotions
and makes it easier for demagogic politicians to mobilize the
public on behalf of the policies they want to pursue Such fear-mongering,
reinforced by security entrepreneurs, the mass media and the entertainment
industry, generates its own momentum.
In Britain each of the New Labour government's
political missteps has been accompanied by similar fear-mongering.
While a terrorist threat does exist, its magnitude is wildly exaggerated.
The European Police Office (Europol) released its first report
on terrorism last year which listed 498 terrorist attacks for
Europe in 2006; only one was attributed to Muslims. The majority
- 136 - were carried out by the Basque separatist group ETA; only
one of them deadly. When it came to the arrests on terrorism related
charges, however, a good half were Muslims.2
It began with the 'Ricin plot': the highly
publicized arrests, national hysteria and front page headlines.
There was no Ricin, or a plot. It wouldn't be until 2005, well
after Colin Powell had used it in his case to sell the Iraq war
to the UN, that the ban on reporting on the case was finally lifted
and the public apprised of the truth. The February 2003 'terror
alert' had Blair scrambling tanks to Heathrow, timed conveniently
to coincide with the large scale demonstrations against the coming
war. Notable support in the media came from BBC propagandist Fred
Gardner, long suspected of ties to the intelligence services,3
themselves busy fanning the fire. Simon Jenkins, the conservative
columnist noted, "In 2002-03, before the Iraq war, the security
service supplied the Cabinet Office with a weekly catalogue of
'terror fears' - anthrax, smallpox, sarin, dirty nuclear devices
and a Christmas bombing campaign - to soften public opinion for
the war."
In June 2006, 250 heavily armed police
men acting on 'specific intelligence' raided a home in Forest
Gate arresting two young Muslims, shooting one in the process.
The chemical weapons that they were alleged to have possessed
were never found. Both were acquitted without charge. The police
apologized. On August 10th, 2006, a day after then Home Secretary
John Reid had hinted that new anti-terror measures were in order,
the Deputy Commissioner of Metropolitan Police, Paul Stephenson,
announced that the police had foiled a plot to commit "mass
murder on an unimaginable scale". Officials were soon conceding
that the immediacy and scale of the threat may have been "exaggerated";
however, the scare succeeded in deflecting attention from Blair's
widely-denounced manoeuvres preventing a ceasefire in Lebanon.
From Beirut, an outraged Robert Fisk wrote:
Stephenson's job is to frighten the British
people, not to stop the crimes that are the real reason for the
British to be frightened I'm all for arresting criminals But
I don't think Paul Stephenson is. I think he huffs and he puffs
but I do not think he stands for law and order. He works for the
Ministry of Fear which, by its very nature, is not interested
in motives or injustice.
In November 2006, the MI5 director general
Eliza Manningham-Buller warned of a violent threat from 1,600
suspects in 200 groups that could last "more than a generation".
Although she identified government policy towards Iraq as the
main factor contributing to the rising radicalism, Blair endorsed
the statement. He continued his scapegoating of Muslims with the
periodic reiterations of the 'Islamic threat' to rationalize the
fear, repression, lies and resentment brought in on the heels
of the Iraq war. When Blair announced that "the rule of the
game have changed", no one took it more seriously than the
tabloid press; they demonstrated just how toxic things could get
when gloves come off with government sanction. Jonathan Freedland
of the Guardian confessed: "I try to imagine how I would
feel if this rainstorm of headlines substituted the word 'Jew'
for 'Muslim' - I wouldn't just feel frightened. I would be looking
for my passport."
One can't miss the Islamophobic nature
of much of the hysteria when one compares the difference in the
treatment of the cases of Robert Cottage and David Bolus Jackson
of the BNP with that of Mohammed Atif Siddique. The case of the
former two, arrested for the possession of rocket launchers, a
"record haul of chemicals used in making home-made bombs",
extremist literature, and bomb-making information, barely got
covered in national media; the latter, a 20 year old, received
front page attention and eight years in prison for merely downloading
extremist literature, and his attorney Aamer Anwer, got charged
with 'contempt of court' for calling the trial a "tragedy
for justice".
The new MI5 chief, Jonathan Evan, raised
the fear factor a year on with the warning that 15-year-olds were
being "groomed" for terror and that there were up to
2,000 people involved in "terrorist-related activity".
Recalling Donald Rumsfeld's "unknown unknown's", the
man appointed by John Reid with Tony Blair's approval, bizarrely
added "there are as many again that we don't yet know of".
Described variously as "lurid", "inflammatory",
"highly ideological", "playing Halloween",
it came on the eve of the Queen's address calling for yet another
terror bill. The institutional imperative of self-preservation
may also have been at play: MI5 has already expanded by 50% with
eight new regional offices, and will have doubled in size by 2011.
Eyebrows have been raised at these very public interventions by
the heads of a clandestine service. Simon Jenkins noted that chiefs
of the secret service have long feared that the absence of a public
profile may diminish funding appropriation. "The answer of
both MI5's Evans and MI6's John Scarlett is to join the fear factory."
Taking Liberties
The assault on constitutional rights that
started in the US with Clinton's Anti-terrorism and Effective
Death Penalty law of 1996 was replicated in Britain with the Terrorism
Act 2000. Section 41 of the Act granted police the right to detain
terror suspects for up to one week without charge (criminal law
on the other hand requires that suspects be charged within the
first 24 hours of arrest, or be released). Section 44 granted
police stop and search rights all across Britain (it has since
been used against: Kevin Gillan and Pennie Quinto for protesting
outside Europe's biggest arms fair in London, the 82-year-old
Walter Wolfgang for heckling Jack Straw at the Labour Conference,
Sally Cameron for walking on a cycle-path in Dundee, the 80-year-old
John Catt for being caught on CCTV passing a demonstration in
Brighton;, the 11-year-old Isabelle Ellis-Cockcroft for accompanying
her parents to an anti-nuclear protest, and a cricketer on his
way to a match over his possession of a bat).
In the United States, September 11 occasioned
the most robust assault yet on civil liberties in the form of
Bush's 'USA Patriot Act' leading eminent constitutional law professor
Sanford Levinson to describe Carl Schmitt, the leading Nazi legal
authority, as "the true éminence grise of the Bush
administration" to the extent that the Administration (advised
by Dick Cheney's lawyer, David Addington) espoused a view of presidential
authority "that is all too close to the power that Schmitt
was willing to accord his own Führer".4 The respected
lawyer Gareth Peirce noted equally worrying tendencies in the
UK:
Blair bulldozed through Parliament a new
brand of internment. This allowed for the indefinite detention
without trial of foreign nationals, the 'evidence' to be heard
in secret with the detainee's lawyer not permitted to see the
evidence against him and an auxiliary lawyer appointed by the
attorney general who, having seen it, was not allowed to see the
detainee. The most useful device of the executive is its ability
to claim that secrecy is necessary for national security.5
The Anti-terrorism, Crime and Security
Act 2001 succeeded in ramming through measures that had been rejected
in the 2000 Act. The Criminal Justice Act 2003 doubled the period
of detention without charge to 14 days. Although the government
suffered a significant setback when the Law Lords swept aside
the indefinite detention ruling since it broke European human
rights legislation (described by the Law Lords as "draconian"
and "anathema" to the rule of law, it was seen by Lord
Hoffmann as a bigger threat to the nation than terrorism). Charles
Clarke, the Home Secretary, immediately made clear his intention
to undermine it. The government obliged by subsequently passing
the Prevention of Terrorism Act 2005 which gave the Home Secretary
the right to use Control Orders and opt out of human rights laws.
In the wake of the terrorist attacks in
London on July 7, the government upped the ante with the Terrorism
Act 2006, which doubled - yet again - the detention period to
28 days, a period far longer than any other state in the western
world. The bill marked the first parliamentary defeat for Tony
Blair, whose original proposal was for 90 days detention without
charge.
Blair's determination to deflect attention
from the failures of his scandal-ridden government by turning
the war on terror into a permanent undeclared state of emergency
seemed to have come up against a wall. However, despite a noticeably
prudent start, Brown's multiplying political problems soon had
him reaching for Blairite nostrums. He renewed the case for doubling
the period of detention without charge subsequently settling for
an arbitrary 42 days which the supine parliament duly passed.6
This despite the fact that the newly appointed Home Secretary
Jacqui Smith had conceded that circumstances had not yet arisen
where it had been necessary "to go beyond 28 days".
Seumas Milne reported in The Guardian that "it's widely acknowledged
in Westminster that a key motivation for this latest assault on
long-established rights and freedoms is Brown's determination
to wrong-foot the Tories tactically and portray them as soft on
terror".
The deleterious effects of a creeping
surveillance state cannot be discounted. While the public may
have little enthusiasm for an ID card scheme after discs containing
personal details of 25 million individuals were lost by the government,
Brown remains adamant. Given the government's record for handling
personal data, proposals for a universal register of citizen's
DNA samples is very worrying. So are Tony Blair's remarks about
identifying problem children who may grow up to pose a menace
to society by intervening before they were born. A new plan under
the government's e-borders scheme would require each person entering
or leaving UK to answer 53 questions including "credit card
details, holiday contact numbers, travel plans, email addresses,
car numbers and even any previous missed flights". Taken
when a ticket is bought, the information, it was reported, "will
be shared among police, customs, immigration and the security
services for at least 24 hours before a journey is due to take
place." When popular shows bear names like Big Brother, the
appurtenances of mass surveillance society, such as the 4.2 million
CCTV cameras, become an acceptable, even desired, part of the
scenery. While the terrorist threat today has nowhere near the
intensity of the IRA campaign, police are using military aircraft
such as the Britten-Norman Islander used previously only in Northern
Ireland during the Troubles. Reaper robot drones of the type being
used in Afghanistan will also be in operation during the Olympics.
Reign of the Terrorologist
Riding the back of the raft of anti-terror
legislations are the terrorologists and the "security"
entrepreneurs; and they have found green pastures in Fortress
Britain. With governments unwilling to address political causes,
the trend is increasingly one of framing the subject in cultural
terms: 'they hate our way of life', 'they hate our freedoms',
etc. This clears the way for the terrorologist to step in and
sell a toxic brew of cultural stereotypes and pop psychology packaged
in pseudo-academic jargon as expertise. In his study of the trade,
James Petras detects the following "eerily predictable patterns":
They use a common language to describe
their subjects and their environment; they are extremely ideological
under a thin veneer of scientific jargon; they possess a keen
sense of selective observation; they always pretend to possess
a psychological understanding though few if any have dealt close
up with their subjects in any clinical sense except perhaps under
conditions of incarceration and interrogation.
Their style slippery with euphemisms when
it comes to dealing with the violence of their partisan states
Psychobabble provides a 'legitimate' sounding channel for assuming
a state of civilized superiority in the face of their dehumanized
subjects. Indeed, the dehumanization process is central to the
whole terrorist-political-academic enterprise
One consequence of earning an elevated
place in official demonology is that the bar for those passing
judgement drops radically. When it comes to Islam, Muslims and
their alleged links to terrorism, any shoddy indictment passes
muster. Doom-laden sensationalism makes for good copy; it makes
no demands on rigour and scepticism, and a stable of 'experts'
is readily at hand to amplify fear. The degree to which this has
penetrated public discourse was demonstrated by the Big Issue
- a publication generally about as provocative as a phonebook
- with a front page story on 'cyber terror' and 'online vigilantes'.
Trotting out a stable of 'terror experts' the story served as
a platform for several tendentious claims ("There are no
longer clear boundaries between real-world cells and 'amateurs'
assisting terror plots via their computers"; "al-Qaeda
is equal in the media war"). Rather than question why a dubious
source such as Evan Kohlmann - the man used as a 'expert witness'
in the Atif Siddique trial who, according to sociologist David
Miller, "has no expertise beyond an undergraduate law degree
and an internship at a dubious think-tank" - should be consulted
by the Scotland Yard, the story served as a puff piece for three
Israel lobby hacks with an ideological axe to grind. Rita Katz
has served in the Israeli military; Aaron Weisburd runs Internet
Haganah (Hebrew name for the paramilitary that later became the
IDF) a project of the Society for Internet Research that works
with the Mossad-linked Intelligence and Terrorism Information
Center; and both Katz and Kohlmann are protégés
of Steve Emerson whose own expertise includes having seen "the
hallmarks of Middle Eastern terror" in the Oklahoma bombing
(actually carried out by Timothy McVeigh, a decorated white Christian
war-hero).
The trade of the terrorologist is not
new: incubated in the Reagan administration's earlier 'war on
terror', its proponents had been exposed and elegantly debunked
by Edward Herman. September 11 ushered in a new breed - ubiquitous,
ideological, and relentless. Some, such as Rohan Gunaratna of
the St. Andrews-based Centre for the Study of Terrorism and Political
Violence (CSTPV), reinvented themselves over night as 'experts
on al-Qaeda'. Gunaratna's book Inside Al Qaeda became an instant
best-seller, even though before the date his expertise was limited
to South Asian groups, such as the Tamil Tigers. In the book he
claimed he was the "principal investigator of the United
Nations' Terrorism Prevention Branch". However, after a Sunday
Age investigation, he admitted that no such position existed.
Intelligence services have been generally dismissive of his claims.
However, despite all this, he keeps making appearances as an 'expert
witness' at various UK prosecutions and in media reports.
CSTPV itself bears some scrutiny. Established
by an alumni of the RAND Corporation (a US think-tank which played
a key role during the Cold War; satirized as the 'Bland Corporation'
in Dr. Strangelove, it was an enthusiastic supporter of the arms
race), the Centre has links to the government and intelligence
agencies. Shaping discourse on terrorism through its two influential
academic journals, Studies in Conflict and Terrorism, and Terrorism
and Political Violence, CSTPV emphasises terror directed against
states, while mostly ignoring violence by states, excluding however
those not allied to the West ('Hell is other people', Sartre might
say). Reports by the Centre have been used by the government to
rationalize permanent anti-terror legislation. The RAND-CSTPV
nexus also has stakes in the Iraq conflict through its links to
mercenary firms operating in the country. However, despite the
conflicts of interest, the Centre's embedded expertise remains
much in demand.7
CSTPV's output may be ideological; but
it still retains a degree of sophistication. With the low demands
on rigour, joining the fray now are some actors less restrained.
In early 2006 it was revealed that authorities at several universities,
including this writer's own, were co-operating with Special Branch
as a result of a recently published study by the right wing Social
Affairs Unit. Conducted by Anthony Glees, the Director of Brunel
Centre for Intelligence and Security Studies, the study claimed
to find evidence of Islamist, animal liberation and British National
Party recruitment on UK campuses. The evidence comprised of the
fact that people who have been arrested under anti-terrorism legislation
attended universities at some point. It castigated Universities
for teaching students "theoretical tools for understanding
the world", such as Marxism, which could lead to further
radicalization when students moved "from campus to Mosque".
Policy Exchange, another dubious neoconservative outfit, shouldered
its way into the debate with an Islamophobic report on extremist
literature allegedly being promoted through various Mosques which,
to the BBC's credit, was publicly debunked by a Newsnight investigation.
This, however, did not deter Policy Exchange members from using
the report to lobby the EU.
Hero and Horse
On November 18, 1822, the Observer reported
that nearly "a million bushels of human and inhuman bones"
had been imported in the previous year from Europe into the port
of Hull. Battlefields swept alike of the "bones of the hero
and the horse which he rode" delivered their haul to Yorkshire
bone grinders who reduced them to granulary state. "In this
condition they are sold to the farmers to manure their lands."8
Two centuries on, the gap between the 'support our troops' rhetoric
and reality has yet to be bridged.
An internal report into the state of the
British Military obtained by The Independent on May 11 reveals
that soldiers are living in such poverty that they can't even
afford food, with many living on emergency food voucher schemes
set up by the Ministry of Defence (MoD). "Commanders are
attempting to tackle the problem through 'Hungry Soldier' schemes,
under which destitute soldiers are given loans to enable them
to eat" the paper reported. With its proclivity for market
solutions, the tradition of soldiers getting three square meals
a day for free has been replaced with a controversial Pay as You
Dine (PAYD) regime, which charges soldiers not on active duty
for their meals, leading many into debt.
Likewise, slightly more than a year back
on March 11, 2007, the Observer had revealed the shocking picture
of neglect and poor treatment of wounded soldiers returning from
Afghanistan and Iraq. It reported, for example, that "the
youngest British soldier wounded in Iraq, Jamie Cooper, was forced
to spend a night lying in his own faeces after staff at Birmingham's
Selly Oak Hospital allowed his colostomy bag to overflow. On another
occasion his medical air mattress was allowed to deflate, leaving
him in 'considerable pain' overnight despite an alarm going off."
Another complaint alleged that one soldier "suffered more
than 14 hours in agony without pain relief because no relevant
staff were on duty". (This, of course, is as much a reflection
of the chronic lack of surplus within the health system as it
is of the wider militarised draw on public resources.) The MoD
has already revealed a serious shortage of medical staff in the
armed forces: "There was a 50% shortfall in the number of
surgeons required by the army, an 80% shortfall of radiologists
and a 46% shortfall of anaesthetists."
Soldiers in the field haven't fared any
better: for example, both Reg Keys and Rose Gentle lost sons in
Iraq due to the lack of proper equipment. Iraq has taken its toll
on an overstretched military. Due to "continuing high level
of operational commitment" an MoD report has revealed, "more
than 1 in 10 soldiers were not getting the rest between operations
they needed." The report also referred to a "continuing
difficult environment for army recruitment and retention".
With a high number of officers and other ranks going over voluntarily
with another 2,000 awaiting approval of their applications to
quit, the armed forces as a whole are nearly 7,000 under strength,
the report revealed.
The crisis has caused the military to
redouble its recruitment efforts with visits to Scottish schools
up by more than 180% in the last three years, The Herald revealed.
The news comes only weeks after the National Union of Teachers
voted to block future military careers' presentations "to
pupils as young as 14_ in England and Wales. "Despite the
outlay of almost £500m, in 2006-07 the field army - the
frontline operational part of UK ground forces - missed its 'gains
to strength' (GTS) recruitment goal by 12%. In 2007-08, it achieved
only 63% of its target." (In the US, the military has been
reduced to enlisting former convicts and the mentally ill.) The
degree of desperation is also evident in the recent advertising
campaign for military recruitment: the military experience is
presented as a sanitized adventure, an adrenaline-soaked escape
from ennui. High-minded calls of duty and honour have been replaced
with ones such as "for the travel, for the action, for the
adventure"; "for the fun, for the friendship, for the
Friday nights".
The MoD caused much consternation among
the National Union of Teachers when it distributed materials on
the Iraq war for use in schools. The ministry was accused of "misleading
propaganda" which "unethically" targeted recruitment
materials at schools in disadvantaged areas. One worksheet described
the purpose of the UK mission in Iraq as "helping the Iraqis
to rebuild their country after the conflict and years of neglect".
Touting "achievements" in "security and reconstruction"
it failed to mention the US-led invasion, its legality, Iraqi
civilian deaths or the absence of WMDs. This is not the MoD's
only advance on the classroom. Another example is the Defence
Science and Technology Laboratory (DSTL) outreach programme, which
sends DSTL scientists to talk to university and school students
to encourage them to think about a career at the lab. According
to Frances Saunders, the chief executive, DSTL sponsors "year-in-industry
students, and are working with the MoD to develop school lesson
texts to get people interested in the science behind defence."
Although DSTL already has strong links with universities including
Southampton, Imperial, Oxford and Cambridge, Saunders plans to
broaden this network.
Not since Suez has the military suffered
a greater loss of prestige. RAF airmen in Cambridgeshire were
recently advised against wearing uniforms in public in order to
avoid being "verbally abused" for their participation
in Afghanistan and Iraq. With the demoralizing effect of ill-conceived
interventions abroad, the struggle for politicians is then of
rehabilitating the myth of the military, rather that the military
itself. What interests policy makers is not so much the military,
but the cult of military. Plans are also underway to introduce
US-style citizenship ceremonies for children and a new public
holiday to celebrate 'Britishness' by 2012, as part of "wide-ranging
proposals to strengthen British citizenship."
In sharp contrast to the decrepit military
stands the fortunes of the private military industry. The preference
of recent governments for market solutions has facilitated the
transfer of most military R&D to the private sector, with
giants like QinetiQ and BAe Systems securing plum deals. When
the Defence Evaluation and Research Agency (Dera) was split in
two in 2001, QinetiQ, a British company with links to the US-based
Carlyle Group, absorbed the majority of its activities. Along
with a raft of other lucrative PFIs, the private military industry
is set to benefit from the largest to date, involving at least
£14 billion of taxpayers' money, for a privatised Military
'Academy' at St Athan in the Vale of Glamorgan to train all-service
personnel and private 'security services'. The corporate bonanza
in Iraq has had Private Military Contractors - mercenaries - reaping
windfalls profits for investors with stakes in the businesses,
such as Frederick Forsyth and former Foreign Secretary Malcolm
Rifkind (of Aegis and ArmorGroup respectively). The lure of salaries,
at times reaching as high as £1,000 a day, may be one reason
why the military is losing so many of its men to the mercenary
business.
While the defence establishment has long
complained of funding shortages for the forces, the R&D budget
remains secure. The MoD, it was reported, has promised not to
raid the R&D budget to pay for wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
However, this injunction doesn't apply in the reverse, as it has
been revealed that the Conflict Prevention Fund set aside for
clearing landmines and removing arms from conflict zones was being
raided to pay BAe Systems to subsidise the £5m-£10m
servicing cost of six Tornado jets in Iraq. The measure was needed
because the MoD has closed its own state-of-the-art facility for
servicing Tornado jets as a way of saving £500m over 10
years.
Sensing opportunity as the war on terror
grinds on, its neoconservative architects have swooped in from
across the Atlantic to establish their presence in Britain. With
ties to the arms industry and the neoconservative wing of the
Israel lobby, the Henry Jackson Society seems to be assuming the
role that the Committee on Present Danger played in the United
States. Its Israel-centric worldview, as exhibited by its roster
of speakers, predisposes it towards perpetual conflict. The support
for a militarized ethnocracy is not the natural inclination of
a liberal-democratic Britain; it can only be sustained in a context
where Israel can be seen aligned with Britain in an overarching
conflict against a common enemy. So it is that the Israel lobby
has contrived to pass its enemies off as those of the 'West'.
HJS appears well placed to sustain this state of conflict should
the Tories get in as its supporters include two of David Cameron's
key advisers. There is a dangerous confluence of interests here.
Fortress Britain is as much a consequence of ill-conceived alliances
as it is a response to the neoliberal order's need for distraction
from its inherent contradictions. While not nearly as unscrupulous
as his predecessor, Gordon Brown's growing travails may lead him
to seek the politician's time-tested remedy: scare the hell out
of the population. One only hopes that Fortress Britain is the
apogee of what Tony Blair had set in motion with his promise to
stand "shoulder to shoulder" with George W. Bush in
his so-called 'war on terror', because things could always be
worse.
0. Might he be the same Amnon Maor of
the squad of six Israeli border policemen who back in 1994 were
sentenced to six months in prison with one year suspended sentences
and a fine of NIS 1,000 each, for brutally assaulting an Arab
in a supermarket whose cart had accidentally knocked one. 'The
six also arrested a passerby who witnessed the beating, and had
asked them to stop and to show identification', the Jerusalem
Post reported. The Judge castigated them for abuse of authority
and violating 'all norms of acceptable behaviour'. (Jerusalem
Post, 8 December 1994) #
0.
0. European Terrorism Situation and Trend Report 2007; David Miller,
'The statistical invisibility of Islamist "terrorism"
in Europe', Spinwatch, 23 May 2007. #
0.
0. While Gardner admits MI6 tried to recruit him while stationed
in Cairo, he insists he turned them down. See David Rowan, 'Interview:
Frank Gardner', Evening Standard, 15 June 2005. #
0.
0. Sanford Levinson, 'Torture in Iraq & the rule of law in
America', Daedalus, Summer 2004. #
0.
0. Gareth Peirce, 'Was it like this for the Irish?', London Review
of Books, 10 April 2008. #
0.
0. Interestingly, this led to the first resignation on principle
from the the British parliament in nearly half a century, of David
Davies, a Tory former SAS man. By contrast voting for the bill
were Labour MPs such as Muhammad Sarwar, the bovine cipher who
represents Glasgow with its large Muslim population. #
0.
0. J. Burnett and Dave Whyte, 'Embedded expertise and the "War
on Terror"', Journal for Crime, Conflict and the Media, 2005,
1(4): 1-18. #
0.
0. Quoted by veteran correspondent Chris Hedges in his incisive
study of the social consequences of conflict, War Is a Force That
Gives Us Meaning. #
0.
Muhammad Idrees Ahmad is a researcher at Spinwatch. Read other
articles by Muhammad, or visit Muhammad's website.
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on Terrorism page
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