Jeremy Benthem’s Panopticon

panopticon

We might owe whistle-blowers Bradley Manning and Edward Snowden (after Daniel Ellsberg) nothing else than the future. We got a final wake-up call. What Snowden has revealed is what all had long feared in nightmares but could not imagine to be real already. We have looked at and criticized filtered internet in Iran, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, or China but did overlook that it is The Home of The Brave that is the most advanced and deformed surveillance state. A timeline how that could happen is detailed in an article by Cora Currier, Justin Elliott and Theodoric Meyer, see here.

Supposedly, the idea of absolute surveillance has fascinated mankind from the beginning. If it is possible, it would have been done. No it is. Of course, late enlightenment philosopher Jeremy Benthem (1748-1832) had no evil in mind when inventing the Panopticon as an easy to survey prison.

10 June 2013 @ 5:05 pm.

Last modified June 10, 2013.

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Kuwait Deports its Workforce

I had generally been hesitant to report on ludicrous news from the tiny, oil-rich feudal autocracy in the corner of the Persian Gulf. This is owing to plenty of nice memories when having lived and worked in Kuwait just a couple of years ago.

The current campaign to arrest and deport expatriate traffic offenders (almost 12,000 in two and half month) in order to reduce the terrifying death rate on various ring roads and the Arabian Gulf Street is so overarching that it can only be described as ridiculous. As a matter of fact, the death toll in traffic is very high, 16.9 per 100.000 per year (in 2010). This is three times higher than in Norway. What is the reason? I doubt that mainly expatriates cause fatal accidents. When in Kuwait, I could hear the roaring sound of car races from the nearby Arabian Gulf Street at 3 am, every night.  It was in general young Kuwaiti boys who entertained themselves and others in these races. Driving on the 4th Ring Road reminded me often of the famous scene in Terminator II – Judgment Day. The other meaning of Highway of Death. It was in fact risky, to say the least. But it was Kuwaiti boys. I have written about the testosterone factor somewhere else.

“…[I]t is uneducated young men without any social perspective who are considered the most dangerous species on Earth. It might be called the testosterone factor, which makes life in countries so unbearable, at least for women, where they have got the opportunity of dominating daily life. It’s in a way a shame that especially Islamic countries have developed into ‘boys’ countries’ during the past few decades. Where women (mothers !) have long given up the careful upbringing of their sons, their development of emotional intelligence, empathy, social competence, responsibilities for nature, culture, and so many other things.”

The raids have meanwhile been expanded and residency law violators are now targeted. Deporting expats means Bangladeshis, Pakistanis, Philippinos. The poor people in Kuwait, the lowest social class, not the rich Westerners.

But it is Asian workforce which makes this country (and other Gulf emirates including Saudi Arabia) function. That the weakest in the society on who much of Kuwait’s wealth depends are targeted time and again by arrogant “owners” of the country is disgraceful and, well, childish. As childish as the recent parliamentary crisis which has not led to more democracy, just the opposite. There is a long way of maturation ahead.

9 June 2013 @ 7:08 pm.

Last modified June 9, 2013.

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NSA Targets US Citizens And, Well, Mainly Iranians

boundless heatmap large

The Guardian has revealed this week America’s further decline into the Home of Big Brother. Now, the National Security Agency (NSA) has even developed a powerful data mining tool, called Boundless Informant, that details and maps by country the enormous amount of  information collected from computer and telephone networks by using a top-secret spying program called PRISM. That the leak (apparently by a “reader” of Glenn Greenwald’s blog on The Guardian and an assumed high ranking intelligence officer at NSA who was deeply concerned about president Obama’s intrusion in U.S. American citizens’ privacy) angered National Intelligence Director James Clapper indicates already its significance. That he even lied at a Senate hearing in March, when Senator  Ron Wyden asked him whether “the NSA collect any type of data at all on millions or hundreds of millions of Americans,” when responding “No sir, not wittingly” is certainly very serious. Likewise, President Obama’s lukewarm response playing down the significance of the disclosure will certainly cost him any scraps of previous good reputation as someone defending civil liberties. Obama, the former civil rights attorney in Chicago.

As Greenwald and MacAskill write,

“A snapshot of the Boundless Informant data, contained in a top secret NSA ‘global heat map’ seen by the Guardian, shows that in March 2013 the agency collected 97bn pieces of intelligence from computer networks worldwide.

Iran was the country where the largest amount of intelligence was gathered, with more than 14bn reports in that period, followed by 13.5bn from Pakistan. Jordan, one of America’s closest Arab allies, came third with 12.7bn, Egypt fourth with 7.6bn and India fifth with 6.3bn.” (Emphasis added.)

In Europe, Germany was amazingly targeted as well. Iran, where (heavily censored) internet and telephone call surveillance is  widespread, dares to report on its arch enemy’s co-disgrace today.

That the disclosures in The Guardian (and simultaneously in the Washington Post) came when the show trial court martial for Pfc. Bradley Manning, who had confessed earlier this year having leaked hundreds of thousands of more or less secret U.S. documents to WikiLeaks, had commenced at Ford Meade is supposedly possibly not mere coincidence. Another whistle-blower who, if caught (and he likely will be caught, I am afraid, when contemplating about the now obvious surveillance system), will be threatened by lifetime sentence. And what about Greenwald himself who had helped investigating the Manning case and the 2010 leaks by Wikileaks in such great detail? It is hoped that we may witness a revision of public opinion about whistle-blowing when it comes to how everybody is affected by government malpractice.

That Democratic Senator Dianne Feinstein bemoans that Americans face “a culture of leaks” meanwhile is a misconception about what citizens need to know about what their government is doing.

9 June 2013 @ 5:18 pm.

Last modified June 9, 2013.

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Parchin Site Finally Sanitized?

It seems so according to recently published and eyeballed satellite images of the site at the Parchin military complex where according to unspecified information by IAEA “member states” Iran has constructed a large explosives containment vessel in which hydrodynamic experiments had allegedly been conducted, see the Annex (para 49, 50) of the November report by Director General Yukiya Amano of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) on Iran here [pdf].

“49. … A building was constructed at that time around a large cylindrical object at a location at the Parchin military complex. A large earth berm was subsequently constructed between the building containing the cylinder and a neighbouring building, indicating the probable use of high explosives in the chamber. The Agency has obtained commercial satellite images that are consistent with this information. From independent evidence, including a publication by the foreign expert referred to in paragraph 44 above [identified by David Albright, Director of ISIS, just days before the release of the IAEA report as Ukrainian scientist Vyacheslav Danilenko], the Agency has been able to confirm the date of construction of the cylinder and some of its design features (such as its dimensions), and that it was designed to contain the detonation of up to 70 kilograms of high explosives, which would be suitable for carrying out the type of experiments described in paragraph 43 above.”

A few months later, Iran began construction work at the site. In the beginning (April 2012), numerous small items have been moved out of one of the main buildings apparently to use lots of water to clean the building from inside. Then, two buildings were demolished and one rebuilt. In his latest report on Iran, see here [pdf], Amano complained that,

“55. Since the Director General’s previous report, Iran has conducted further spreading, levelling and compacting of material over most of the site, a significant proportion of which it has also asphalted. There have also been indications of activity within the chamber building.

56. […] Iran has stated that the allegation of nuclear activities at the Parchin site is “baseless” and that “the recent activities claimed to be conducted in the vicinity of the location of interest to the Agency, has nothing to do with specified location by the Agency”. Iran’s explanation for the soil displacement by trucks is that it was “due to constructing the Parchin new road”.

So, final proof in case IAEA inspectors will eventually get access to the site won’t be easy, but certainly not impossible. Does “sanitizing” the site to prevent inspectors from obtaining conclusive samples make any sense? Most probably not. But it is amazing that all these activities at the site took place only after Amano’s heavily criticized publication of the Annex to the November 2011 Iran report (former IAEA DG Mohamed ElBaradei had denied to publish the document in his Iran reports); apparently hasty in the beginning, then more relaxed. More than a year later, work on the small area (at maximum 370 meters long and about 100 meters wide) appears complete.

So, who’s right? Iran having its innocent explanation, or meanwhile heavily biased IAEA under Amano? We don’t know as long as nobody was allowed to take samples. Why then argue further? Yousaf Butt, a research professor and scientist-in-residence at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation at the Monterey Institute of International Studies makes a seemingly plausible observation in a lengthy and heavily distracting, on Syria’s Dair Alzour site,  post on Dan Joyner’s ArmsControlLaw blog. Any “sanitizing” activity was  done on areas facing east, not west.

There is a simple answer to that. On satellite images it might be easily overlooked that the two main buildings are actually located at the flank and in a gap of a larger hill. No space for proper “sanitizing” (if that was ever necessary). IAEA inspectors will know where to go.

Parchin 1 26 13

2 June 2013 @ 1:10 pm.

Last modified June 2, 2013.

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No Trouble

As expected, former president Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani and highly controversial Esfandiar Rahimi Mashaie have been barred from running for president by the Iranian Guardian Council. According to presstv, among almost 700 registered candidates, only (or rather after all) eight were approved, Saeed Jalili, Mohammad-Baqer Qalibaf, Gholam-Ali Haddad-Adel, Ali-Akbar Velayati, Hassan Rohani, Mohammad Gharazi, Mohsen Rezaei and Mohammad-Reza Aref. Most probably, several figures will still step out now, so the list will probably be shorter when candidates are eventually allowed to campaign after Thursday. 

Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei thus has made sure this time that there will be no trouble before and after the election on June 14.

22 May 2013 @ 7:40 am.

Last update May 22, 2013.

 

 

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