[Peace-discuss] Putting America's enemies in one basket

unionyes unionyes at ameritech.net
Tue Jan 19 06:56:11 CST 2010


Great article Carl !

Remember back in the 1980's during the Central American Contra terrorist 
war, when the Reagan Admin. tried to make the case that the FARC in 
Columbia, Nicaragua, and Cuba were smuggling cocaine into the U.S. ?

The only REAL evidence that emerged was that the Contras and the CIA were 
smuggling cocaine into the U.S. and selling it in the U.S. as well.

David J.

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "C. G. Estabrook" <galliher at illinois.edu>
To: "Peace-discuss List" <peace-discuss at lists.chambana.net>
Sent: Tuesday, January 19, 2010 2:42 AM
Subject: [Peace-discuss] Putting America's enemies in one basket


You Say FARQaeda, I Say El Qaeda
by Kelley B. Vlahos, January 19, 2010

Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-Fla.) knows her terrorists. And as queen bee
representative of the Miami anti-Castro movement for the last 22 years, she 
has
had a lot of practice telling the American people whom they should be afraid 
of
and whom should be backhanded by Uncle Sam, whether it be with crippling
economic sanctions or a rain of fire on their cities.

That’s why it came as no surprise this month when Ros-Lehtinen and her 
fellow
terror radar, Rep. Connie Mack (R-Fla.), cited "overwhelming evidence" that
al-Qaeda is working closely with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia
(FARC), with Venezuela facilitating their drug deals as well as the 
activities
of numerous international drug cartels and Middle Eastern terror groups,
including Hamas and Hezbollah.

Some are already calling it FARQaeda, or better yet, El Qaeda.

"Groups like the FARC are finding new ways to sell drugs in Europe by means 
of
al-Qaeda in Africa," Ros-Lehtinen charged in a statement to reporters 
earlier
this month. "And al-Qaeda is more than willing to use the drug trade to help
finance its extremist agenda."

As for Venezuela and its president, Hugo Chavez, who is the arch nemesis of
Ros-Lehtinen and her fellow neoconservatives in Congress, she added, "It is 
no
surprise that Hugo Chavez allows Venezuela to serve as a massive airport for 
the
use of traffickers. In fact, the DEA [Drug Enforcement Agency] has said that 
all
the planes captured in West Africa left for Venezuela."

Mack added that evidence exists that that FARC, Hezbollah, and Hamas 
"operate
with few restrictions in Venezuela," and that agents from these 
organizations
travel abroad with Venezuelan passports.

Put it all together, Mack continued, and "there is no doubt that the 
potential
threat to [U.S.] security from Venezuela is extremely high." He and 
Ros-Lehtinen
then asked President Obama – again, no surprise – to add Venezuela to the 
State
Department’s list of state sponsors of terrorism.

This isn’t the first time they’ve tried to nail Chavez by advocating the
inclusion of his socialist country on that list. There’s just no 
overwhelming
support in Congress for it, probably because the "overwhelming evidence" 
they
cite is as loose as a goose, a witch’s brew of fluctuating threat 
assessments,
unnamed official sources, scattered arrests, the frozen assets of disparate
individuals, suspects on the lam, a declared "Axis of Unity," and a lot of 
hype.
And that also goes for the most recent charges – and one could say the most
audacious yet – of an al-Qaeda-FARC-Venezuela narco nexus.

"Al-Qaeda? That’s even more ridiculous," charges a nonplused Marc Weisbrot,
co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research and president of 
Just
Foreign Policy in Washington, D.C. "But they’re always coming up with that 
kind
of stuff. I usually ignore it. [Mack and Ros-Lehtinen] are pretty wild… 
obsessed
with enemies south of the border."

"They’ve conflated a lot of stuff together to make it politically palatable" 
for
a vulnerable audience, just after a Christmas Day bomb plot was foiled and 
the
threat levels were raised once again, suggests Sanho Tree, director of the 
Drug
Policy Project at the Institute for Policy Studies.

Ros-Lehtinen and Mack apparently weren’t satisfied that their primary 
torment,
Fidel Castro’s Cuba, was included on a list of 14 countries from which 
airline
passengers will now be singled out for body searches at security checkpoints 
and
remains on the list of states that sponsor terrorism. They are driven to see
that Castro’s friend Hugo Chavez is a leader "of interest" in the wider 
Global
War on Terror, too.

"I call it a stunt because it is all based on one article – one Reuters 
piece –
based on one [DEA] agent," says Tree of the latest al-Qaeda accusations.

The Jan. 3 report in question said the U.S. can establish a link "suggesting
al-Qaeda is funding itself in part by providing security for drug smugglers 
in
West Africa." Specifically, the report asserted that FARC is expediting 
drugs
through West Africa and paying al-Qaeda to get shipments to the European 
market.

As Foreign Policy blogger Joshua Keating pointed out, the charges are based 
on
the December arrest of three alleged al-Qaeda members who were approached in
Ghana by a DEA agent posing as a Lebanese radical and "fixer" for FARC. 
"U.S.
Attorney Preet Bharara says the arrests ‘reflect the emergence of a 
worrisome
alliance between al-Qaeda and transnational narcotics traffickers,’" wrote
Keating, "but if these guys represent the vanguard of a new generation of
narcoterror, we probably don’t have too much to worry about."

The "unholy alliance" of "Islamic extremists" and "Marxist rebels," as 
described
by Reuters correspondent Hugh Bronstein, is therefore based on the cuffing 
of
three al-Qaeda rubes in what appears to be the DEA’s easiest sting operation
since agents dressed up like Deadheads to net hippies like fish in a barrel
outside Grateful Dead concerts.

Still, it was all that the lobby of fear-mongers and GWOT-peddlers needed to
advance the argument that al-Qaeda is insinuating itself in the Western
Hemisphere via a noisome, anti-American, socialist bully. "Connie Mack and
Ileana Ros-Lehtinen are exploiting people’s fears about terrorism in the 
wake of
the Christmas Day bombing attempt, to pursue their own vendettas against the
Venezuelan government," says anti-Drug War activist Sean Donahue.

"The idea that the Marxists of the FARC, the Shi’ites of Hezbollah and 
Hamas,
the Sunnis of al-Qaeda, and the government of Venezuela all are conspiring
together to create mayhem in the U.S. is laughable."

But for 10 years, the attempt to find and connect the dots has not been a
laughing matter. The motivations vary – political, ideological, or pure
institutional self-preservation – but the goal has been the same: to prove 
that
the evildoers of the Middle East are being harbored by governments we do not
like or cannot control here in our own neighborhood. But experts say the 
bread
crumbs hardly measure up to anything worth eating, and so far all the hype 
has
yet to catch fire.

For example, in 2002, then-Assistant Secretary of State for Narcotics and 
Law
Enforcement Rand Beers (who today serves Obama’s Department of Homeland
Security) was forced to rescind a statement he made during a federal court
deposition. In his initial statement, made under oath in November 2001 (at 
the
height of American fear and paranoia), Beers said FARC guerrillas had 
received
training in al-Qaeda camps in Afghanistan and any disruption in the U.S.-led
drug eradication effort would "undermine national security."

In September 2002, Beers entered in a "supplemental," retracting several
assertions made during the initial deposition, including that "it is 
believed
that FARC terrorists have received training in al-Qaeda terrorist camps."

As stated in the supplemental, "based upon information made available to me
subsequent to the filing of the declaration, I no longer believe this 
statement
to be true and correct."

There have been a number of attempts to situate al-Qaeda and the diaspora of
Middle East terror elements in South America, beginning shortly after 9/11.
About the time of Beers’ original deposition, CNN produced a report about a
seeming terrorist infestation in the "tri-border region," the porous area 
where
Argentina, Brazil, and Paraguay meet. Zeroing in on Ciudad del Este, which 
is
described in this and other excited accounts at the time as a sort of cross
between a medieval bazaar and the pirate city of Mos Eisley from Star Wars, 
CNN
cited "official sources" and a lot of conjecture.

"Sources told CNN they believe the tri-border area is being used as a haven 
and
source of funding for terrorists linked to Iran’s Party of God and to
organizations that work closely with Osama bin Laden.

"In Ciudad del Este, on the Paraguayan side of the Parana River, the 
commercial
district is a mosaic of businesses owned mostly by Arab merchants. 
International
and regional intelligence sources said those businesses and a mosque in the 
city
serve as a revolving door for Islamic extremists."

Five years later, Asia Times correspondent Pepe Escobar pointed out that the
U.S. military still hadn’t confirmed the existence of terrorist cells at the
tri-border, "nor anywhere else in South American for that matter." He said 
that
between 2001 and 2002 "the whole thing had been fine combed by U.S. and
Brazilian investigators," but they failed to find anything to match the 
hype. As
for the alleged $20 million a year being sent from the region to finance
Hezbollah, Escobar wrote, "there’s no independent confirmation."

"But the pressure is nonstop" to find it, he added.

In many ways, people like Ros-Lehtinen and Mack have all the evidence they 
need.
In 2007, Navy Adm. James G. Stavridis, then-head of U.S. Southern Command, 
gave
his annual "posture statement" [.pdf] to Congress in which he argued that
"Hezbollah appears to be the most prominent group active in the region, and
while much of their activity is currently linked to revenue generation, 
there
are indications of an operational presence and potential for attacks."

He added that the Colombian government had broken up a forgery ring with 
alleged
ties to Islamic extremists, and that Brazilian authorities had arrested a
suspect linked to the assassination of Lebanese Foreign Minister Rafik 
Hariri.
The suspect, Rana Qoleilat, who was also accused of a massive bank swindle 
in
Beirut, was reportedly cleared of all charges less than a year later.

In 2007, several individuals’ assets were frozen by the U.S. Treasury, which
charged the men with raising money for Hezbollah and trafficking in fake
passports and drugs. Then in 2008, the U.S. Treasury Department fingered
Venezuelan diplomat Ghazi Nasr al Din and Venezuelan-Arab businessman Fawzi
Kanan as key links to Hezbollah and subsequently froze their assets. As a
result, the Bush administration accused the Chavez government of providing 
"safe
harbor" to Hezbollah "facilitators and fundraisers."

Still, no al-Qaeda.

Keep in mind, according to the Treasury’s own data, the total amount of 
assets
from foreign terrorist groups, individuals, and charities frozen by the 
Treasury
Department in 2008 was less than $25 million, only 5 percent of total
terrorism-related funding targeted that year. About 95 percent came from 
states
that sponsored terrorism directly, calling into question how big a role 
these
supposed financiers play in the first place.

Meanwhile, the stagy "Axis of Unity" between Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad and Chavez has been proof enough for the terror-chasers that 
Iran is
plotting to strike at the U.S. from its own backyard.

"Since 2000, Chavez has been to Tehran seven times for extensive deal-making
that has produced $20 billion of arrangements more opaque than the funds of
Bernie Madoff," wrote Douglas Schoen and Michael Rowan, authors of The 
Threat
Closer to Home: Hugo Chavez and the War against America, in a January 2009
Forbes commentary. But the "deal-making" has hardly been a secret. As of 
March
2008, the two countries had generated nearly 200 bilateral agreements 
involving
oil, gas, and the financial and metals industries – with Iran doing most of 
the
investing – though it is not clear how much of that has yet reached 
fruition.

For his part, Chavez has sided with Ahmadinejad over the recent anti-regime
protests in Iran and has accused the Israelis of "genocide" in Gaza. 
Venezuela
joined Cuba and Malaysia in voting against an IAEA censure of Iran over its
nuclear facility at Qom in November.

Schoen and Rowan suggest all of this may be a prelude to an anti-American 
attack
and point to numerous "investigations" into supposed Hezbollah-Caracas
connections. Chavez "has all the weapons needed to terrorize the U.S., 
including
the capacity to build a dirty bomb – or another biological weapon – and the
ability to move money or materials across American borders at will through 
the
14,000 American gas stations he owns," they wrote. Manhattan District 
Attorney
Robert Morgenthau pumped these theories up with steroids late last year,
suggesting in a Brookings Institution speech that Venezuela might be mining
uranium for Iran.

But what does all of this amount to? A thicket of investigations, arrests, 
and
theories, but so far, no smoking gun. Ros-Lehtinen and Mack are nonetheless
convinced that Chavez is not only facilitating FARC rebels, but also 
providing a
safe haven for Hezbollah and a now a revenue stream for al-Qaeda, too. It’s 
as
easy as connecting the dots.

Funny, there wasn’t a lot of dot-connecting when Ros-Lehtinen lobbied to get
terrorist Orlando Bosch out of the slammer (he’s beloved by the anti-Castro
community, even though he’s accused of destroying an airliner with 73 people
inside), or when she weighed all the mitigating factors and lobbied to get 
the
Iranian Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK) off the U.S. list of terrorist groups (they’re
beloved by the neoconservatives, even though they were responsible for 
blowing
up embassies and assassinating Americans in 1970s Tehran).

Never you mind, Ros-Lehtinen knows her terrorists. And if she can find a way 
to
get al-Qaeda – or El Qaeda – into the Americas, or better yet, the Americas 
into
the Global War on Terror, she will.

http://original.antiwar.com/vlahos/2010/01/18/you-say-farqaeda-i-say/

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