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Why Is President Obama Keeping a Journalist in Prison in Yemen?
On February 2, 2011, President Obama called Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh. The two discussed counterterrorism cooperation and the battle against Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula. At the end of the call, according to a White House read-out, Obama “expressed concern” over the release of a man named Abdulelah Haider Shaye, whom Obama said “had been sentenced to five years in prison for his association with AQAP.” It turned out that Shaye had not yet been released at the time of the call, but Saleh did have a pardon for him prepared and was ready to sign it. It would not have been unusual for the White House to express concern about Yemen’s allowing AQAP suspects to go free. Suspicious prison breaks of Islamist militants in Yemen had been a regular occurrence over the past decade, and Saleh has been known to exploit the threat of terrorism to leverage counterterrorism dollars from the United States. But this case was different. Abdulelah Haider Shaye is not an Islamist militant or an Al Qaeda operative. He is a journalist.
This cartoon, drawn by Abdulelah Haider Shaye’s friend, Kamal Sharaf, portrays Shaye locked up while US Ambassador to Yemen Gerald Feierstein holds the key. The words above the cartoon read: "Freedom for the Journalist Abdulelah Haider Shaye."
Unlike most journalists covering Al Qaeda, Shaye risked his life to travel to areas controlled by Al Qaeda and to interview its leaders. He also conducted several interviews with the radical cleric Anwar al Awlaki. Shaye did the last known interview with Awlaki just before it was revealed that Awlaki, a US citizen, was on a CIA/JSOC hit list. “We were only exposed to Western media and Arab media funded by the West, which depicts only one image of Al Qaeda,” recalls his best friend Kamal Sharaf, a well-known dissident Yemeni political cartoonist. “But Abdulelah brought a different viewpoint.”
Shaye had no reverence for Al Qaeda, but viewed the group as an important story, according to Sharaf. Shaye was able to get access to Al Qaeda figures in part due to his relationship, through marriage, to the radical Islamic cleric Abdul Majid al Zindani, the founder of Iman University and a US Treasury Department–designated terrorist. While Sharaf acknowledged that Shaye used his connections to gain access to Al Qaeda, he adds that Shaye also “boldly” criticized Zindani and his supporters: “He said the truth with no fear.”
While Shaye, 35, had long been known as a brave, independent-minded journalist in Yemen, his collision course with the US government appears to have been set in December 2009. On December 17, the Yemeni government announced that it had conducted a series of strikes against an Al Qaeda training camp in the village of al Majala in Yemen’s southern Abyan province, killing a number of Al Qaeda militants. As the story spread across the world, Shaye traveled to al Majala. What he discovered were the remnants of Tomahawk cruise missiles and cluster bombs, neither of which are in the Yemeni military’s arsenal. He photographed the missile parts, some of them bearing the label “Made in the USA,” and distributed the photos to international media outlets. He revealed that among the victims of the strike were women, children and the elderly. To be exact, fourteen women and twenty-one children were killed. Whether anyone actually active in Al Qaeda was killed remains hotly contested. After conducting his own investigation, Shaye determined that it was a US strike. The Pentagon would not comment on the strike and the Yemeni government repeatedly denied US involvement. But Shaye was later vindicated when Wikileaks released a US diplomatic cable that featured Yemeni officials joking about how they lied to their own parliament about the US role, while President Saleh assured Gen. David Petraeus that his government would continue to lie and say “the bombs are ours, not yours.”
Seven months after the Majala bombing, in July 2010, Sharaf and Shaye were out running errands. Sharaf popped into a supermarket, while Shaye waited outside. When Sharaf came out of the store, he recalls, “I saw armed men grabbing him and taking him to a car.” The men, it turned out, were Yemeni intelligence agents. They snatched Shaye, hooded him and took him to an undisclosed location. The agents, according to Sharaf, threatened Shaye and warned him against making further statements on TV. Shaye’s reports on the Majala bombing and his criticism of the US and Yemeni governments, Sharaf said, “pushed the regime to kidnap him. One of the interrogators told him, ‘We will destroy your life if you keep on talking about this issue.’” Eventually, in the middle of the night, Shaye was dumped back onto a street and released. “Abdulelah was threatened many times over the phone by the Political Security and then he was kidnapped for the first time, beaten and investigated over his statements and analysis on the Majala bombing and the US war against terrorism in Yemen,” says Shaye’s lawyer, Abdulrahman Barman. “I believe he was arrested upon a request from the US.”
Shaye responded to his abduction by going back on al Jazeera and describing his own arrest. “Abdulelah continued to report facts, not for the sake of the Americans or Al Qaeda, but because he believed that what he was reporting was the truth and that it is a journalist’s role to uncover the truth,” says Sharaf. “He is a very professional journalist,” he adds. “He is rare in the journalistic environment in Yemen where 90 percent of journalists write extempore and lack credibility.” Shaye, he explains, is “very open-minded and rejects extremism. He was against violence and the killing of innocents in the name of Islam. He was also against killing innocent Muslims with pretext of fighting terrorism. In his opinion, the war on terror should have been fought culturally, not militarily. He believes using violence will create more violence and encourage the spread of more extremist currents in the region.”
In the meantime, Sharaf was encountering his own troubles with the Yemeni regime over his drawings of President Saleh and his criticism of the Yemeni government’s war against the minority Houthi population in the north of Yemen. He had also criticized conservative Salafis. And he was Shaye’s best friend.
On August 6, 2010, Sharaf and his family had just broken the Ramadan fast when he heard shouting from outside his home: “Come out, the house is surrounded.” Sharaf walked outside. “I saw soldiers I had never seen before. They were tall and heavy—they reminded me of American Marines. Then, I knew that they were from the counterterrorism unit. They had modern laser guns. They were wearing American Marine–type uniforms,” he recalls. They told Sharaf he was coming with them. “What is the accusation?” he asked. “They said, ‘You’ll find out.’ ”
As Sharaf was being arrested, Yemeni forces had surrounded Shaye’s home as well. “Abdulelah refused to come out, so they raided his house, took him by force, beat him and broke his tooth,” Sharaf says. “We were both taken blindfolded and handcuffed to the national security prison, which is supported by the Americans.” They were separated and thrown in dark, underground cells, says Sharaf. “We were kept for about thirty days during Ramadan in the national security prison where we were continuously interrogated.”
For that first month, Sharaf and Shaye did not see each other. Eventually, they were taken from the national security prison to Yemen’s Political Security prison, where they were put in a cell together. “We were transferred to the political security prison built by Saddam Hussein, his gift to Yemen,” he says. “We were moved from the American gift to the Iraqi gift.” (The Nation could not independently verify Sharaf’s claim of an Iraqi role in the building of the prison. And while the US trains and supports Yemen’s counterterrorism force, it is not clear if that aid has been used for the national security prison). Sharaf was eventually released, after he pledged to the authorities that he would not draw any more cartoons of President Saleh. Shaye would make no such deal.
Shaye was held in solitary confinement for thirty-four days with no access to a lawyer. His family did not even know where he had been taken or why. Eventually, his lawyers received a tip from a released prisoner that Shaye was in the Political Security prison and they were able to see him. “When Abdulelah was arrested, he was put in a narrow dirty and foul smelling bathroom for five days.I noticed that one of Abdulelah’s teeth was extracted and another one was broken, in addition to presence of some scars on his chest,” recalls Barman. “There were a lot scars on his chest. He was psychologically tortured. He had been told that all his friends and family members had left him and that no one had raised his case. He was tortured by false information.”
Abdulelah Haider Shaye. (Credit: Iona Craig)
On September 22, Shaye was eventually hauled into a court. Prosecutors asked for more time to prepare a case against him. A month later, in late October, he was locked in a cage in Yemen’s state security court, which was established by presidential decree and has been roundly denounced as illegal and unfair, as a judge read out a list of charges against him. He was accused of being the “media man” for Al Qaeda, recruiting new operatives for the group and providing Al Qaeda with photos of Yemeni bases and foreign embassies for potential targeting. “The government filed many charges against him,” says Barman. “Some of these charges were: joining an armed group aiming to target the stability and security of the country, inciting Al Qaeda members to assassinate President Ali Abdullah Saleh and his son, recruiting new Al Qaeda members, working as propagandist for Al Qaeda and Anwar Al-Awlaki in particular. Most of these charges carry the death sentence under Yemeni law.” As the charges against him were read, according to journalist Iona Craig, a longtime foreign correspondent based in Yemen who reports regularly for the Times of London, Shaye “paced slowly around the white cell, smiling and shaking his head in disbelief.”
When the judge finished reading the charges against him, Shaye stood behind the bars of the holding cell and addressed his fellow journalists. “When they hid murderers of children and women in Abyan, when I revealed the locations and camps of nomads and civilians in Abyan, Shabwa and Arhab when they were going to be hit by cruise missiles, it was on that day they decided to arrest me,” he declared. “You notice in the court how they have turned all of my journalistic contributions into accusations. All of my journalistic contributions and quotations to international reporters and news channels have been turned into accusations.” As security guards dragged him away, Shaye yelled, “Yemen, this is a place where, when a young journalist becomes successful, he is viewed with suspicion.”
In January 2011, Shaye was convicted of terrorism-related charges and sentenced to five years in prison, followed by two years of restricted movement and government surveillance. Throughout his trial, Shaye refused to recognize the legitimacy of the court and refused to present a legal defense. Human Rights Watch said the specialized court where Shaye was tried “failed to meet international standards of due process,” while his lawyers argue that the little “evidence” that was presented against him relied overwhelmingly on fabricated documents. “What happened was a political not judicial decision. It has no legal basis,” says Barman, Shaye’s lawyer, who boycotted the trial. “Having witnessed his trial I can say it was a complete farce,” says Craig.
Several international human rights groups condemned the trial as a sham and an injustice. “There are strong indications that the charges against [Shaye] are trumped up and that he has been jailed solely for daring to speak out about US collaboration in a cluster munitions attack which took place in Yemen,” said Philip Luther, Amnesty International’s Deputy Director for the Middle East and North Africa.
There is no doubt that Shaye was reporting facts that both the Yemeni and US government wanted to suppress. He was also interviewing people Washington was hunting. While the US and Yemeni governments alleged that he was a facilitator for Al Qaeda propaganda, close observers of Yemen disagree. “It is difficult to overestimate the importance of his work,” says Gregory Johnsen, a Yemen scholar at Princeton University who had communicated regularly with Shaye since 2008. “Without Shaye’s reports and interviews we would know much less about Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula than we do, and if one believes, as I do, that knowledge of the enemy is important to constructing a strategy to defeat them, then his arrest and continued detention has left a hole in our knowledge that has yet to be filled.”
As the US ratcheted up its efforts to assassinate the radical cleric Anwar Awlaki, among the charges leveled against him was that he praised the actions of the alleged Fort Hood shooter, Maj. Nidal Hasan. A key source for those statements was an interview with Awlaki conducted by Shaye broadcast on Al Jazeera in December 2009. Far from coming off as sympathetic, Shaye’s interview was objective and seemed aimed at actually getting answers. Among the questions he asked Awlaki: How can you agree with what Nidal did as he betrayed his American nation? Why did you bless the acts of Nidal Hasan? Do you have any connection with the incident directly? Shaye also confronted Awlaki with inconsistencies from Awlaki’s previous interviews. If anything, Shaye’s interviews with Awlaki provided the US intelligence community and the politicians and pro-assassination punditry with ammunition to support their campaign to kill Awlaki. (Awlaki was killed in a US drone strike on September 30, 2011.)
After Shaye was convicted and sentenced, tribal leaders intensified their pressure on President Saleh to issue a pardon. “Some prominent Yemenis and tribal sheikhs visited the president to mediate in the issue and the president agreed to release and pardon him,” recalls Barman. “We were waiting for the release of the pardon—it was printed out and prepared in a file for the president to sign and announce the next day.” Word of the impending pardon leaked in the Yemeni press. “That same day,” Barman says, “the president [Saleh] received a phone call from Obama expressing US concerns over the release of Abdulelah Haider.” Saleh rescinded the pardon.
“Certainly Shaye’s reports were an embarrassment for the US and Yemeni government, because at a time when both governments were seeking and failing to kill key leaders within AQAP, this single journalist with his camera and computer was able to locate these same leaders and interview them,” says Johnsen. “There is no publicly available evidence to suggest that Abdulelah was anything other than a journalist attempting to do his job, and it remains unclear why the US or Yemeni government refuse to present the evidence they claim to possess.”
In February, Shaye began a brief hunger strike to protest his imprisonment, ending it after his family expressed serious concerns about his deteriorating health. While international media organizations, including the Committee to Protect Journalists, the International Federation of Journalists and Reporters Without Borders, have called for Shaye’s release, his case has received scant attention in the United States. Yemeni journalists, human rights activists and lawyers have said he remains in jail at the request of the White House. Some had hoped that when President Saleh stepped down earlier this year, Shaye might be released.
That seems unlikely if the US government has any say in the matter. “We are standing by [President Obama’s] comments from last February,” State Department spokesperson Beth Gosselin told The Nation. “We remain concerned about Shaye’s potential release due to his association with Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula. We stand by the president’s comments.” When asked whether the US government should present evidence to support its claims about Shaye’s association with AQAP, Gosselin said, “That is all we have to say about this case.”
When Craig recently questioned the US ambassador to Yemen, Gerald Feierstein, about Shaye’s case, she says Feierstein laughed at the question before answering. “Shaye is in jail because he was facilitating Al Qaeda and its planning for attacks on Americans and therefore we have a very direct interest in his case and his imprisonment,” he said. When Craig mentioned the shock waves it had sent through the journalism community in Yemen, Feierstein replied, “This isn’t anything to do with journalism, it is to do with the fact that he was assisting Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula and if they [Yemeni journalists] are not doing that they don’t have anything to worry about from us.”
For many journalists in Yemen, the publicly available “facts” about how Shaye was “assisting” AQAP indicate that simply interviewing Al Qaeda–associated figures, or reporting on civilian deaths caused by US strikes, is a crime in the view of the US government. “I think the worst thing about the whole case is that not only is an independent journalist being held in proxy detention by the US,” says Craig, “but that they’ve successfully put paid to other Yemeni journalists investigating air strikes against civilians and, most importantly, holding their own government to account. Shaye did both of those things.” She adds: “With the huge increase in government air strikes and US drone attacks recently, Yemen needs journalists like Shaye to report on what’s really going on.”
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35 Comments so far
Show AllThis journalist is lucky to be alive. For now.
Galenwainwright, the article notes:
"A month later, in late October, he was locked in a cage in Yemen’s state security court, which was established by presidential decree and has been roundly denounced as illegal and unfair, as a judge read out a list of charges against him. He was accused of being the “media man” for Al Qaeda, recruiting new operatives for the group and providing Al Qaeda with photos of Yemeni bases and foreign embassies for potential targeting. “The government filed many charges against him,” says Barman. “Some of these charges were: joining an armed group aiming to target the stability and security of the country, inciting Al Qaeda members to assassinate President Ali Abdullah Saleh and his son, recruiting new Al Qaeda members, working as propagandist for Al Qaeda and Anwar Al-Awlaki in particular."
Obviously, President Saleh would have been able to 'take care of' this pesky journalist much easier, quickly, quietly, and with an untraceable final solution if Saleh merely had the same NDAA secret detention powers as Obama has (and Hitler had with the Nazi Empire's 'Enabling Acts').
Saleh, and most tin-horn dictators and oppressors of the people in the Middle East, and throughout the 'less developed world', would be much more efficient, discrete, and deadly effective in carrying out their powers over their pissant countries if they had Obama's NDAA totally secret and extra-judicial powers (which obviate any pesky Constitutional rights), and if they could simply 'disappear' troublesome truth-telling journalists or protestors in their own countries --- as Obama can here in the heart of the disguised global corporate/financial/militarist (and media) EMPIRE which has captured and now fully "Occupies" our former country.
Yes, Galen; Saleh in Yemen, Mubarak in Egypt, Gaddafi in Libya, Assad in Syria, and even old dictators like Pinochet in Chile would have all had a much easier time and personally safer life after office for themselves, if they just had the marvelous powers that Obama has under the NDAA secret detention legally protected illegalities.
After all, Hitler (under the 1933 'Enabling Acts') had such marvelous powers as Obama, but the obviousness of the Nazi Empire as an empire wound-up screwing Hitler in the end. Whereas, Obama is not dressing up in military costumes like Hitler, Stalin, Mussolini, and Bush II, and Obama has been very very careful to successfully hide the fact that he is the figure-head of any 'Empire' (which all the others were pridefully guilty of).
In fact, Obama is the best secret agent (008) of a disguised global Empire who ever existed, and when it comes to smoothly covering-up and hiding the Empire that he fronts for as just a normal democratic country --- "Nobody Does It Better."
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OMOd1JJvwlM
Obama certainly proves the old point that "you can trap more flies (or peons) with honey than with vinegar"!
Best luck and love to the "Occupy THIS Empire" educational and revolutionary movement.
Liberty, democracy, justice, and equality
Over
Violent/Vichy
Empire,
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
Follow-up 3/15/12 --- Obama and his professional liar (Jake Carney) exposed for causing journalist Shaye being imprisoned in Yemen!!!!
Yesterday, in the White House press briefing a question by Jake Tapper to Obama's press secretary, Jay Carney, publicly exposed both Carney and Obama as being liars in this matter of Obama using the power of his position as the faux-Emperor/President of US headquartered global Empire to pressure Yemen (territorial faux-President Saleh) to imprison and "disappear" Yemen journalist Shaye.
Watch this video of that White House press briefing at the 23:40 mark to see the global Empire's professional liar, cover-up for this disguised Global Empire's (FEOC) faux-Emperor in Chief, Obama.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I6msL-Ku1tY
another copy of the incriminating video:
http://www.vidjin.com/31512-white-house-press-briefing.html
[And there are plenty more copies of this proof that Carney and Emperor Obama are lying through their teeth for the global Empire that they shill for]
Obama is fully exposed as the disguised and soft-fascist lying faux-Emperor of this equally disguised corporate/financial/militarist and media EMPIRE, which has captured and fully "Occupies" our former country, by hiding behind the facade of its modernized two-party "Vichy" sham of faux-democratic and totally illegitimate government --- just as surely as the Nazi Empire earlier tried to disguise itself with the crude single-party facade of the "Vichy" regime in France c. 1940.
Obama is trying to use the POWER of this Global Empire to suppress any journalistic truth about the murderous power of this disguised Empire in the territories where the Empire is murdering people and using foreign presidential stooges in those territories to cover-up and bury any information about the global Empire's methods of murder and looting.
Ironically, it must be annoying for Obama, as nominal figure-head for this all powerful Global Empire to have to employ such easily exposable secrets in the territories, when he has the power domestically in the fatherland of the global Empire (our former country) to bury such truths (and bury the journalists who dare expose such lies) with the air-tight powers of his NDAA weapons of secret detention right here in the US 'homeland' of the Empire.
Best luck and love to the "Occupy THIS Empire" educational and revolutionary movement.
Liberty, democracy, justice, and equality
Over
Violent/Vichy
Empire,
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
Watch this video on the right hand side of common dreams right now. It will be replaced with another video some times later.
The video is Chris Hedges legal suit against NDAA. Chris says on the video that as a journalist he has interacted with 17 organizations on the terror list. Among his work was the NY Times Mideast bureau chief and he was put in jail in Iran.
http://www.commondreams.org/video/2012/03/13
okay, i wached the video and here's what confuses me. looks like the suit is against an amoral institution, ~the government~ right? so, if ~the government~ is found guilty what sentence might the gang named as defendants exect???????
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Chris Hedges Sues Obama Over NDAA
This year was kicked off with a highly controversial bill: the National Defense Authorization Act. The NDAA, now law, gives the US military the power to legally detain individuals without charge or trial. The right to due process has become null and void under the new legislation, even for American citizens. Recently a group of individuals filed a lawsuit against the new law to challenge it, and one of the plaintiffs is Chris Hedges, columnist for TruthDig. Hedges joins us to explain why he felt it necessary to file a lawsuit.
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Posted by DogStarMan69
Mar 13 2012 - 9:46am
Chomsky, and Pentagon Papers’ Daniel Ellsberg (among others) are also suing the govt over NDAA. Here's the site: https://www.stopndaa.org/ and http://obrag.org/?p=55523
"A lawsuit against the United States government was filed this week on behalf of a group of plaintiffs that includes Pulitzer prize-winning author Chris Hedges, Professor Noam Chomsky, the Pentagon Papers’ Daniel Ellsberg, an Icelandic Parliamentarian, and three women activists engaged in work they believe will put them in imminent danger under the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA).
-->Defendants in the suit include President Obama, Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta, Senator John McCain, John Boehner, Nancy Pelosi and others.<--"
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Just another case of the Obama Administration persecuting "truth-tellers". Nothing they hate more than someone exposing their dirty lies. Shameful. For someone who "campaigned on transparency", he's surely one of the least transparent presidents ever.
Obummer is getting scarier by the minute. How can he in any conscience, allow this? Well he did sign the NDAA and that killer bill too. Good luck Americant...you are drowning in the sewer of deceit.
NDAA and last week he signed HR 347 amid a mainstream media blackout. CD has posted nothing on this and other so-called progressive outlets have ignored it as well.
Obama's an insane mass murderer Yankee Doodle Dandy. war pig in chief of a completely criminal society.
NDAA has destroyed centuries of legal precedent dating back to the Magna Carta of 1215. The Emperor is above the Constitution and has de-facto dictatorship power over matters of life and death.
Scahill's article should be neither shocking nor surprising as de-facto dictatorship has been formalized.
And what's more, the Emperor signed HR 347 just last week, but it has been censored from public discourse, even on so-called progressive sites like CD.
https://www.google.ca/search?ie=UTF-8&q=HR+347#q=site%3Acommondreams.org+%22HR+347%22&fp=1
Yep.
Wow they must have pulled the link quickly, I did not see it.
It's gonna make the conventions very interesting. The lack of people aware of these new laws will make the aftermath (as felonies get handed out like candy, and they stew in their rage and anger) VERY interesting.
Socialist: C.D. has had at least 4 articles on NDAA... that's how I learned about it. In fact, they started publishing articles on the topic right when the evil deed took place... just after New Years. Its timing marks 2012 as the year when human rights took a leap backwards many centuries.
The awful treatment of this journalist, added to that of the fate of Bradley Manning & Julian Assange are purposeful examples being put on display. Citizens are being shown that the only way to manage during a growing Authoritarian Era is to shut up, stay in line, raise no questions, and do as they are told.
And all this will be packaged as "Freedom," a premise that poses no contradiction to those similarly formatted by authoritarian churches and related religious institutions.
I know but it took them 5-6 days to get around posting anything about the signing of NDAA on New Year's Eve.. And it took them several days to post anything about HR 347 being signed. They only briefly posted something yesterday, brought to my attention by IBB below.
Because he wants to.
PS: I assume that this latest violation of international law, human rights, the U.S. Constitution and various U.S. laws will lead to the Nation calling for Obama's impeachment -- or at least the endorsement of an alternative candidate who actually respects human rights, the rule of law and basic human decency.
Not a false assumption, is it?
tj
And because he can.
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"What he discovered were the remnants of Tomahawk cruise missiles and cluster bombs, neither of which are in the Yemeni military’s arsenal. He photographed the missile parts, some of them bearing the label “Made in the USA,” and distributed the photos to international media outlets. He revealed that among the victims of the strike were women, children and the elderly. To be exact, fourteen women and twenty-one children were killed. Whether anyone actually active in Al Qaeda was killed remains hotly contested. After conducting his own investigation, Shaye determined that it was a US strike."
I think it's clear why he has to be detained indefinitely. His knowledge of the facts makes him a threat to US security. Like those being held indefinitely at Gitmo, it's more to do with how they might damage the US's image by relating US "missteps" and atrocities, then any personal threat they might offer as individuals or members of any group or religion.
Obama ♥ Saleh
"Why Is President Obama Keeping a Journalist in Prison in Yemen?"
Dear Jeremy Scahill:
You know all too well the answer to your own rhetorical question.
Note the telling juxtaposition of events:
(1) In February 2011, Obama pressures Yemeni officials to keep journalist Abdulelah Haider Shaye in prison in Yemen.
(2) In February 2012, Obama welcomes Yemeni president, Ali Abdullah Saleh -- with full diplomatic immunity from well-documented war crimes and crimes against humanity -- for his stay at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel on Central Park South while receiving medical treatment in New York City.
Saleh has vowed to return to Yemen where he can continue to manipulate the political process, order the use of live ammunition against peaceful unarmed protestors, give the green light to Obama's lethal drone attacks and targeted assassinations, and hold legitimate journalists in jail at the behest of his best pal Barack Obama.
The truth hurts...but it's been rumored to set you free.
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And, according to Chris Hedges, the Supreme Court will rubber-stamp the conviction of truth-tellers under the Espionage Act (the five fascist "Justices" voting to give the State supreme power.) We will thence never find out about such crimes as the strike in Yemen.
The worst crime is to shine a bright light on the crimes of our government.
Anyone noticed o's newer campaign slogan 'Standing up for american workers' which I bet follows with a quick sit down. But it isn't nearly as anal as o and o's first slogan, R-U-N. R-U-N. R-U-N.
"Why Is President Obama Keeping a Journalist in Prison in Yemen?"
Well, isn't that the prerogative of a quasi-dictatorial executive branch?
No more habeas corpus, plus NDAA and Patriot Act, plus no respect for international laws and treaties, plus "continuity of government" will precisely yield that result.
It would appear as if the Obama administration has learned at least one thing from the Dubya, Cheney, & Co. Iraq fiasco in the area of public relations. Do not let any story get out, especially with pictures, that contradicts in any meaningful way the 'official line.' The absolute last thing they want is a repeat of how the Iraq boondoggle made Al Jazeera the go-to news network for the Arab world by broadcasting stories the Western corporate press ignored or missed. Even worse would be for the American public to realize that there is a proxy war going on in Yemen that has disturbing overtones of / similarities to Vietnam in terms of a creeping war simmering into a full blown intervention.
Jeremy Scahill is one of America's best and most fearless reporters. He's shown up the Bush/Cheney regime for the fascists they were, and is doing the same for Obama/Holder, et al.
Hey all you Democrats out there. Don't vote for a war criminal! Don't vote for a fascist who shreds the constitution! Let's find a write-in candidate and give our vote to him/her!
But,....but,......but ... What if a REPUBLICAN sneaks into the White House because the DEMOCRATIC vote was divided? Well, what's the difference? Obama is as much a fascist and a war-criminal as Bush ever was. Worse in many ways!
Maybe we have to hit bottom before the supine "electorate" are roused enough to take the future of the country into their own hands. Bush was bad, but Obama has sealed our fate with his lies and sneakiness, - he really sold us a bill of goods!
You are spot on regarding Scahill and of course Obama. It truly is a toss-up when it comes to who's the current resident Murderer-in-Chief... it's all about The Empire and the holy troika that fuels hegemony abroad and anti-democratic forces at home: free-market fundamentalism, aggressive militarism, and escalating authoritarianism.
Well said, Bernie. I happen to be in Puerto Rico at the moment (visiting relatives), and there's a coffee shop that was my old stomping ground since the late l970's... anyway, I went there to get a cup of their most excellent coffee only to learn that Obama stopped in there. That's right. He made a trip to P.R. recently and apparently met up with an old buddy in that coffee shop. There are now plaques on the wall signifying the table he sat at, etc. Public relations to get "the Latin vote"?
The first time I came to P.R. 30-something years ago, I'd visit the homes of simple folks who lived out in the mountains (some never having made a journey to the sea), and noticed photos of JFK prominently placed in their homes. Everyone seemed to love JFK, one of the last U.S. presidents with a heart and soul intact.
I doubt if the locals will hang photos of Obama. By the day, his concessions to the plutocracy become more and more obscene. It makes me wonder if my Democratic friends who became antagonistic towards me for relating how little Obama's policies differed from those of Bush get it yet. But I forget, no popular media is really telling the public the truth about the state of climate, our shared Natural Resources, or the state of the economy beyond the "paper chase" illusion represented by "Finance," or the full-scale sell-out of our very precious liberties... upon which no price can be placed. The vast sell-out continues masked by photo-ops.
Heaven help us.
Strangely, here on this island nothing happening on the mainland seems to matter. But then, no drones have yet put this tropical paradise into its sites.
The Yemeni regime -- another proud member of Washington's "Free World."
This is nothing. You know what I'm waiting for? The conventions later this year both the Democratic and the Republican. You're gonna see if you haven't already why they have quietly, quickly passed those two back-to-back laws preventing you from gathering and allowing them to shoot you in the back as you run for your life. But why?
They are doing this because it's an election year and they'll be danged if the young are going to embarrass the rulers on television during those wonderful conventions we're about to have. And like the 60s, a lot of people are about to be shocked at how the Democrat's convention will be more violent because clearly that is the most betrayed constituency and will act accordingly. The other reason the bill(s) were passed so quickly is because they know that all 50 states have restrictive hiring policies at both the public and private level designed to screen out felons. With a misdemeanor or two it's still possible to eek out a living in the U.S, but a felony conviction is a whole new ball game, and one thing which scares the pants off of college students deep in debt is the thought of those felonies following them around for the rest of their lives no matter where they go or what they do. Takes care of that! Tactically, it's a incredibly stupid move because the last thing you want to draw attention to during hard times is how messed up your cops and courts are, how much money they take and how much "punishment" they gleefully dish out, how they mark and tag you like animals in the wild and follow you around with high tech gear. It's also a stupid move because they are essentially backing the one segment of the population that has no where else to go (poor young people) into a corner. I think the best thing to come out of all this is a heightened sense of how what happens to prisoners and the poor directly affects everyone else. This is not a bad thing to figure out. A lot of the people arrested over the last year in various OWS events are finding out, to their shock, that no-one is very interested in getting their cases dismissed, no politicians are calling for pardons, lawyers don't work for free and employers are noticing that 'arrest' on the record...well, it's turning a lot of people into very aware humans, and a few into folks like me. It will be very hard for the Democrats to sell their brand during those conventions with 30 to 40 thousand outside screaming their lungs off because they have been betrayed, so, out will come the wagons and cops and "free-speech" zones just like during the Bush years. They cannot allow that symbol of disunity to be broadcast worldwide, certainly not during the historic term of "The First Black Whatever", so as I said, expect some fireworks. Maybe it'll get so violent they'll flip that infamous internet "kill-switch" I've read so much about.
A Plausible Theory. We shall see if you're correct. I suspect that you are.
It turns out that Nuttinyahoo's favorite poodle is really a mangy rabid cur indeed!
"Why Is President Obama Keeping a Journalist in Prison in Yemen?"
It seems very much like the answer is this: Obama is aware that killing US citizen Awlaki without a judical sentencing is "controversial" - to put it mildly, in that the president is breaking the US Constitution - and keeping Shaye in jail indefinitely for presenting Awlaki's viewpoint to the public is a way of covering up this illegality - as well as sending a clear message to other journalists that presenting suspected terrorists' viewpoint is itself considered to be "terrorism" and punishable by disappearance in a third world prison.
But thank god the USA is a democracy...
See Glen Greenwald's follow-up in salon.com on this important article at:
http://www.salon.com/2012/03/14/obamas_personal_role_in_a_journalists_imprisonment/
skeptic888
You beat me to the punch -- good job.
I was just going to post the link to Glenn Greenwald's latest piece at Salon in which he gives well-deserved kudos to Jeremy Scahill's brilliant reporting on Obama's multiple and serial violations of the U.S. Constitution, the federal statutes, and international law, including war crimes and crimes against humanity.
Clearly, freedom of the press and truth-seeking individual journalists are a favorite target for Obama, Inc.
PS -- Jeremy Scahill is a national treasure.
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The current US president and head of the Murkan mafia doens't like free press nor even free speech that much. All this democracy can be so "inefficient." "Our man" wants the trains to run on time. Ditto the planes and drones doing the shooting up and blowing up special!