Empire Watch: Human Rights Violations, Bogus Figures, and a 'Silent Coup'
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2014-01-31 22:58:28 UTC
- Modified: 2014-01-31 23:00:55 UTC
Summary: This week's news about torture, assassination, and endless wars of conquest
-
By the fall of 2007, Italy was in a significant state of conflict with the US over the Bush administration's policy of extraordinary rendition. Of specific note were Italian kidnapping charges against nearly two dozen CIA agents for the kidnapping of Muslim cleric Abu Omar, resulting in 23 convictions. The New York Times reported, "Judge Oscar Magi handed an eight-year sentence to Robert Seldon Lady, a former C.I.A. base chief in Milan, and five-year sentences to the 22 other Americans, including an Air Force colonel and 21 C.I.A. operatives."
[...]
It's not clear if Amanda Knox will foot the bill for the 23 convicted CIA agents, but what is clear is that Italy and many other countries view America's policy of rendition as indeed extraordinary, and they have a point to make.
-
A decision by a court in Lithuania ruling that a Saudi Arabian national has a right to an investigation into his alleged torture in a secret CIA detention centre in the country is a breakthrough for justice, said Amnesty International.
-
Vilnius Regional Court has ruled prosecutors unfoundedly refused to launch a pre-trial investigation into claims a Saudi Arabian citizen was kept in a secret CIA detention center in Lithuania in 2004-2006.
-
Three senators pummeled CIA Director John Brennan at a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing Wednesday, peppering him with tough questions on torture and domestic surveillance that he has refused to answer in public.
Brennan defended the CIA against accusations that it is double-dealing with the Intelligence committee about a report on agency torture, and he also received surprisingly pointed questions about whether the CIA spies on Americans. Such public hearings offer senators critical of the intelligence agencies the chance to telegraph their private concerns about classified programs -- and these questions could suggest there is something the public isn't being told about what the CIA does at home.
-
The Mihail Kogalniceanu Air Base in Romania is a short drive from the Black Sea and the port city of Constanta, a sprawling metropolis with beach resorts, museums, and nightclubs. It's also about to become the main transit point for the tens of thousands of U.S. troops flowing out of Afghanistan. It won't be the first time Washington has used the base for a sensitive mission, however: If human rights groups are correct, the facility also used to house one of the CIA's notorious "black site" detention facilities.
-
US Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel has said in Warsaw that the US-Polish partnership can "withstand testing and questioning" over allegations of a secret CIA prison in Poland.
-
Poland's official stance of denying it hosted a secret CIA jail is harming its reputation and it needs to be frank about what really happened, a senior intelligence official at the time the alleged prison was operating told Reuters.
-
Prosecutors leading Poland's investigation into an alleged CIA prison where terrorist suspects were held and tortured have asked for another extension to the probe.
-
David Petraeus, the chairman of the KKR Global Institute and former commander of the US Central Command, said that while the energy boom had extended to Canada and Mexico, the Arabian Gulf’s oil and gas still fuelled the US’s trade partners and would for the foreseeable future.
He was speaking at a lecture on the forthcoming North American decades at the Emirates Centre for Strategic Studies and Research last night.
“According to projections, the US is set to become a leading oil producer by 2020,” he said. “Crude oil production is expected to reach 9.5 million barrels a day by only 2016, and this situation is dramatically changed since 2008-2009, when many experts said oil production had peaked and wasn’t ready to climb. They couldn’t have been more wrong.”
-
The subtitle of Gareth Porter’s new book, “The Untold Story of the Iran Nuclear Scare,” is well-chosen. Large parts of “A Manufactured Crisis” are indeed untold till now. They amount to what the author terms an “alternative narrative”.
-
The Central Intelligence Agency should not be launching deadly military strikes. We would be better off if the C.I.A. returned to being an agency that collected and analyzed intelligence and stopped being a secretive paramilitary organization.
-
Dozens of Wisconsin residents phoned or visited the district offices of our senators and representatives to call for an end to drone warfare. The visits and calls were timed for Jan. 15-21 when our nation commemorated its prophet of peace and nonviolence, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.
-
In his State of the Union address, President Obama called on the United States to "move off a permanent war footing," citing his recent limits on the use of drones, his withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq and Afghanistan, and his effort to close the military prison at Guantánamo Bay. Obama also vowed to reform National Security Agency surveillance programs to ensure that "the privacy of ordinary people is not being violated." Jeremy Scahill, whose Oscar-nominated film "Dirty Wars" tackles the U.S. drone war and targeted killings abroad, says Obama has been a "drone president" whose operations have killed large numbers of civilians. On NSA reform, Scahill says "the parameters of the debate in Washington are: Should we figure out a way to streamline this and sell it to the American people, or should we do more surveillance?"
-
On issues from domestic inequality to foreign policy, President Obama delivered the fifth State of the Union with a vow to take action on his own should Congress stonewall progress on his agenda. But will Obama’s policies go far enough? We host a roundtable with three guests: Jeremy Scahill, producer and writer of the Oscar-nominated documentary "Dirty Wars: The World is a Battlefield;" and senior investigative reporter at First Look Media, which will launch in the coming months; Bob Herbert, Distinguished Senior Fellow with Demos; and Lorella Praeli, Director of Advocacy and Policy at the United We Dream Coalition.
-
An Arizona lawmaker who wants to prohibit police departments, prosecutors and state courts from helping the National Security Agency with its data mining and surveillance plans on adding anti-drone language to the measure.
-
Development of modern drone technologies will never eliminate civilian collateral damage in conflict deployment, Michael Raddie, antiwar activist told RT, arguing that investing in drones makes warfare more acceptable for general public.
-
It is the fullest official record of the covert campaign yet to emerge, providing the dates, precise times and exact locations of drone strikes, as well as casualty estimates. The document abruptly stops routinely recording civilian casualties after the start of 2009, but overall casualty estimates continue to be comparable to independent estimates such as those compiled by the Bureau.
-
I am not a lawyer but I am certain that the defence secretary, Philip Hammond, needs to take very seriously a legal opinion which was handed to Parliament this week.
It comes from Jemima Stratford QC. She has given a judgment on whether GCHQ can pass information onto the US, which is later used to facilitate drone strikes.
-
It's been over 10 years since the United States entered Iraq. Though the war in Iraq has officially been over since 2011, our involvement in the Middle East is stronger than ever. And from 9/11 until now, popular opinion in favor of or against the war in Afghanistan has ebbed and flowed.
-
Undoubtedly, the role of the Saudi Arabia and its influence on the Middle East has long been under the discussion. Now with Iran and the West trying to reach an agreement on the nuclear matter, the monarchy is trying to amend the situation to their favor, with the Washington’s support, according to recent reports.
-
Before the hearing began, activists from CODEPINK stood up holding signs reading ‘Stop – Killing, Lying, Spying’ and called for the firing of James Clapper, Director of Central Intelligence, John Brennan, Director of the CIA, and James Comey, Director of the FBI.
Recent Techrights' Posts
- 10 Easy Steps to Follow for Digital Sovereignty in Nations That Distrust GAFAM et al
- When "enough is enough"
- Dr. Andy Farnell Explains Why Slop Companies Like Anthropic and Microsoft 'Open' 'AI' Basically Plunder and Rob People
- This article was published last night at around 10
-
- Five Years Ago, After We Broke the Story About Richard Stallman Rejoining the FSF's Board, All Hell Broke Loose (for Me and My Family)
- They generally seem to target anyone who thinks Richard Stallman (RMS) should be in charge or thinks alike about computing
- Links 22/01/2026: Slop Fantasy About Patents, Retirement in China Now Reached at Age Seventy
- Links for the day
- Gemini Links 22/01/2026: Why Europe Does Not Need GAFAMs, XScreenSaver Tinkering, FlatCube
- Links for the day
- Salvadorans' Usage of GNU/Linux Measured at Record Levels
- All-time high
- Links 22/01/2026: Ubisoft Layoffs Disguised as "RTO", US "Congress Wants To Hand Your Parenting To GAFAM", Americans' Image Tarnished Among Canadians (Now Planning to "Repel US Invasion")
- Links for the day
- No, the Problem at IBM/Red Hat Isn't Diversity
- Microsoft Lunduke also openly shows his admiration for Pedo Cheeto
- Do Not Link to Linuxiac Anymore, Linuxiac Became a Slopfarm
- now Linuxiac is slop
- Richard Stallman (RMS) at Georgia Tech Tomorrow
- After the talk we'll write a lot about "cancel culture" and online mobs fostered and emboldened in social control media
- Software Patents by Any Other Name
- There is no such thing as "AI" patents
- Over at Tux Machines...
- GNU/Linux news for the past day
- IRC Proceedings: Wednesday, January 21, 2026
- IRC logs for Wednesday, January 21, 2026
- The "Alicante Mafia" - Part VIII - Salary Cuts to Staff, 100,000 Euros to Managers Busted Using Cocaine (for Doing Absolutely Nothing, Just Pretending to be "Sick")
- Today we look at slides from the union
- Gemini Links 22/01/2026: Forest Monk, Aurora Observation, and Arduino Officially Launches the More Powerful Arduino UNO Q 4GB Single-Board Computer
- Links for the day
- Next Week is Close Enough for Wall Street Storytelling About 'Efficiency' by Layoffs for "AI"
- This coming week GAFAM and others will tell some creative tales about how "AI" something something...
- Google News Still a Feeder of Slop About "Linux", Which Became Rarer in 2026
- Our main concern these days is what happened to Linuxiac. Bobby Borisov became a chatbots addict.
- Links 21/01/2026: "Snap Settles Lawsuit on Social Media Addiction" and Attempts in the US to Revive Software Patents
- Links for the day
- Links 21/01/2026: Microsoft 'Open' 'Hey Hi' in More Trouble, US Has "Brown Shirts" Problem
- Links for the day
- Yesterday Afternoon The Register MS Published Paid Microsoft SPAM Disguised as an Article About "AI PCs"
- The Register MS cannot help itself, can it? [...] Follow the money.
- Microsoft's XBox is in Effect Dead Already, Now It's a Streaming and Advertising Platform
- Expect many layoffs soon
- Richard Stallman's Talk at Georgia Tech is Just 2 Days Away
- We're still curious to see how malicious people (or trolls) in social control media will try to slant his talk as "bad"
- EPO's Web Site Misused for Propaganda About Illegal Kangaroo Courts to Distract From EPO Scandals and Judicial Crisis in Europe
- UPC is illegal and unconstitutional
- The "Alicante Mafia" - Part VII - The Industrial Actions Began Yesterday, Here's Why
- The "Alicante Mafia" might not last much longer
- Gemini Links 21/01/2026: Edible Circuits and "Sayonara HTTP"
- Links for the day
- Over at Tux Machines...
- GNU/Linux news for the past day
- IRC Proceedings: Tuesday, January 20, 2026
- IRC logs for Tuesday, January 20, 2026
- IBM Hides Its Own Destruction (and Red Hat's)
- It's like scenes out of '1984', which is what a now-famous advertisement from Apple compared IBM to
- LLM Slop Not Dead Yet, Examples of Slop About "Linux"
- We wish to see the totals down to zero
- Links 20/01/2026: Cheeto Blackmails France Into 'Peace' While Looking to Annex EU, Mass Layoffs in Capgemini (Microsoft Reseller/Promoter) in France
- Links for the day
- Gemini Links 20/01/2026: Boxing and "Inbox Zero" Success
- Links for the day
- Windows and Slop Declining While Microsoft Silences Critics
- Microsoft tries to suppress facts while faking 'demand' by imposing slop on everybody, everywhere
- openai.com Traffic Said to Have Fallen 50% in the Past Three Months, Reports Say It Nearly Ran Out of Money to Borrow
- After the slop frenzy all we'll have left is environmental destruction
- IBM Kills OzLabs, Signalling An Attack on Free Software (a Sign for Red Hat)
- ibiblio also appears to have died (or experiences critical issues)
- Red Hat Vice President Leaving After Nearly Two Decades
- IBM's culture of secrecy is not compatible with Free software
- Links 20/01/2026: "ChatGPT Health" (Latest Distraction From Being Insolvent) Flops and Raises Concerns, "The U.S. Military Faces a Reckoning on Greenland"
- Links for the day
- Rudeness and Vulgarity Won't Stop Journalism About Free Software
- we seem to be on the right path
- Readers Pleased With Layout Changes
- Two days ago we began improving clarity and accessibility in the site
- IBM Plans for Layoffs Becoming Clearer With "Employee Reviews"
- Of course this impacts Red Hat as well
- IBM is Outsourcing Red Hat's Fedora to Slop to 'Save Money'
- If IBM cared about quality rather than alleged "cost savings" (cutting corners), it would assign more IBM staff to Fedora, but instead the exact opposite happened, with the likes of Cotton and Miller removed from the project
- European Patent Office (EPO) Industrial Actions Formally Start in Two Hours
- As per the latest (revised) action plan, today workers will slow down their work and limit patent grants
- Microsoft Under Fresh Investigation by the Italian Competition Authority
- In 2025 we kept a running tally of 30,000+ Microsoft layoffs, so 40k this year would not be unthinkable
- The "Alicante Mafia" - Part VI - More Strikes Planned at the EPO, Starting This Month
- Yesterday we said that friends of Berenguer or inside Berenguer's circle may have left
- Gemini Links 20/01/2026: New Tea, Using a Roku at a Hotel, and "Voltage-Based Power Management for Any Raspberry Pi"
- Links for the day
- Over at Tux Machines...
- GNU/Linux news for the past day
- IRC Proceedings: Monday, January 19, 2026
- IRC logs for Monday, January 19, 2026