Showing posts with label US flip-flopping policy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label US flip-flopping policy. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 08, 2010

Soros gives $100m to group [Human Rights Watch, because the US has lost the “moral high ground’’ when it comes to fighting abuses]

George Soros

September 8, 2010
Associated Press

NEW YORK — Billionaire philanthropist George Soros is putting up $100 million, the largest gift ever to a human rights group, to expand Human Rights Watch and help it court more international support.

The financier and major donor to liberal causes said yesterday that it’s become a disadvantage for the group to be primarily funded by Americans because the United States has lost the “moral high ground’’ when it comes to fighting abuses.

The gift, to be distributed over 10 years, is meant as a dramatic start toward major growth for the group, which documents abuses and advocates for human rights in about 90 countries. It is intended to attract enough additional money to let the group expand work in such emerging powers as Brazil and India.

Obama to meet with one of "those who cling to power through corruption and deceit and the silencing of dissent"


Hun Sen, Asean Leaders To Meet With Obama

Sok Khemara, VOA Khmer
Washington, DC Tuesday, 07 September 2010

President Obama wished to work with regional leaders on issues such as “trade and investment, regional security, disaster management, food and energy security, and climate change.”
Prime Minister Hun Sen and other Asean leaders are slated to meet with US President Barack Obama at the end of the month, the White House said in a statement.

Obama will meet the leaders as a group at a US-Asean summit in New York Sept. 24, where Hun Sen could also meet with his Thai counterpart, Abhisit Vijjajiva, over the border dispute between the two neighbors.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Koy Kuong confirmed the meeting with the president, but he said it remains uncertain whether the Thai and Cambodian premiers will meet.

Both leaders have expressed a desire to meet in upcoming international and regional forums, following the resumption of full diplomatic ties in August. Soldiers from both sides remain entrenched along a disputed section of border west of Preah Vihear temple.

Meanwhile, analysts say the US is making more efforts lately to engage with Asean leaders, as China spreads its influence across the region.

The White House said in a Sept. 3 statement Obama wished to work with regional leaders on issues such as “trade and investment, regional security, disaster management, food and energy security, and climate change.”

Friday, July 30, 2010

Cambodia's "Angkor Sentinel 2010" military exercise ends

July 30, 2010
Xinhua

A two-week multi-nations' military exercise that began in Cambodia in mid-July ended Friday.

In his speech in Kompong Speu province, about 50 kilometers west of Phnom Penh, Tea Banh, deputy prime minister and minister of national defense said the military exercise was successful and hoped that Cambodia, in the future, will again be a host and home for international military exercises in the form of the peacekeeping operations.

He, meanwhile, reiterated that the exercise was nothing related to threat or show of muscle to any country, but for a purpose of strengthening security and peace in the region.

The military exercise was conducted in two forms of "command post" and "field exercise".

Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen presided over the "field exercise" that began on July 17 in Kompong Speu province, while the "command post" was conducted in Phnom Penh was presided over by Gen. Moeng Samphan, vice minister of National Defense.

Delivering speech at the field exercise, Hun Sen said the exercise has "opened a new page to integrate Cambodia into the region and the world and will also strengthen and expand Cambodia' s capacity in supporting peace operation, enhancing multi -lateral cooperation as well as strengthening international relations and regional partnership for the cause of peace and humanity".

Both of the military exercises with official name of "Angkor Sentinel 2010"-- are part of the Global Peace Operations Initiative (GPOI) program, the United Nations Peacekeeping framework for strengthening peace and security.

A total of 26 countries and two international organizations, including the United States, France, Indonesia, the Philippines, Australia, India, Italy, Germany, Japan, Mongolia and Britain, have participated in the Angkor Sentinel that invovled about 1,000 troops.

The previous exercises in GPOI framework were conducted in 2007 in Khaan Quest in Mongolia, in Shanti Doot of Bangladesh in 2008 and Garuda Shield in Indonesia in 2009.

US and Cambodia in controversial lockstep

Cartoon by Sacrava (on the web at http://sacrava.blogspot.com)

Jul 31, 2010
By Clifford McCoy
Asia Times (Hong Kong)

"In a July 8 report, Human Rights Watch (HRW), a US-based rights lobby, alleged that many RCAF units selected to participate in the joint exercises had abysmal rights records. HRW said that by allowing the controversial units to participate in the drills, the US had undermined its own commitment to the promotion of human rights in Cambodia."
BANGKOK - Cambodia's first-ever multinational military exercise is part and parcel of intensifying competition between the United States and China for regional influence.

The recently completed US-Cambodia military drills, known as "Angkor Sentinel 10", involved 1,200 soldiers from 23 countries and were ostensibly part of Washington's Global Peace Operations Initiative, a program run jointly by the US Department of Defense and State Department to help train global peacekeepers against insurgency, terrorism, crime and ethnic conflict.

The largest contingents of troops in the exercise were from the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces (RCAF) and the US Army Pacific, even as it was billed as a multilateral peacekeeping operation.

Warming bilateral relations come as the Barack Obama administration puts new policy emphasis on Asia and moves to compete with, if not contain, China's growing influence in Southeast Asia. Cambodia, as well as Laos and Myanmar, are viewed by many observers as already firmly in China's orbit. China's influence in Cambodia has grown considerably in the past decade. While not the largest official donor to the country, its aid projects and investments are strongly publicized and come without demands for improved human rights, better governance or less corruption.

The US has provided over US$4.5 million worth of military equipment and training to the Cambodian military since 2006, and this was the first time the two sides jointly put the equipment to use. Recent statements by US officials highlighted the cooperation between Cambodia and US forces.

At the May 3 opening of the now-completed, US Defense Department-funded Peacekeeping Training Center, US charge d'affaires Theodore Allegra said the US remained ''committed to enhancing military relations with Cambodia in the areas of defense reform and professionalization, border and maritime security, counter-terrorism, civil-military operations and de-mining."

The $1.8 million training center was "evidence of the US government's commitment to enhancing partner capacity with Cambodia", he said.

At the July 12 opening ceremony of the military operations, US ambassador to Cambodia Carol Rodley said Washington was committed to enhancing its military relationship with Phnom Penh and called Angkor Sentinel a "unique opportunity" to expand the friendship between the two countries.

The drills, which also included participants from France, Indonesia, the Philippines, Australia, India, Italy, Germany, Japan, Mongolia and the United Kingdom, notably coincided with the 60th anniversary of US-Cambodia relations.

The program for the exercises consisted of two main components: a multilateral UN force headquarters computer-simulated command post exercise held in Phnom Penh and a two-week field training exercise at the RCAF's ACO Tank Command headquarters in Kompong Speu province 50 kilometers west of the capital.

However, the exercises did not sit well with some military officers in Thailand, the US's erstwhile security partner in the region. Thailand plays host annually to the region's largest US-led joint military exercise, Cobra Gold. Some Thai officers have expressed dismay that the US is showing increased strategic interest in a country that has emerged as one of its biggest security threats in light of recent border disputes and Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen's perceived meddling in Thai domestic politics.

United States Under Secretary of State William Burns discounted this view in a July 16 press conference in Bangkok. "We don't see that as in any way contradicting or in conflict with our commitment to working with the Thai military on regional security or peacekeeping operations," he said.

Guns for hire

Cambodia has come a long way since being the recipient of one of the United Nations' largest peacekeeping operations from 1991-1993. After decades of debilitating civil war, the country has in recent years sent peacekeepers, primarily de-mining experts, to Sudan, Chad, Central African Republic and Lebanon.

Human-rights activists argue that while Cambodia may no longer need peacekeepers itself, its population is still in need of protection from its own armed forces, including units involved in the recent joint exercises.

In a July 8 report, Human Rights Watch (HRW), a US-based rights lobby, alleged that many RCAF units selected to participate in the joint exercises had abysmal rights records. HRW said that by allowing the controversial units to participate in the drills, the US had undermined its own commitment to the promotion of human rights in Cambodia.

HRW, Cambodian human-rights organizations and other international rights groups, as well as the US State Department, have all detailed ACO Tank Command units involvement in illegal land seizures. These include the November 2009 seizure of farmland from 133 families in Baneay Meanchey province and the use of tanks in 2007 to flatten villagers' fences and crops in a forceful move to confiscate land.

HRW noted that certain elite units, such as the prime minister's personal bodyguard, Airborne Brigade 911, Brigade 31 and Brigade 70, were all scheduled to participate in the Phnom Penh portion of the exercise. Both the bodyguard unit and Brigade 70 were involved in the 1997 grenade attack on a political rally by the opposition Sam Rainsy Party, according to HRW.

Airborne Brigade 911, meanwhile, has been linked to arbitrary detentions, political violence, torture and summary executions. Brigade 31 has been accused of involvement in illegal logging, intimidation of opposition party activists and land-grabbing, including the use in 2008 of US-provided trucks to forcibly evict villagers from their land in Kampot province.

Cambodian military officers and soldiers operate without fear of arrest or punishment, human-rights groups say. ''Hun Sen has promoted military officers implicated in torture, extra-judicial killings and political violence,'' said Phil Robertson, HRW's deputy Asia director.

While some of these acts have been carried out for the benefit of the business interests of military officers, others have been done at the request of private companies with links to the military. Plans announced by Hun Sen in February for corporate sponsorship of military units to cover defense costs have many worried that the contributions will increase companies' control over military units to do their bidding.

Cambodian government officials dismissed HRW's claims. The US has likewise defended its involvement in the exercises. In a July 11 statement by embassy spokesman John Johnson, he said all participants in the exercises were "thoroughly and rigorously vetted" by the embassy and the Defense and State departments.

This was echoed by Burns during his visit to Phnom Penh. "Any military relationship that we conduct around the world is consistent with US law. And so, we look very carefully, we vet carefully, the participants from Cambodia, from other countries, in any kind of exercise that we engage in."

HRW called on the US government to suspend military aid to Cambodia until an improved and thorough human-rights vetting process could be implemented to screen out abusive individuals or units from receiving US aid or training. However, indications are that the US has little interest in putting the brakes on rapidly improving bilateral ties with Cambodia.

Symbolic gestures

One major symbolic step was the removal last year of Cambodia and Laos from a list of Marxist-Leninist states. The redesignation opened the way for increased US investment by removing restrictions on US Export-Import Bank financing and loans to both countries. Washington is currently one of Cambodia's largest donors with more than $72 million in assistance this year focused on health, education, economic development and government accountability. The US donated $65 million in 2009.

Washington is apparently showing its support in other ways, too. Last month, an American judge sentenced Cambodian-American Chhun Yasith to life in prison for his leading role in an attempted coup in November 2000 by a group calling itself the Cambodian Freedom Fighters (CFF). Although the CFF had previously received some tacit US approval, the verdict sent a message to other Cambodians that support for any anti-government activities from US soil would no longer be tolerated.

Security related ties have also improved, partly out of recognition that several high-profile terror suspects have passed through Cambodia. In January 2008, US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) director Robert Mueller made a visit to Cambodia to open a new FBI office at the embassy. Mueller said at the time, "It's an important country to us because of the potential for persons transiting Cambodia or utilizing Cambodia as a spot for terrorism."

Since then Phnom Penh has requested FBI help to solve the assassination of opposition journalist Khim Sambo and his son in July 2008 during a national election campaign. The journalist was known for his scathing criticisms of Hun Sen's administration, including allegations of corruption. The government has also requested FBI assistance in a joint investigation into a failed bomb plot against several government buildings by would-be Cambodian rebels in January 2009.

Prior to opening its new office, the FBI was involved in an investigation into the 1997 grenade attack on a rally by the opposition Sam Rainsy Party in which 16 people were killed and an American citizen was among the injured. The US government and the FBI were later criticized for pulling out of the investigation when it was believed they were on the verge of solving it. A June 1997 Washington Post article cited US government officials familiar with a classified FBI report on the investigation as saying the agency had tentatively pinned the blame on Hun Sen's personal bodyguard unit.

Jousting between the US and China for influence has become more openly apparent. After the US suspended the delivery of military vehicles following the repatriation of ethnic Uighur asylum seekers from Cambodia to China in December, Beijing stepped in with a $14 million pledge of military aid in May. The 256 military vehicles and 50,000 military uniforms covered under the pledge were delivered by China in June.

China has also provided small arms to Cambodia in recent years, including modern QBZ Chinese-made assault rifles for Cambodia's special forces units. With China keen to maintain its edge in Cambodia and expand its influence in the rest of the region, US policymakers may feel Washington can ill-afford to miss opportunities to improve ties. The upshot may be that strategic partners are less rigorously vetted as new friends are sought and military relationships developed.

Clifford McCoy is a freelance journalist.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

How America is helping to whitewash the Cambodian genocide

Accommodation ... accommodation: The US foreign policy with Cambodia's dictator?

Mock Trial

July 26, 2010

Stephen Morris
The New Republic (USA)


Yesterday, in Cambodia, a perpetrator of one of the twentieth century’s great crimes was sentenced. Kang Kek Iev, also known as Comrade Duch, was the head of the infamous Tuol Sleng prison during the reign of the Khmer Rouge, and was at least partly responsible for the murder of more than 12,000 people. Now he will serve 19 years in jail.

But, after the West spent nearly a hundred million dollars to create a tribunal in Cambodia, this is all we have to show for it, at least so far: a solitary conviction of a man who was involved in less than one percent of the 1.5 to 2 million murders that took place in the country from 1975 to 1978. No one knows for sure if the next phase of the tribunal—the trial of the four highest ranking Khmer Rouge leaders still alive—will occur in 2011, 2012, or even at all. Some of the accused are elderly and frail, and may die before their trial begins, as another arrested leader, Ta Mok, did in 2006.

Even if the other trials do go forward, it will be difficult to argue that justice has been served. Authority at the tribunal is divided between international and Cambodian officials, and the two sides cannot agree on how many people to prosecute. International prosecutors want to charge at least five more individuals for their role in the mass killings. But Cambodia’s current leader, Hun Sen, has said that he does not want any more trials, and the Cambodian team has argued against further indictments. Moreover, even if those additional trials were to take place, it would still leave the vast majority of the guilty unpunished. It took more than ten people to murder up to 2 million Cambodians. It is now certain that none of the thousands of lower-level murderers will ever stand trial.

How did the matter of justice in Cambodia go so badly awry? The answer begins with the fact that the current Cambodian regime is riddled with former members of the Khmer Rouge. But part of the fault also lies with the United States.

In December 1978, Vietnam, reacting to unprovoked attacks on its own territory and civilians, invaded Cambodia and deposed the Khmer Rouge regime headed by Pol Pot. The invaders installed a puppet regime that was staffed at the highest levels by former mid-level Khmer Rouge political and military cadres. The cadres had fled Cambodia to Vietnam not out of revulsion at the holocaust, but out of fear of Pol Pot’s executioners who were conducting purges. The new regime was led first by Heng Samrin and later by Hun Sen.

The Heng Samrin-Hun Sen government was obviously a substantial improvement over the Khmer Rouge, but it was still a brutal authoritarian regime. For the next 30 years, it would murder its political opponents and preside over a politicized and corrupt judiciary. It would open Cambodia to various criminal syndicates, including drug traffickers, human traffickers, and illegal loggers. And even after the Vietnamese ended their occupation of Cambodia in 1989, and Soviet aid dried up, the government would find ways to cling to power.

In 1991, Hun Sen reluctantly accepted a U.N. plan to occupy the country and pave the way for elections. Unfortunately, the United Nations was not prepared to use its 22,000-strong military and police contingents to enforce its written mandate. Discerning this, Hun Sen’s army and Pol Pot’s guerrillas refused to disarm. The non-communists won the May 1993 elections, despite the campaign of terror waged by both Hun Sen and Pol Pot. But the heavily armed Hun Sen was able to bully his way into an ostensible coalition government with the unarmed election winners—the non-communists, led by Prince Norodom Ranariddh. Four years later, Hun Sen ousted Ranariddh in a bloody coup, in which more than 100 non-communist political leaders and military officials were murdered.

Meanwhile, the Clinton State Department, at least at first, pursued a policy of engagement with Hun Sen, whose son was invited to attend West Point. Stability was the watchword of this policy. Following the 1997 coup, Clinton did impose a ten-year ban on U.S. government aid to Cambodia. But the Bush administration allowed the aid ban to lapse in 2007, and, more broadly, revived the policy of engagement. At one point, the administration invited then-Chief of National Police Hok Lundy—a known torturer, murderer, and human trafficker—to Washington to become a partner in the war on terror.

Hovering over Cambodian politics during all this time was the question of whether, and how, to prosecute the leaders of the Khmer Rouge holocaust. For two decades after taking power, the government did call for prosecution of Pol Pot’s circle. Yet it was noteworthy that the proposed targets of these prosecutions never included members of the new regime. For Hun Sen, the purpose of the tribunals was not justice; it was to delegitimize his armed opponents who were still holding out in remote rural areas.

In June 1997, Hun Sen and Ranariddh had signed a letter requesting U.N. assistance to establish a tribunal. And, even after ousting Ranariddh in a coup, Hun Sen continued to agree to a dominant role for the United Nations in the proposed tribunal. Meanwhile, a committee appointed by the U.N. Secretary General, noting Cambodia’s lack of a technically competent and politically independent judiciary, recommended that the tribunal be held in a foreign country and staffed by international judges and prosecutors.

By late 1998, however, Hun Sen had flipped his position. What had changed was Cambodian politics. During the mid-’90s, many of Pol Pot’s political and military commanders had defected with their units to the government side, where they were given a chance to share in the spoils of power. By 1997, the Pol Pot-led rump had begun to disintegrate in internal disputes. “Brother Number One,” Pol Pot, died in July 1998. When “Brother Number Two,” Nuon Chea, as well as the nominal president of the former regime, Khieu Samphan, defected in December 1998, the armed opposition to Hun Sen’s regime was finished. Suddenly, Hun Sen announced that it was time to “dig a hole and bury the past.” Within a matter of weeks, he told the United Nations that he no longer needed its help, and that any tribunal would be held in Cambodia under the country’s judicial processes.

In the end, the United States and the United Nations mostly backed down. They accepted Hun Sen’s demand that the tribunal be held in Cambodia. And John Kerry—whose interest in southeast Asian issues dated to his days as an antiwar activist—proposed a compromise under which a majority of judges would be Cambodian (though the international judges would have veto power should the Cambodians try to block indictments).

In theory, it might have worked, but in practice it has turned out to be disastrous. Hun Sen, whose government contains many former Khmer Rouge functionaries, remains reluctant to see many people put on trial. And because the trials are being conducted in Cambodia, with such heavy involvement by people who are appointed by Hun Sen’s government, it appears that he might just get his way.

No U.S. security interest is at stake in the events in Cambodia. The question of justice for this poor and ravaged nation remains significant only as a moral issue. Yet, perhaps because engagement, even with nasty regimes, has long been the default operating principle of the State Department, both the Clinton and Bush administrations were frequently content to cater to Hun Sen. Given that Barack Obama is preoccupied with so many other pressing issues, it seems unlikely that the United States—which is still helping to fund the tribunal—will reverse course anytime soon. And so, more than three decades after the end of the Cambodian killings, it is possible that yesterday’s sentencing of a sole murderer is all that the Khmer Rouge’s victims are going to get in the way of justice.

Stephen Morris is a senior fellow at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies and author of Why Vietnam Invaded Cambodia.

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Obama's Golden Words

Mu Sochua said US support for military units have been implicated in human rights abuses was "a huge insult to the people of Cambodia." "So I am extremely disappointed by President Obama for allowing this to happen in Cambodia," Mu Sochua said.






Why is US funding Sen's troops?

Obama and Sen
Sochua vs Sen

July 21, 2010
By A. Gaffar Peang-Meth
Pacific Daily News
(Guam)


Two weeks ago, I wrote about the Obama national security strategy "to achieve the world that we seek" through pursuing "four enduring national interests" -- security, prosperity, values, international order -- that are "inextricably linked. ... No single interest can be pursued in isolation."

Critics find the strategy weak on human rights.

Yet, the NSS paper says in a section on values (Page 35), "The U.S. believes certain values are universal" -- peoples' "freedom to speak their minds, assemble without fear, worship as they please, and choose their own leaders" -- and the U.S. "will work to promote them worldwide."

It admits that autocratic rulers "have repressed basic human rights and democratic principles," but declares, "The U.S. supports those who seek to exercise universal rights around the world."

To many international rights reformers, U.S. words and actions don't jibe.

Some critics say there are rights and policies the U.S. should support unconditionally, regardless of how many other nations in the world oppose them. Some Obama supporters say that condemning every rights violator would leave the U.S. with few to work with; U.S. national interests are better served through "international engagement."

Yet, the "inextricably linked" four enduring national interests mean unless the U.S. upholds "respect for universal values at home and around the world," it can't "achieve the world that we seek."

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's U.S. leadership consists of "providing incentives for states who are part of the solution, ... and disincentives for those who do not ... live up to responsibilities."

On July 8, Human Rights Watch called on the U.S. to halt aid to Premier Hun Sen's "abusive military units." It criticized Washington for selecting Cambodian military units with a record of human rights abuses to be host of the largest multinational peacekeeping military exercise in Asia July 12-30, co-hosted by the U.S. Pacific Command.

HRW's deputy Asia director Phil Robertson chastised the Pentagon and the State Department: to "permit abusive Cambodian military units to host a high-profile regional peacekeeping exercise is outrageous." It "undermines (U.S.) protests against the (Sen) government for rampant rights abuses like forced evictions when it showers international attention and funds on military units involved in land grabbing and other human rights violations."

HRW charges that the U.S has provided more than $4.5 million worth of military equipment and training to Cambodia since 2006. "Some of that aid has gone to units and individuals within the Cambodian military with records of serious human rights violations."

It linked Premier Sen's personal bodyguards and Brigade 70 to the 1997 grenade attack on the political opposition; Airborne Brigade 911 to arbitrary detentions, political violence, torture and summary executions; Brigade 31 to forced evictions of Kampot villagers, illegal logging, land grabbing, intimidation of opposition party activists during the 2008 national elections and to summary executions of captured soldiers loyal to the royalist FUNCINPEC party during Sen's 1997 coup.

On July 13, the Cambodian Center for Human Rights's legal analysis shows the Cambodian judicial system is "broken" and is used as a tool to intimidate opposition voices, including the Supreme Court's conviction of lawmaker Mu Sochua for defaming Sen.

Sochua sued premier Sen for the equivalent of 12 cents for calling her "cheung klang," or "strong legs," a derogatory term, in a public address, saying she unbuttoned her blouse in front of an officer. Sen counter-sued Sochua for defaming him. Sen's Municipal Court dismissed Sochua's suit for lack of evidence, but upheld Sen's. It ordered Sochua to pay approximately $4,000 in fines by July 15 or go to prison.

On June 2, as Sen's Supreme Court upheld the verdict and ordered Sochua to pay fines or go to prison, foreign donors awarded $1.1 billion in development aid to the Sen regime.

So, what were Clinton's incentives and disincentives?

Cambodia may yet experience Malcolm Gladwell's "Tipping Point" -- "that magic moment when an idea, trend, or social behavior crosses a threshold, tips, and spreads like wildfire" -- as Sochua stands her ground. She would rather go to prison than pay fines for a crime she never committed.

"It is my conscience that tells me that we have to stop living in fear, and fear of one man who has ruled Cambodia for over 30 years. ... And for me, it's a gender issue as well. Because if I allow it to happen, if I pay the fine, what does it mean to the value of women who represent more than half of the people of Cambodia?" Sochua told Voice of America.

Gladwell suggested that the world "may seem like an immovable, implacable place. It is not. With the slightest push -- in just the right place -- it can be tipped." But, there must be "a bedrock belief that change is possible."

Sochua, a 56-year-old mother of three daughters, a nominee for the 2005 Nobel Peace Prize, may well provide Gladwell's "right kind of impetus" to the tipping point.

The Sen regime was not so foolish as not to see the trap, however. By the weekend, the regime backtracked. It no longer seeks a jail term for Sochua, but will impound Sochua's parliamentary salary for the fines.

The Sen regime has initiated a new round of political Ramvong -- a circle dance in which participants go around and around as long as the drumbeats continue. It has averted international embarrassment for now.

A. Gaffar Peang-Meth, Ph.D., is retired from the University of Guam, where he taught political science for 13 years. Write him at peangmeth@yahoo.com.

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Angkor Sentinel Starts in Cambodia


Report by Sek Bandith, Radio Free Asia
Video by Uon Chhin

In Cambodia, American diplomats sat down with criminals in the name of peace and security

Hun Xen shaking hands with Obama in Singapore on November 15, 2009 during the the 1st ASEAN-US leaders Meeting (Photo: Kao Kim Hourn)

U.S. Terrorist List System Constrains Peacebuilding Efforts

19 Jul 2010
Joshua Gross
World Politics Review


The Supreme Court's recent ruling on Holder v. Humanitarian Law Project tightens the straightjacket that our current terrorist list system has placed on American diplomats and social scientists. In a 6-3 decision, the court ruled that the First Amendment does not protect groups or individuals who provide "expert advice or assistance" or "training" for pacific means to proscribed terrorist groups. For non-governmental peacebuilding groups that conduct workshops and promote dialogue as critical elements of their work, this decision is catastrophic. Now, even individuals who, through direct communication, urge proscribed terrorist groups to disarm and participate in negotiations are vulnerable to prosecution in a U.S. court.

Chief Justice John Roberts argued that the 2001 Patriot Act's broad definition of material support to terrorism was necessary to block "aid that makes the attacks more likely to occur." However, this betrays a misunderstanding of what practitioners of peacebuilding actually do. Unlike humanitarian support, which could potentially free up resources for military spending by providing free food and social services, the services provided by peacebuilding groups cannot be diverted.

Part of the problem is the lists themselves. Beginning with the U.S. Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, the U.S. created a series of overlapping terrorist lists managed by different government agencies, including the Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO) list, the Specially Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons (.pdf) (SDN) list and the Terrorist Exclusion List (TEL). Such lists are an important element of U.S. counterterrorism policy. But they are a blunt instrument -- too calcified, too bureaucratic, and too resistant to modification when political realities shift. All of the groups on the terrorist lists are dangerous and violent, but some less so than others. The lists force the U.S. to adopt a uniform policy that disregards the variety among terrorist entities in size, location, ideology and capabilities -- and the differences in how they might respond to incentives and disincentives.

An example of how the practical consequences of the terrorist list system can hinder a promising peace process can be found in Nepal. In 2003, the country's Maoist insurgency was added to the TEL and SDN lists. The U.S. ambassador announced that the fight against the Maoists was now part of the Global War on Terror, speciously linking the group to al-Qaida.

While the proscription of the Maoists provided no tangible benefit for U.S. national security, it handcuffed efforts by Americans, both inside and outside government, to support the fragile peace process. A peace accord was signed in 2006, ending a brutal decade-long civil war. Shortly thereafter, the Maoists won a plurality of seats in Nepal's first post-conflict democratic election. However, partially due to the legal tangle created by the terrorist lists, the U.S. Embassy was unable to capitalize on the Maoist decision to commit to the ceasefire and peace process. In proscribing the Maoists, the U.S. lost a crucial early opportunity to identify and strengthen the pragmatists within the Maoist leadership and isolate the elements that opposed negotiations.

On the ground, the lists have strained relations between U.S. embassies and non-governmental conflict resolution organizations operating in fragile states. NGO officials and social scientists engaged in field research have complained that State Department and Justice Department lawyers provide contradictory or vague guidance. Peacebuilding experts argue that their work with armed groups is dependent upon trust, which is hard-won and easily lost. In Nepal, the proscription of the Maoists complicated or categorically severed these personal relations. As a result, considerable institutional knowledge and communication channels were lost.

"U.S. law cuts Americans out of the dialogue process," said one scholar who preferred to remain anonymous. "We are not telling them how to build a bomb. You can't even give them advice on how to change their direction and move toward nonviolence."

The process of designating terrorist groups should be better calibrated to fight terror, while anticipating the potential for engaging armed groups inclined toward moderation and political participation. Instead, the current system creates perverse political incentives for listing a group, to burnish terror-fighting credentials, while de-listing a group can lead to accusations of being "soft on terror."

Congress could begin the needed reforms, though, by amending the U.S. Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996. Armed groups that meet certain positive criteria, such as commitments to ceasefires or active involvement in peace accords, should be offered some variation of probationary status as an incentive for continued constructive behavior. This sliding scale would have been useful in Nepal, where the U.S. Embassy could have rewarded the Maoists for their initial steps toward moderation without entirely removing the symbolic stigma of U.S. sanctions. U.S. planners in Afghanistan might find the complications encountered in Nepal to be instructive when contemplating political outreach to the Taliban.

The Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) at the Department of Treasury has the authority to issue licenses that permit diplomats, NGO employees, and social scientists to engage proscribed groups in activities that otherwise would be prohibited. OFAC should proactively open a direct channel to these groups while concurrently facilitating and expediting specific requests. For their part, peacebuilding organizations should revisit their monitoring standards and demonstrate a higher level of due diligence and transparency in reporting their interactions with armed groups to OFAC. Even those with good intentions can be misled by empty promises of future moderation by terrorist groups.

Holder v. Humanitarian Law Project was yet another missed opportunity to fix a misguided and heavy-handed U.S. counterterrorism policy. Not every counterterrorism campaign ends with the eradication of the terrorist group. The best-case scenario for many insurgency-afflicted governments is to strike a deal. In Sierra Leone, Cambodia, and Mozambique, American diplomats sat down with criminals in the name of peace and security. Private-sector groups and individuals should not be prosecuted for similarly promoting peaceful solutions to protracted conflict. The U.S. experience in Nepal demonstrates how cutting off the possibility for engagement can become a self-fulfilling prophecy, neutralizing incentives for an armed group to undergo the difficult transformation into a legitimate and nonviolent political party.

Joshua Gross is a recent graduate of the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy and the former director of Media Relations at the Embassy of Afghanistan in Washington, D.C. This essay was adapted from a forthcoming study of U.S. conflict management in Nepal. The author can be contacted at joshuarobert144@yahoo.com.

Monday, July 19, 2010

Sacrava's Political Cartoon: Uncle Sam's Best Friend

Cartoon by Sacrava (on the web at http://sacrava.blogspot.com)

US stresses "the importance of freedom" ... while cozying up to the oppressor of Cambodia's freedom: Go figure, Uncle Obama!

US envoy defends military relations with Cambodia

Sunday, July 18, 2010
AFP

PHNOM PENH — A senior US diplomat on Sunday defended relations with allegedly abusive Cambodian military units as he concluded a two-day visit to the capital Phnom Penh.

William Burns, US Under-Secretary of State for political affairs, said military aid from the United States to Cambodia was intended to boost a civil-military relationship that was essential to a "healthy political system".

"Any military relationship that we conduct around the world is consistent with US law. So we look very carefully and vet very carefully the participants from Cambodia, from other countries," Burns told a press conference.

He spoke as Cambodia conducted its first ever large-scale international peacekeeping exercise, co-sponsored by the US Army, on the grounds of a military unit accused of being involved in illegal landgrabs.

Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch, said last week it was "outrageous" that Cambodia's ACO Tank Unit was hosting 700 military personnel from 23 countries in the "Angkor Sentinel" exercise.

The rights group said the US State Department and human rights organisations have documented soldiers of the unit using armoured vehicles to seize land from Cambodian villagers and farmers.

Burns made his trip while a Cambodian opposition politician faced an arrest warrant after controversial defamation proceedings.

Mu Sochua of the Sam Rainsy Party faces jail for refusing to pay 4,000 dollars in fines and compensation on a conviction last year for defaming premier Hun Sen when she announced plans to sue him for allegedly insulting her.

Burns, who met with Hun Sen and other government and opposition officials during his visit, said he spoke "about the importance of freedom of expression".

"It's very important to very carefully to weigh importance of issues like defamation suits... often times the kind of criticism that goes on is best in the political arena rather than the judicial system," he said.

The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights said last week that defamation proceedings against Sochua illustrated the "alarming erosion" of Cambodia's free speech and judicial independence.

US State Department Defends Military Aid to Cambodian Army

Uh... Uncle Sam also wantsneeds your dictator?!?

Robert Carmichael, Voice of America
Phnom Penh 18 July 2010


A senior U.S. State Department official visiting Cambodia defended U.S. support for Cambodia's military on Sunday. His comments follow strident criticism by a leading opposition parliamentarian over U.S. support for Cambodia's military.

The Under-Secretary of State for Political Affairs, William J. Burns, was in Cambodia this weekend to return seven looted antiquities recovered by U.S. officials.

Burns's visit coincides with the 60th anniversary of the establishment of U.S.-Cambodian diplomatic ties.

It also comes during a two-week military exercise in Cambodia involving more than 1,000 troops from 23 Asia-Pacific nations and the United States. It is part of the Global Peace Operations Initiative, a U.S.-run effort to improve peacekeeping skills among other nations.

But some Cambodian military units, including the tank unit hosting the provincial exercise, stand accused of human rights abuses.

Earlier this month Human Rights Watch said it was "outrageous" that the United States was supplying millions of dollars of equipment to army units, and undermined U.S. protests against forced evictions and land-grabbing.

Some local politicians are also displeased. Opposition M.P. Mu Sochua condemned American support for the Cambodian military.

"This is a huge insult to the people of Cambodia," said Mu Sochua. "This is not about helping democracy in Cambodia - this is about serving the US interests in the region."

At a news conference on Sunday, Burns stressed that all of America's military relationships were consistent with U.S. law, and said his government carefully vetted all participants.

But Mu Sochua said Washington was evading its responsibility. She said the U.S. Department of Defense had lied when it told Congress that none of Cambodia's military units were guilty of human rights violations.

"I am extremely disappointed by President Obama for allowing this to happen in Cambodia," she added.

Mu Sochua said donors, who earlier this year pledged more than $1 billion to Phnom Penh, must tie aid to human rights and democracy.

She said failing to do so meant the international community was failing in its obligations to Cambodia.

Mu Sochua's comments came Thursday as she awaited possible arrest for refusing to pay a fine levied in a defamation case filed by Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen.

The court fined her $4,000 after ruling that she had defamed Hun Sen by announcing her plan to sue him for defamation over comments he had made.

Her case was thrown out of court, but Hun Sen went on to win his.

She said the case was highly political, and was further evidence that democracy was being undermined by the ruling party.

William Burns alluded to her case when he said the political arena was a better venue for resolving such disputes than the courts. Freedom of expression, said Burns, was "an essential value for any healthy political society".

Sunday, July 18, 2010

U.S. pleased with Cambodian cooperation, looks to expand in agriculture

July 18, 2010
Xinhua

The United States is pleased with Cambodian cooperation and is looking to expand cooperation with Cambodia in the field of agriculture, Cambodian government spokesman said on Saturday.

Ieng Sophalleth, spokesman for Prime Minister Hun Sen, told reporters during the meeting between Prime Minister Hun Sen and visiting U.S. Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs William J. Burns, that Burns said "United States of America is pleased with Cambodian cooperation and hopes the two countries will enhance their cooperation in other sectors, mainly in the field of agriculture."

In response, Prime Minister Hun Sen said that "Cambodia is pleased with U.S. cooperation through assistance to fight terrorism as well as for the development of Cambodian human resources", according to Ieng Sophalleth.

However, the spokesman did not provide details concerning U.S. expanding in agriculture cooperation with Cambodia.

Meanwhile, Hun sen said during the meeting that the two countries have more potential that can be expanded for more cooperation in the future.

On Sunday July 18, Burns, who arrived here on Saturday morning will attend a ceremony at the national museum of Cambodia honoring the repatriation of Cambodia antiquities by the U.S. government. He will leave Phnom Penh on Sunday.

US defends military aid to Cambodia after opposition criticism

Mu Sochua (Photo: AP)

Sun, 18 Jul 2010
DPA
Mu Sochua said US support for military units have been implicated in human rights abuses was "a huge insult to the people of Cambodia.""So I am extremely disappointed by President Obama for allowing this to happen in Cambodia," Mu Sochua said.

She also accused the US Department of Defense of lying to the US Congress when it said Cambodian military units had not been involved in human rights abuses.
Phnom Penh - A senior US diplomat defended military aid to Cambodia on Sunday, following criticism from a prominent opposition parliamentarian.

William Burns, US under secretary of state for political affairs, said military exercises in Cambodia involving troops from the US and 23 Asia-Pacific nations were part of efforts to improve regional humanitarian and peacekeeping capabilities.

"Any military relationship we conduct around the world is consistent with US law, and so we look very carefully and vet very carefully the participants," Burns said at a ceremony in Phnom Penh to return seven ancient Cambodian artefacts recovered from the US.

The two-week exercise that began July 12 is part of the 2010 Global Peace Operations Initiative, a US-run effort to train peacekeepers.

Burns spoke after opposition legislator Mu Sochua said US support for military units have been implicated in human rights abuses was "a huge insult to the people of Cambodia.""So I am extremely disappointed by President Obama for allowing this to happen in Cambodia," Mu Sochua said.

She also accused the US Department of Defense of lying to the US Congress when it said Cambodian military units had not been involved in human rights abuses.

Mu Sochua said the international community was repeatedly failing in its obligations to Cambodia. She called on donors, who pledged more than 1 billion dollars this year, to impose conditions such as respect for human rights.

Saturday, September 19, 2009

Duck Shot (aka Tea Banh) and Baby Hun (aka "General" Hun Manet) visit the US

Tea Banh (L) and Hun Manet (R), the general-son of Cambodia's Strongman Hun Sen. Local newspaper reported that the inexperienced young general will accompany Tea Banh to the US

US, Cambodia Defense Chiefs To Meet

By Taing Sarada, VOA Khmer
Original report from Washington
18 September 2009


The Cambodian defense minister will meet with the US secretary of defense later this month, in the first such high-level meeting since the 1970s, officials said.

Gen. Tea Banh will meet with Robert Gates to strengthen relations between the two militaries, including an exercise for multi-national peacekeeping operations, Tea Banh told VOA Khmer by phone.

“The most important thing is we need to talk to each other, to understand each other on some points that we will complete together,” he said.

Tea Banh will lead a delegation from Sept. 18 to Sept. 23, according to the Cambodian Embassy.

That delegation will include the deputy commander of the Royal Gendarmerie, Veat Tha, and deputy director of peace operations, Tat Chantha, among other high-ranking military officers.

The visit comes amid warming relations between the two militaries, including the addition of a military attachés this year and cooperation on crimes such as human and drug trafficking.

The US has provided direct military aid since 2006. In September, the US provided more than $6 million in military equipment to the armed forces.

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

US Czar: Cambodia has not done enough to stop corrupt officials—including the national police—that allow the slave trade to thrive

Cambodia's Anti-Trafficking Efforts Still Weak, US Czar Says

Brian Calvert, VOA Khmer
Original report from Washington
11 September 2007

"In Cambodia, police officials, including National Police Chief Hok Lundy, have been implicated in the crime of buying and selling human beings for the sex trade."
When the US State Department's new anti-human trafficking chief took his position in June, he found himself tasked with bringing nearly 50 countries in line with US standards for fighting the practice.

Cambodia is one of those countries, and if its efforts have not been strong enough, Mark Lagon said in a recent interview.

"Over time we've tried to get Cambodia's attention. At one point in the past it was subject to partial sanctions," Lagon said.

Cambodia remains on a US watch list for countries that are not doing enough to fight the movement of people for sex or labor. This is the second year it has been on the list, and, Lagon said, it can't stay there forever. It must either improve, or fall back onto a list of countries who are subject to US sanctions for their complicity in the practice.

The US estimates about 800,000 people are trafficked between nations each year. Most of them are women, and nearly half of them are under 18 years old. In Asia, Lagon said, that means Burmese victimized in the Thai fishing industry, sex trafficking to Malaysia, and high numbers of people shipped across China for labor in brick kilns and on farms.

In Cambodia, most of those trafficked are sex slaves.

"At a certain point, one has to ask the question, is this a matter of will, rather than a matter of lacking capacity?" Lagon said.

Cambodia has not done enough to stop corrupt officials—including the national police—that allow the slave trade to thrive.

The worst of that is child prostitution, with customers from Asia and abroad.

"Americans as tourists can be insidious consumers of sexually exploited children," he said, "and we're going to do everything we can, in partnership, to fight those bastards."

The practice is difficult to destroy at its roots. Traffickers are devious. They prey on the hopes of the rural poor, promising them a better life. They often find a ready ear.

"They say, 'Migrate to this other place, other part of the country, another neighboring state [country], there will be better economic conditions there," Lagon said. "And they often describe a different life, a life as a dancer, a life as a domestic servant, and it turns out to be something frightfully different."

Recruiters will ask to hold a passport, an obvious warning sign and an easy way for criminals to control trafficking victims. And Human trafficking is lucrative, making it difficult to stamp out.

In Cambodia, police officials, including National Police Chief Hok Lundy, have been implicated in the crime of buying and selling human beings for the sex trade.

Although some US agencies work with Hok Lundy, and he has denied involvement, Lagon, who's former boss was a strong opponent of the police chief, said he has not seen satisfactory proof from Hok Lundy to clear him of the allegations.

"The burden of proof must always lie with officials who have been corrupt and who have been part of the problem and part of dehumanization of their fellow citizens," Lagon said. "That will always be the case with Hok Lundy."

Until recently, the US State Department refused to allow Hok Lundy in the country , and Lagon said such measures may be working.

Agencies like the Federal Bureau of Investigation now work with the police, but Lagon said the US is still pushing the authorities to clean up.

"We're trying to work, region-wide, on the key to the puzzle," he said. "And the key to the puzzle is rule of law."

Without the rule of law, he said, there never be dignity for all.