Beyond Snowden: US General Cartwright has been indicted for espionage
JULY 2, 2013 BY 6 COMMENTS
RELATED: Whistleblower General Cartwright: demonized by a criminal US government21st Century Wire says…
While the world focuses on Washington’s pursuit of NSA whistleblower Ed Snowden, another much more high ranking member of the US power structure has been indicted for espionage this week…
US General James Cartwright was regarded by Washington insiders as ‘Obama’s General’, and now he’s facing prosecution for blowing the whistle on ‘Operation Olympic Games’ which planted the Stuxnet and Flame viruses in Iranian nuclear facilities in order derail Iran’s civilian nuclear program. At closer examination, it appears that Cartwright’s revelations didn’t so much harm US interests per say, but they hindered Israeli ambitions towards a war with Iran.
But why espionage? What is the line between “whistleblowing” and “espionage” in America today?
Journalist Thierry Meyssan give us a historical perspective and tells is what it really means…
Voltaire Net
While the international press plays up the information leaked by Edward Snowden as a revelation concerning the PRISM surveillance program, feigning to have discovered what everyone should already have known for a long time, Thierry Meyssan, is particularly curious about the meaning of this rebellion. From this perspective, he attaches more importance to the case of General Cartwright, who has also been indicted for espionage.
Thierry Meyssan
Are
American public servants, civilian or military, who face a minimum of
30 years in prison for revealing U.S. state secrets to the press “whistleblowers” exercising power in a democratic system, or are they “resistors to oppression” at the hands of a military-police dictatorship?
The answer to this question does not depend on our own political opinions, but on the nature of the U.S. government. The answer completely changes if we focus on the case of Bradley Manning, the young leftist Wikileaks soldier, or if we consider that of General Cartwright, military adviser to President Obama, indicted Thursday, 27 June 2013, for spying.
IMAGE: US General James Cartwright
The answer to this question does not depend on our own political opinions, but on the nature of the U.S. government. The answer completely changes if we focus on the case of Bradley Manning, the young leftist Wikileaks soldier, or if we consider that of General Cartwright, military adviser to President Obama, indicted Thursday, 27 June 2013, for spying.
IMAGE: US General James Cartwright
Here, a look back is needed to understand how one shifts from “espionage” in favor of a foreign power, to “disloyalty” to a criminal organization that employs you.
Worse than censorship: the criminalization of sources
The President of the United States and Nobel Peace
Prize laureate, Woodrow Wilson, tried to confer on the Executive branch the power to censor the press when “national security” or “the reputation of the government” are in play. In his speech on State of the Union (7th of December 1915), he said:
“There are citizens of the United States … who have poured the poison of disloyalty into the very arteries of our national life, who tried to drag the authority and reputation of our government in contempt … to destroy our industries … and degrade our policy in favor of foreign intrigue …. We are without adequate federal laws …. I urge you to do nothing less than save the honor and self-respect of the nation. Such creatures of passion, disloyalty, and anarchy must be crushed.”
“There are citizens of the United States … who have poured the poison of disloyalty into the very arteries of our national life, who tried to drag the authority and reputation of our government in contempt … to destroy our industries … and degrade our policy in favor of foreign intrigue …. We are without adequate federal laws …. I urge you to do nothing less than save the honor and self-respect of the nation. Such creatures of passion, disloyalty, and anarchy must be crushed.”
However, Congress did not heed him immediately. After the U.S. entry into the war, it passed the Espionage Act, taking in most of the British Official Secrets Act.
It was no longer a matter of censoring the press, but of cutting off
access to information by muzzling the custodians of state secrets. This
device allows the Anglo-Saxons to present themselves as “defenders of freedom of expression“,
though they are the worst violators of the democratic right to
information, constitutionally defended by the Scandinavian countries.
Silence, not secrecy
Thus, the Anglo-Americans are less informed
about what is happening at home than are foreigners. For example, during
World War II, the United States, the United Kingdom and Canada managed
to keep under wraps something as big as the Manhattan Project,
that created the first nuclear bomb, while it employed 130,000 people
for 4 years and it was widely penetrated by foreign intelligence
services. Why? Because Washington did not prepare the weapon for this
war, but for the next, against the Soviet Union.
As shown by Russian historians, the abdication of Japan was postponed
until after Hiroshima and Nagasaki were destroyed as a warning to the
USSR. If Americans had known that their country possessed such a weapon,
their leaders would have had to use it to finish with Germany and not
to threaten the Soviet ally at the expense of the Japanese. In reality,
the Cold War began before the
end of World War II [1].
In terms of secrecy, it should be noted that Stalin and Hitler were informed of the Manhattan Project from
its inception. They indeed had inside agents. Meanwhile Truman was
informed in his capacity as vice president, but only at the last moment,
after the death of President Roosevelt.
The real utility of the Espionage Act
In any event, the Espionage Act deals only secondarily with espionage as shown by its jurisprudence.
In wartime, it is used to punish dissent. Thus, in 1919, the Supreme Court recognized in Schrenck v. United States andAbrams v. United States that calling for insubordination or non-intervention against the Russian Revolution fell under theEspionage Act.
In
peacetime, the same law serves to prevent public officials from
exposing a system of fraud or crimes committed by the state, even if
their revelations are already known, but not yet proven.
Under the administration of Barack Obama, the Espionage Act has been invoked 8 times, a peacetime record. Let’s put aside the case of John Kiriakou, a CIA officer who revealed the detention and torture of Abu Zubaydah. Far from being a hero, Kiriakou is actually an agent provocateur funded by the Agency, whose role it was to delude the public regarding pseudo-confessions extorted from Zubaydah to justify, a posteriori, the “fight against terrorism“ [2].
Let’s also eliminate the case of Shamal Leibowitz, since his revelations were never released to the
public. There remain six cases instructing us about the U.S. military-police system.
Stephen Jin-Woo Kim confirmed to Fox News that
North Korea was preparing a nuclear test regardless of U.S. threats; a
confirmation that caused no harm to the USA other than pointing out
their inability to be obeyed by North Korea. In another context, this
information had already been released by Bob Woodward without provoking
reactions.
Andrew Thomas Drake revealed the mismanagement of the Trailblazer program
to a member of the U.S. House of Representatives Intelligence
Committee. He was alleged to have informed those congressmen tasked with
keeping an eye on the intelligence agencies with regard to the billions
that the NSA was secretly throwing out the window. Trailblazer sought to find a
way to plant viruses on any computer or mobile phone. It has never worked.
In
a similar vein, Edward Snowden, an employee of the Booz Allen Hamilton
technology consulting firm, published various NSA documents attesting to
U.S. spying in China as well as on the guests of the British G20. Above
all, he has revealed the scope of the military phone tapping and
internet spy system, which no one can escape, not even the President of
the United States. U.S. politicians described Snowden as “a traitor to kill” only because his documents prevent the NSA from continuing to deny before Congress activities long known to all.
Bradley Manning, a simple soldier, sent to Wikileaks videos
of two blunders by the army, 500,000 intelligence reports on military
bases in Afghanistan and Iraq, and 250,000 cables on the
information gathered by U.S. diplomats in conversations with foreign
politicians. None of this is of paramount importance, but the
documentation projects a poor image of the gossip collected by the
State Department to serve as the basis for its “diplomacy.”
Jeffrey Alexander Sterling is a CIA employee who revealed “Operation Merlin” to the New York Times.
More surprisingly, General James Cartwright was number two man in the
military, in his capacity as Vice-Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
and so close an advisor to the President as to be dubbed “Obama’s general“. He supposedly revealed “Operation Olympic Games” to the New York Times last year and has been placed under investigation, according to CNN.
Sterling and Cartwright don’t buy into the Israeli myth of “the atomic bomb of the mullahs.” So they tried to defuse the war into which Tel Aviv is trying to plunge their country. “Operation Merlin”
consisted in sending to Iran false information about the manufacture of
the bomb. In reality, it was supposed to push Iran to engage in a
military nuclear program to justify a posteriori the Israeli accusation [3]. As for “Operation Olympic Games,”
it was meant to implant the Stuxnet and Flame viruses in the Natanz
plant, to disrupt its operation, notably that of its centrifuges [4].
It was therefore intended to block Iran’s civilian nuclear program.
None of these revelations damaged U.S. interests, but they hindered
Israeli ambitions.
Resistance heroes
A salon opposition presents the men indicted under the Espionage Act as “whistleblowers“,
as if the United States today were a real democracy and they were
alerting citizens to the need to correct some errors. In fact, what they
show us is that in the United States, from a common soldier (Bradley
Manning) to the second in command (General Cartwright), men are trying
as best they can to fight against a dictatorial system in which they
discover themselves to be a cog. Faced with a monstrous system, they
ought to be celebrated as major resistance figures such as Admiral
Canaris or Count Stauffenberg.
Thierry Meyssan
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