<http://www.truth-out.org/nick-turse-did-pentagon-help-strangle-arab-spring/1323796589>

Did the Pentagon Help Strangle the Arab Spring?

Tuesday 13 December 2011

by: Nick Turse, TomDispatch | Report

As the Arab Spring blossomed and President Obama hesitated about 
whether to speak out in favor of protesters seeking democratic change 
in the Greater Middle East, the Pentagon acted decisively.  It forged 
ever deeper ties with some of the most repressive regimes in the 
region, building up military bases and brokering weapons sales and 
transfers to despots from Bahrain to Yemen. 

As state security forces across the region cracked down on democratic 
dissent, the Pentagon also repeatedly dispatched American troops on 
training missions to allied militaries there.  During more than 40 
such operations with names like Eager Lion and Friendship Two that 
sometimes lasted for weeks or months at a time, they taught Middle 
Eastern security forces the finer points of counterinsurgency, small 
unit tactics, intelligence gathering, and information operations -- 
skills crucial to defeating popular uprisings.

These recurrent joint-training exercises, seldom reported in the 
media and rarely mentioned outside the military, constitute the core 
of an elaborate, longstanding system that binds the Pentagon to the 
militaries of repressive regimes across the Middle East.  Although 
the Pentagon shrouds these exercises in secrecy, refusing to answer 
basic questions about their scale, scope, or cost, an investigation 
by TomDispatch reveals the outlines of a region-wide training program 
whose ambitions are large and wholly at odds with Washington's 
professed aims of supporting democratic reforms in the Greater Middle 
East.

Lions, Marines, and Moroccans -- Oh My!

On May 19th, President Obama finally addressed the Arab Spring in 
earnest.  He was unambiguous about standing with the protesters and 
against repressive governments, asserting that "America's interests 
are not hostile to people's hopes; they're essential to them." 

Four days earlier, the very demonstrators the president sided with 
had marched in Temara, Morocco.  They were heading for a facility 
suspected of housing a secret government interrogation facility to 
press for political reforms.  It was then that the kingdom's security 
forces attacked.

"I was in a group of about 11 protesters, pursued by police in their 
cars," Oussama el-Khlifi, a 23-year-old protester from the capital, 
Rabat, told Human Rights Watch (HRW).  "They forced me to say, 'Long 
live the king,' and they hit me on my shoulder. When I didn't fall, 
they clubbed me on the head and I lost consciousness. When I regained 
consciousness, I found myself at the hospital, with a broken nose and 
an injured shoulder."  

About a five-hour drive south, another gathering was taking place 
under far more hospitable circumstances.  In the seaside city of 
Agadir, a ceremony marking a transfer of military command was 
underway.  "We're here to support... bilateral engagement with one of 
our most important allies in the region," said Colonel John Caldwell 
of the U.S. Marine Corps at a gathering to mark the beginning of the 
second phase of African Lion, an annual joint-training exercise with 
Morocco's armed forces.

"Annually, USCENTCOM executes more than 40 exercises with a wide 
range of partner nations in the region," a military spokesman told 
TomDispatch.  "Due to host-nation sensitivities, USCENTCOM does not 
discuss the nature of many of our exercises outside our bilateral 
relationships."       

Of the dozens of joint-training exercises it sponsored these last 
years, CENTCOM would only acknowledge two by name: Leading Edge, a 
30-nation exercise focused on counter-proliferation last held in the 
United Arab Emirates (UAE) in late 2010; and Eager Resolve, an annual 
exercise to simulate a coordinated response to a chemical, 
biological, radiological, nuclear, or high yield explosive attack, 
involving the member states of the Gulf Cooperation Council -- 
Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE. 

However, military documents, open-source reports, and other data 
analyzed by TomDispatch offer a window into the training 
relationships that CENTCOM refused to acknowledge.  While details of 
these missions remain sparse at best, the results are clear: during 
2011, U.S. troops regularly partnered with and trained the security 
forces of numerous regimes that were actively beating back democratic 
protests and stifling dissent within their borders.

Getting Friendly With the Kingdom

In January, for example, the government of Saudi Arabia curtailed 
what little freedom of expression existed in the kingdom by 
instituting severe new restrictions regarding online news and 
commentary by its citizens.  That same month, Saudi authorities 
launched a crackdown on peaceful demonstrators.  Shortly afterward, 
six Saudi men sought government recognition for the country's first 
political party whose professed aims, according to Human Rights 
Watch, included "greater democracy and protection for human rights."  
They were promptly arrested.

On February 19th, just three days after those arrests, U.S. and Saudi 
forces launched Friendship Two, a training exercise in Tabuk, Saudi 
Arabia.  For the next 10 days, 4,100 American and Saudi troops 
practiced combat maneuvers and counterinsurgency tactics under an 
unrelenting desert sun.  "This is a fantastic exercise and a 
fantastic venue, and we're sending a real good message out to the 
people of the region," insisted Major General Bob Livingston, a 
National Guard commander who took part in the mission.  "The 
engagements that we have with the Saudi Arabian army affect their 
army, it affects our Army, but it also shows the people of the region 
our ability to cooperate with each other and our ability to be able 
to operate together."

Eager Lights and Lions

As the Arab Spring brought down U.S.-allied autocrats in Tunisia and 
Egypt, the Kingdom of Jordan, where criticizing King Abdulluh or even 
peacefully protesting government policies is a crime, continued to 
stifle dissent.  Last year, for instance, state security forces 
stormed the house of 24-year-old computer science student Imad al-Din 
al-Ash and arrested him.  His crime?  An online article in which he 
called the king "effeminate." 

In March, Jordanian security forces typically failed to take action, 
and some even joined in, when pro-government protesters attacked 
peaceful activists seeking political reforms.  Then came allegations 
that state forces had tortured Islamist activists.

Meanwhile, in March, U.S. troops joined Jordanian forces in Eager 
Light 2011, a training exercise in Amman, the country's capital, that 
focused on counterinsurgency training.  Then, from June 11th to June 
30th, thousands of Jordanian security forces and U.S. troops 
undertook Eager Lion, focusing on special operations missions and 
irregular warfare as well as counterinsurgency.

In November, Human Rights Watch's Christoph Wilcke took Jordan to 
task for the trial of 150 protesters arrested in the spring on 
terrorism charges after a public brawl with pro-regime supporters.  
"Only members of the opposition face prosecution. The trial... is 
seriously flawed," wrote Wilcke.  "It singles out Islamists on 
charges of terrorism and casts doubts on the kingdom's path towards 
genuine political reform, its commitment to the rule of law, and its 
stated desire to protect the rights of freedom of expression and 
assembly."

At around the same time, U.S. troops were wrapping up Operation 
Flexible Saif.  For about four months, American troops had engaged in 
basic mentoring of the Jordanian military, according to Americans who 
took part, focusing on subjects ranging from the fundamentals of 
soldiering to the essentials of intelligence gathering. 

Who Are Kuwait's Lucky Warriors?

Earlier this year, Kuwaiti security forces assaulted and arrested 
"Bidun" protesters, a minority population demanding citizenship 
rights after 50 years of stateless status in the oil-rich kingdom.  
"Kuwaiti authoritiesŠ should allow demonstrators to speak and 
assemble freely -- as is their right," wrote Sarah Leah Whitson, 
Middle East director at Human Rights Watch.  More recently, Kuwait 
has been cracking down on online activists.  In July, HRW's Priyanka 
Motaparthy wrote in Foreign Policy magazine that 26-year-old Nasser 
Abul was led, blindfolded and shackled, into a Kuwaiti courtroom.  
His crime, according to Motaparthy, "a few tweetsŠ criticizing the 
ruling families of Bahrain as well as Saudi Arabia."

This spring, U.S. troops took part in Lucky Warrior, a four-day 
training exercise in Kuwait designed to hone U.S. war fighting skills 
particular to the region.  The sparse material available from the 
military mentions no direct Kuwaiti involvement in Lucky Warrior, but 
documents examined by TomDispatch indicate that translators have been 
used in past versions of the exercise, suggesting the involvement of 
Kuwaiti and/or other Arab nations in the operation.  Pentagon 
secrecy, however, makes it impossible to know the full extent of 
participation by the Pentagon's regional partners.

TomDispatch has identified other regional training operations that 
CENTCOM failed to acknowledge, including Steppe Eagle, an annual 
multilateral exercise carried out in repressive Kazakhstan from July 
31st to August 23rd which trained Kazakh troops in everything from 
convoy missions to conducting cordon and search operations.  Then 
there was the Falcon Air Meet, an exercise focusing on close 
air-support tactics that even included a bombing contest, carried out 
in October by U.S., Jordanian, and Turkish air forces at Shaheed 
Mwaffaq Salti Air Base in Jordan. 

The U.S. military also conducted a seminar on public affairs and 
information operations with members of the Lebanese armed forces 
including, according to an American in attendance, a discussion of 
"the use of propaganda in regards to military information support 
operations."  In addition, there was a biannual joint underwater 
demolitions exercise, Operation Eager Mace, carried out with Kuwaiti 
forces.

These training missions are only a fraction of the dozens carried out 
each year in secret, far from the prying eyes of the press or local 
populations.  They are a key component of an outsized Pentagon 
support system that also shuttles aid and weaponry to a set of allied 
Middle Eastern kingdoms and autocracies.  These joint missions ensure 
tight bonds between the U.S. military and the security forces of 
repressive governments throughout the region, offering Washington 
access and influence and the host nations of these exercises the 
latest military strategies, tactics, and tools of the trade at a 
moment when they are, or fear being, besieged by protesters seeking 
to tap into the democratic spirit sweeping the region.

Secrets and Lies

The U.S. military ignored TomDispatch's requests for information 
about whether any joint operations were postponed, rescheduled, or 
canceled as a result of Arab Spring protests.  In August, however, 
Agence France Presse reported that Bright Star, a biannual training 
exercise involving U.S. and Egyptian forces, had been canceled as a 
result of the popular revolt that overthrew president ally Hosni 
Mubarak, a Washington ally. 

The number of U.S. training exercises across the region disrupted by 
pro-democracy protests, or even basic information about the total 
number of the Pentagon's regional training missions, their locations, 
durations, and who takes part in them, remain largely unknown.  
CENTCOM regularly keeps such information secret from the American 
public, not to mention populations across the Greater Middle East. 

The military also refused to comment on exercises scheduled for 
2012.  There is nonetheless good reason to believe that their number 
will rise as regional autocrats look to beat back the forces of 
change.  "With the end of Operation New Dawn in Iraq and the 
reduction of surge forces in Afghanistan, USCENTCOM exercises will 
continue to focus on... mutual security concerns and build upon 
already strong, enduring relationships within the region," a CENTCOM 
spokesman told TomDispatch by email. 

Since pro-democracy protests and popular revolt are the "security 
concerns" of regimes from Saudi Arabia and Bahrain to Jordan and 
Yemen, it is not hard to imagine just how the Pentagon's advanced 
training methods, its schooling in counterinsurgency tactics, and its 
aid in intelligence gathering techniques might be used in the months 
ahead.

This spring, as Operation African Lion proceeded and battered 
Moroccan protesters nursed their wounds, President Obama asserted 
that the "United States opposes the use of violence and repression 
against the people of the region" and supports basic human rights for 
citizens throughout the Greater Middle East.  "And these rights," he 
added, "include free speech, the freedom of peaceful assembly, the 
freedom of religion, equality for men and women under the rule of 
law, and the right to choose your own leaders -- whether you live in 
Baghdad or Damascus, Sanaa or Tehran."

The question remains, does the United States believe the same is true 
for those who live in Amman, Kuwait City, Rabat, or Riyahd?  And if 
so, why is the Pentagon strengthening the hands of repressive rulers 
in those capitals?

- Nick Turse is a historian, essayist, investigative journalist, the 
associate editor of TomDispatch.com, and currently a fellow at 
Harvard University's Radcliffe Institute. His latest book is The Case 
for Withdrawal from Afghanistan.

_______________________________________________
Biofuel mailing list
Biofuel@sustainablelists.org
http://sustainablelists.org/mailman/listinfo/sustainablelorgbiofuel

Biofuel at Journey to Forever:
http://journeytoforever.org/biofuel.html

Search the combined Biofuel and Biofuels-biz list archives (70,000 messages):
http://www.mail-archive.com/biofuel@sustainablelists.org/

Reply via email to