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“New name, same shame”: SOA
continues bloody mission
By Megan Reilly-Buser
On Thursday, May 18, the US House of Representatives,
by a 214 to 204 margin, voted to close the US Army School of
the Americas (SOA). Yet, in the same vote, Congress approved
the Pentagon proposal to open a “clone” immediately. The new
school, called the Defense Institute for Hemispheric Security
Cooperation, is a combat training school for Latin American
soldiers. There was a bipartisan amendment to defeat the Pentagon
proposal in the Defense Authorization Bill, which would have
closed the SOA but halted the opening of the proposed institute
until a congressional task force reported its recommendations.
The amendment would call for an evaluation of the effect of
US military training on the human rights performance of Latin
American soldiers. The House rejected the amendment by only
ten votes. Like the School of the Americas, the new school will
be located at Ft. Benning, in the same place. Both SOA supporters
and critics alike agree that this change is merely “cosmetic,”
allowing the SOA to continue its actions under another name.
It seems that this name change was proposed as an attempt to
silence SOA critics. Col. Glenn Weidner, Commandant of the SOA,
stated in a recent conference of the SOA Board of Visitors that
certain congressional members would not support anything with
the SOA name on it…thus, the change in the name. Knowing that
the new school is based completely on the US Army School of
Americas, a thorough look at the current SOA and its history
is warranted.
While John Galbreath gave us some important information
to consider about the School of the Americas in his guest commentary
in the Asheville Citizen-Times of May 10, stating that the SOA
serves a vital role, it is of vital importance to examine more
of the facts than those he has chosen to present. As he is active
in Amnesty International, he must be aware that AI passed a
resolution to close the school.
Mr. Galbreath states that 60,000 students have
attended the school and only 1 % has committed human rights
abuses. The SOA has stated they track their graduates minimally
if at all. So that percentage is based on the research of human
rights groups with limited funding, and the 1% would be the
minimum. If it were only that figure, 1% equals 600, a rather
large number when one considers the small number needed to plan,
coordinate, and order summary executions, assassinations, and
targeted kidnappings. For example, declassified CIA documents
point to high-ranking officials as being responsible for scorched
earth campaigns that razed entire villages in Guatemala. Former
General Hector Gramajo and former army chief Benedicto Lucas
Garcia, both SOA graduates (as documented by the US Defense
Intelligence Agency), have been singled out as responsible for
these campaigns. Garcia is currently being sued for genocide
because of massacres committed by the Guatemalan Army between
December 1981 and March 1982. SOA critics state that often when
a human rights report comes from Latin America, SOA graduates
are “front and center.” For example, over 2/3 of the Salvadoran
officers cited by the United Nations Truth Commission Report
for human rights abuses are SOA graduates. Over 50% of the Colombian
officers cited in a definitive human rights report on Colombia
are SOA graduates, and 40% of the cabinet members under three
brutal Guatemalan dictatorships were SOA graduates. It’s not
just a “few bad apples.” The 1998 Pentagon “cream-of-the -crop”
short list of prominent grads contains at least five graduates
cited for human rights abuses.
SOA supporters say that any SOA-connected abuses,
if they happened at all, are in the distant past. In fact, the
February 2000 Human Rights Watch Report on Colombian military
implicates seven SOA graduates in crimes committed in 1999,
including kidnapping, murder, massacres, and the creation of
paramilitary groups. The 1998 and 1999 US State Dept. Reports
on Human Rights in Colombia provide information implicating
SOA graduates in abuses including a 1997 massacre, an illegal
raid on a human rights group in 1998, and involvement in kidnapping
and murder in 1999. Furthermore, the Colombian 20th military
brigade, which was disbanded in 1998 for human rights abuses,
was commanded by an SOA graduate. An SOA graduate who was responsible
for the 1998 murder of Bishop Juan Gerardi of Guatemala was
also head of the infamous D-2 (G-2) Military Intelligence agency
at the height of the genocide campaign in Guatemala’s civil
war. In Mexico, at least 13 SOA graduates are now top military
officials who have played a key role in the conflict in the
Southern Mexican states. Before the signing of NAFTA and the
uprising in Chiapas, Mexico in 1994, Mexico was sending one
or two soldiers a year to the SOA. A few years after those events,
the number rose to 288 in one year. The new school will be opened
without any evaluation of the effect of US military training
on the human rights performance of Latin American soldiers,
in essence without an adequate evaluation of the SOA model upon
which it is based.
SOA supporters claim that the SOA has a “new”
focus for human rights and democratic values. In fact, of the
31 courses SOA lists as available, only five are related to
human rights, democracy or humanitarian issues, and less that
18% of the students took these courses in 1999. Furthermore,
although the SOA has made much of its new Human Rights “Train
the Trainer” course, no student attended the course in 1997,
1998, or 1999. The new school has not stated any plans to seek
input from noted outside human rights specialists and has no
provision to modify the content to address specific human rights
issues in particular countries. The SOA claims its instructors
from outside the US must be cleared of any violations of human
rights in their histories. However, since many of these countries
give impunity to their military, abusers are rarely convicted
and therefore, have no formal “record.”
As Mr. Galbreath has stated, the SOA claims it
wants to focus on leadership development, peace support, counter-drug
operations, and disaster relief. The new school wishes to focus
on these elements as well, downplaying the militaristic aspects
of the training offered. These courses currently exist at the
SOA but have never been well attended. Although Colombia is
in a drug crisis, only 5 of the 141 Colombians trained at the
SOA in 1999 took the counter-narcotics course. In total, less
than 5 % of the SOA soldiers took counter-narcotics training
in 1999. This is down from 8% in 1998. The vast majority took
the same SOA commando and combat courses that have had devastating
human rights consequences in the past. At least three SOA grads
in Mexico have been under investigation for drug trafficking.
Carol Richardson of SOAWatch points out that the
recent SOA Certification Report to Congress shows that in 1999
a scant 14% of SOA soldiers took the peace operations, civil/military
relations, and similar classes. Over 85% took the standard SOA
fare: commando tactics, military intelligence, psychological
operations, and combat training. A recent newspaper headline
sums it up: “Bombs and Bullets Most Popular Classes at the US
Army School of the Americas.” The Department of Defense proposal
for the new school showed that this would not change.
Galbreath mentioned a Board of Visitors for the
SOA appointed by the President, who have knowledge and commitment
to human rights issues. However, it does not provide oversight
to the SOA, nor critical review. In the new school, the Board
of Visitors will be selected and appointed by the Secretary
of Defense. There is no selection criteria, nor any mandates
for the inclusion of independent human rights experts, religious
leaders, and other potential critics.
The new school will have an Annual Report that
does not require even the minimal tracking or monitoring of
recent graduates that was called for in the SOA Certification
Report. The Annual Report is not an analysis, critique, assessment,
evaluation, appraisal, or examination with recommendations from
an outside, independent source…it is only a report from the
Board of Visitors, hand-picked by the Secretary of Defense.
The repeal of Congressional authorization for
the SOA in effect closes the school. It is done with no analysis.
As Richardson points out, why close a school without fault?
Why open another that is, for all intents and purposes, identical,
except for name? An investigation of the charges against the
SOA would be a reasonable action to resolve the controversy
over its existence or its replacement. Says Richardson, “Neither
US tax payers, elected officials, nor, hopefully, the Department
of Defense wants to duplicate or continue misguided policies
or procedures that have produced results that visit death and
suffering on our neighbors in Latin America and dishonor the
people of the United States and its military.”
The sources of information are a compilation
of research done by the SOA Watch and the Latin America Working
Group, among others.
US military civil disturbance
planning: The war at home
By Frank Morales
Under the heading of “civil disturbance planning,”
the US military is training troops and police to suppress democratic
opposition in America. The master plan, Department of Defense
Civil Disturbance Plan 55-2, is code-named, “Operation Garden
Plot.” Originated in 1968, the “operational plan” has been updated
over the last three decades, most recently in 1991, and was
activated during the Los Angeles “riots” of 1992, and more than
likely during the recent anti-WTO “Battle in Seattle.”
Current US military preparations for suppressing
domestic civil disturbance, including the training of National
Guard troops and police, are actually part of a long history
of American “internal security” measures dating back to the
first American Revolution. Generally, these measures have sought
to thwart the aims of social justice movements, embodying the
concept that within the civilian body politic lurks an enemy
that one day the military might have to fight, or at least be
ordered to fight.
Equipped with flexible “military operations in
urban terrain” and “operations other than war” doctrine, lethal
and “less-than-lethal” high-tech weaponry, US “armed forces”
and “elite” militarized police units are being trained to eradicate
“disorder,” “disturbance” and “civil disobedience” in America.
Further, it may very well be that police/military “civil disturbance”
planning is the animating force and the overarching logic behind
the incredible nationwide growth of police paramilitary units,
a growth which coincidentally mirrors rising levels of police
violence directed at the American people, particularly “non-white”
poor and working people.
Military spokespeople, “judge advocates” (lawyers)
and their congressional supporters aggressively take the position
that legal obstacles to military involvement in domestic law
enforcement civil disturbance operations, such as the 1878 Posse
Comitatus Act, have been nullified. Legislated “exceptions”
and private commercialization of various aspects of US military-law
enforcement efforts have supposedly removed their activities
from the legal reach of the “public domain.” Possibly illegal,
ostensible “training” scenarios like the recent “Operation Urban
Warrior” no-notice “urban terrain” war games, which took place
in dozens of American cities, are thinly disguised “civil disturbance
suppression” exercises. In addition, President Clinton recently
appointed a “domestic military czar,” a sort of national chief
of police. You can bet that he is well versed in Garden Plot
requirements involved in “homeland defense.”
Ominously, many assume that the training of military
and police forces to suppress “outlawed” behavior of citizens,
along with the creation of extensive and sophisticated “emergency”
social response networks set to spring into action in the event
of “civil unrest,” is prudent and acceptable in a democracy.
And yet, does not this assumption beg the question as to what
civil unrest is? One could argue for example, that civil disturbance
is nothing less than democracy in action, a message to the powers-that-be
that the people want change. In this instance, “disturbing behavior”
may actually be the exercising of ones’ right to resist oppression.
Unfortunately, the American corporate/military directorship,
which has the power to enforce its definition of “disorder,”
sees democracy as a threat and permanent counter-revolution
as a “national security” requirement.
The elite military/corporate sponsors of Garden
Plot have their reasons for civil disturbance contingency planning.
Let’s call it the paranoia of the thief. Their rationale is
simple: self-preservation. Fostering severe and targeted “austerity,”
massive inequality and unbridled greed, while shifting more
and more billions to the generals and the rich, the de-regulated
“entities of force” and their interlocking corporate directors
know quite well what their policies are engendering, namely,
a growing resistance. Consequently, they are systematically
organizing to protect their interests, their profits, and their
criminal conspiracies. To this end, they are rapidly consolidating
an infrastructure of repression designed to “suppress rebellion”
against their “authority.” Or more conveniently put, to suppress
“rebellion against the authority of the United States.” And
so, as the Pentagon Incorporated increases its’ imperialist
violence around the world, the chickens have indeed come home
to roost here in America in the form of a national security
doctrine obsessed with domestic “insurgency” and the need to
pre-emptively neutralize it. Its code-name: “Garden Plot.”
Recently, Pentagon spokesman Kenneth H. Bacon
“acknowledged that the Air Force wrongfully started and financed
a highly classified, still-secret project, known as a black
program, without informing Congress last year.” The costs and
nature of these projects “are the most classified secrets in
the Pentagon.” Could it be that the current United States Air
Force Civil Disturbance Plan 55-2 Garden Plot is one such program
financed from this secret budget? We have a right to know. And
following Seattle, we have the need to know.
As this and numerous other documents reveal, US
military training in civil disturbance “suppression,” which
targets the American public, is in full operation today. The
formulation of legitimizing doctrine, the training in the “tactics
and techniques” of “civil disturbance suppression,” and the
use of “abusable,” “non-lethal” weaponry, are ongoing, financed
by tax dollars. According to the Pentagon, “US forces deployed
to assist federal and local authorities during times of civil
disturbance…will follow use-of-force policy found in Department
of Defense Civil Disturbance Plan-Garden Plot.” (Joint Chiefs
of Staff, Standing Rules of Engagement, Appendix A, 1 October
1994.)
Origins: The Kerner Commission
“Knowledge makes a man unfit to be a slave.”
-Frederick Douglass
Rochester, New York is the former home of Frederick
Douglass’s North Star newspaper. In 1964, it erupted in one
of the first large-scale urban outbursts of the decade. Precipitated
by white police violence against the black community, the July
uprising lasted several days, subsiding only after the arrival
of 1500 National Guardsmen. In “the fall of 1964, the FBI, at
the direction of President Johnson, began to make riot control
training available to local police departments, and by mid-1967
such training assistance had been extended to more than 70,000
officials and civilians.”
On July 29, 1967, President Johnson issued Executive
Order 11365, establishing the National Advisory Commission on
Civil Disorders. It is more commonly known as the Kerner Commission,
named for it’s chair, former Major General, and then Governor
of Illinois, Otto Kerner. The creation of the commission came
hot on the heels of the violence in Detroit, a conflict which
left 43 dead, several hundred wounded and over 5,000 people
homeless. Johnson sent troubleshooter Cyrus Vance, later Secretary
of Defense, as his personal observer to Detroit. The commission
issued its final report, completed in less than a year, on March
1, 1968.
Although the Kerner Commission has over the years
become associated with a somewhat benign, if not benevolent
character, codifying the obvious, “we live in two increasingly
separate America’s” etc., the fact is that the commission itself
was but one manifestation of a massive military/police counter-insurgency
effort directed against US citizens, hatched in an era of emergent
post-Vietnam “syndrome” coupled with elite fears of domestic
insurrection. While the movement chanted for peace and revolution,
rebellious, angry and destructive urban uprisings were occurring
with alarming frequency, usually the result of the usual spark,
police brutality, white on black crime. The so-called urban
riots of 1967-1968 were the zenith, during this period, of social
and class conflict. “More than 160 disorders occurred in some
128 American cities in the first nine months of 1967.”
During the early stages of staff recruitment,
commission Deputy Executive Director Victor H. Palmieri “described
the process as a war strategy” and so he might be given the
overwhelming presence within the commission and its’ consultants
of military and police officials.
The Kerner Commission’s “study” of “civil disorder”
lead directly to (civilian) recommendations regarding the role
of the military in domestic affairs. The report dutifully “commends
the Army for the advanced status of its training.” Further,
it states that “the Department of the Army should participate
fully in efforts to develop nonlethal weapons and personal protective
equipment appropriate for use in civil disorders.” In addition,
“the Army should investigate the possibility of utilizing psychological
techniques to ventilate hostility and lessen tension in riot
control, and incorporate feasible techniques in training the
Army and National Guard units.”
The Army and civil disorder
Under the heading, “Army Response To Civil Disorders,”
the commission report states that “the commitment of federal
troops to aid state and local forces in controlling a disorder
is an extraordinary act…An Army staff task group has recently
examined and reviewed a wide range of topics relating to military
operations to control urban disorders: command and control,
logistics, training, planning, doctrine, personnel, public information,
intelligence, and legal aspects.” The results of the Army brass’s
study was subsequently “made known to the National Guard and
to top state and local civil and law enforcement officers in
order to stimulate review at the state and local level.”
In addition, “the Army Task Force that had designed
this program took on a new name, the Directorate of Civil Disturbance
Planning and Operations. The Army Task Force transformation
into the Directorate occurred during the massive rioting that
broke out in black ghettos of 19 cities after the assassination
of Martin Luther King in April 1968.” At that time “seven army
infantry brigades, totaling 21,000 troops were available for
riot duty. And a huge, sophisticated computer center kept track
of all public outbursts of political dissent, thereby furnishing
the first of the Army Task Force’s prescribed remedies: intelligence.”
By June of 1968, the Directorate had become the
Directorate of Military Support, setting up shop in the basement
of the Pentagon. “Better known as the domestic war room, the
Directorate had 150 officials to carry out around-the-clock
monitoring of civil disorders, as well as to oversee federal
troop deployments when necessary. At the cost of $2.7 million,
this massive directorate also developed policy advice for the
secretary of the Army on all disturbances and maintained intelligence
packets on all major US cities.”
Even though the full extent of US military intelligence
activities during this period is far from generally known, “by
1968, many Justice Department personnel knew that the military
was preparing to move in massively if needed to quash urban
riots, and some officials feared the development of a large
national military riot force. It was well known among top officials
that the Department of Defense was spending far more funds than
the Justice Department on civil disorder preparations… indicative
of the growing trend at the federal level toward repression
and control of the urban black rioters.”
As time went on, “Garden Plot evolved into a
series of annual training exercises based on contingency plans
to undercut riots and demonstrations, ultimately developed for
every major city in the United States. Participants in the exercises
included key officials from all law enforcement agencies in
the nation, as well as the National Guard, the military, and
representatives of the intelligence community… According to
the plan, joint teams would react to a variety of scenarios
based on information gathered through political espionage and
informants. The object was to quell urban unrest…”
Unrest of a different sort took place on the evening
of February 27, 1973. At that time, a group of Native Americans
occupied a trading post in the village of Wounded Knee on the
Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. By the second of March
the takeover had “triggered the army contingency plan for domestic
disturbances. Emergency Plans White —now coded as Garden Plot
— brought the Army into South Dakota…Three army colonels, disguised
as civilians, and reconnaissance planes assisted”, while “the
Justice Department used the army to conduct intelligence for
civilian law enforcement around Wounded Knee.” Information on
other instances in which Garden Plot was “triggered” over the
intervening years is presently locked in Pentagon vaults.
In essence, the contemporary roots of militarized
efforts to suppress domestic rebellion lie in the US Army’s
master plan, Department of Defense Civil Disturbance Plan 55-2,
Garden Plot. Since at least 1968, the military has expended
billions of dollars in this effort. The plan is operative right
now, most recently during and after the Los Angeles uprising
of 1992. A view into details of this plan is possible by way
of an examination of United States Air Force Civil Disturbance
Plan 55-2, Garden Plot which is the “implementing” and “supporting
plan for the Department of the Army (DA) Civil Disturbance Plan
— Garden Plot — dated 1 March 1984 (which) provides for the
employment of USAF forces in civil disturbances.” It is specifically
drawn up “to support the Secretary of the Army, as DOD Executive
Agent for civil disturbance control operations (nicknamed Garden
Plot), with airlift and logistical support, in assisting civil
authorities in the restoration of law and order through appropriate
military commanders in the 50 States, District of Columbia,
the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and US possessions and territories,
or any political subdivision thereof.” The plan “is effective
for planning on receipt and for execution on order.”
US Air Force 55-2: Garden Plot
“The long title of the plan is United States
Air Force Civil Disturbance Plan 55-2, Employment of USAF Forces
in Civil Disturbances. The short title of this document is USAF
Civil Disturbance Plan 55-2. The nickname assigned by Department
of the Army is Garden Plot.” It’s dated July 11, 1984.
The plan opens with some basic “assumptions,”
namely that “civil disturbances requiring intervention with
military forces may occur simultaneously in any of the 50 States,
District of Columbia, Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, US possessions
and territories.” And like the current situation in Vieques,
Puerto Rico, “civil disturbances will normally develop over
a period of time.” In the event it evolves into a confrontational
situation, under Garden Plot, it is a “presidential executive
order” that “will authorize and direct the Secretary of Defense
to use the Armed Forces of the United States to restore law
and order.”
According to the Air Force plan, the military
will attempt “to suppress rebellion whenever the President considers
that unlawful obstructions, combinations, or assemblages, or
rebellion against the authority of the United States, make it
impractical to enforce the laws of the United States in any
state or territory by the ordinary course of judicial proceedings…(10
USC 332).” Applying its own version of equal protection under
the law, the military can intervene “when insurrection, domestic
violence, unlawful combinations, or conspiracies in a state
so hinder or obstruct the execution of the laws as to deprive
individuals of their Constitutional rights, privileges, and
immunities or when the insurrection impedes the due course of
justice, and only when the constituted authorities of the state
are unable, fail or refuse to protect that right, privilege,
immunity, or to give that protection (10 USC 333).” In other
words, the Army makes an offer of “protection” that the citizenry
can’t refuse.
The Air Force also has some experience in this
area. “In response to the US invasion of Cambodia, student unrest
broke out. Under Operation Garden Plot, from April 30 through
May 4, 1970, 9th Air Force airlift units transported civil disturbance
control forces from Ft. Bragg to various locations throughout
the eastern US.” In fact, two years earlier, “Air Force Reserve
C-119 and C-124 units participated in Garden Plot operations
set up to quell domestic strife that followed the assassination
of Martin Luther King.”
Although the section on “Counterintelligence
Targets and Requirements” is “omitted,” the plan does specify
its targets, namely, those “disruptive elements, extremists
or dissidents perpetrating civil disorder.” A “civil disturbance”
is defined as a “riot, acts of violence, insurrections, unlawful
obstructions or assemblages, or other disorders prejudicial
to public law and order. The term civil disturbance includes
all domestic conditions requiring the use of federal armed forces
pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 15, Title 10, United States
Code.” Conditions precipitating Garden Plot activation are “those
that threaten to reach or have reached such proportions that
civil authorities cannot or will not maintain public order.”
As for legal authority, “the Constitution of the United States
and numerous statutes provide the President with the authority
to commit Federal military forces within the United States…DOD
Directive 3025.12 provides guidance in committing Federal armed
forces.”
Police repress social justice
movement
Philadelphia: all-out security effort for GOP
convention
By Thomas Ginsberg
The Secret Service is checking rooftops. The
FBI is monitoring the Internet. And city police are getting
ready to play cat and mouse with protesters.
Unnoticed by most Philadelphians, security preparations
for the Republican National Convention are moving into high
gear about 10 weeks before the July 31-Aug. 3 event. Thousands
of law enforcement officers will land in the city for an operation
made particularly complex by the likelihood of civil disobedience
and surprise protests.
“Virtually every resource that the FBI has available
will be put into play,” said Thomas J. Harrington, the assistant
special agent-in-charge in the FBI’s Philadelphia office. “After
the Atlanta Olympics it was bombings that were the main focus.
. . . Now protesters have become more of a focus.”
At both the GOP event and the Democratic convention
in Los Angeles two weeks later, the Secret Service is coordinating
the work of dozens of federal, state and local agencies employing
thousands of officers -- some of whom will be dressed like tourists
to mix with their surroundings.
The FBI will focus on intelligence gathering,
investigation, and prosecution if necessary. City police will
police the city, perhaps the most complicated job.
The goal is a smooth, safe convention with minimal
inconvenience to city dwellers and delegates. Subway and regional
rail lines may run later into the night to handle extra passengers,
streets will be closed as briefly as possible, and a caravan
of tow trucks will stand ready to clear traffic jams.
“We’re not going to shut the city down. . . .
We have to live here too,” said Thomas G. Spurlock, the Secret
Service’s assistant special agent-in-charge in Philadelphia.
With a command center in a Pentagon-owned building
near 20th and Oregon Streets, the Secret Service will have direct
responsibility for security inside the First Union Center, where
the convention takes place. Inside and outside the arena its
agents will guard every move by two former presidents (George
Bush and Gerald R. Ford) and dozens of diplomats and dignitaries,
including former first lady Nancy Reagan. Not to mention the
presumptive nominee, George W. Bush.
The agency also will coordinate the work of police
from 35 states guarding 35 Republican governors. It will oversee
members of the Capitol Police arriving with the leaders of the
GOP-controlled Congress.
Spurlock said the agency would check every nook
and cranny where the “protectees” will stay, visit or travel;
scrutinize high-rise buildings for possible sniper’s nests;
and possibly move mailboxes and weld manholes shut around hotels
or meeting halls. Agents are mapping out motorcade routes and
backdoor exits from hotels and meeting spots, a challenge in
Philadelphia’s narrow downtown streets.
The city’s police force will have responsibility
for security around the rest of the city and next to the First
Union Center, including the 7,600-square-foot “free speech zone”
already established in FDR Park.
Whether protesters bother with the rally site
is another question. Few groups have signed up to use it; the
largest rallies are planned in Center City, with some activists
promising sporadic acts of protest and civil disobedience everywhere.
Several Philadelphia officers traveled to Washington,
DC, in April and New York City on May 1 to observe the protests
there over corporate globalization. The FBI and Justice Department
are holding training sessions in Philadelphia in crowd control
and tactics for police officers and commanders. They say officers
must be ready to respond to varying problems, such as a surprise
blockade or protest in a city street.
Capt. William Fisher, commanding officer of the
civil affairs unit, said police intend to designate a special
detention center for any protesters arrested.
At the same time, police will maintain full staffing
at the city’s 23 precincts during the week, Fisher said. Court
sessions have been canceled and new vacation schedules have
been offered to free as many officers as possible.
Taking their cue from recent protests in Washington,
DC, and Seattle, police intend to be ready to rush officers
to potential flash points around the city in “mobile field forces,”
said Deputy Commissioner Robert Mitchell. They could travel
in either marked or unmarked vehicles, he said, but he gave
no details.
Police said protesters in Seattle, using their
own mobile-phone network, dashed from one area to another to
avoid police as they blocked streets.
In Philadelphia, police may deploy officers just
to keep routes open for their mobile forces, a defense Seattle
failed to use, Fisher said.
The tactics mean that both sides may end up playing
a game of cat and mouse.
Fisher said police would also be cordial but
careful when faced with one expected protest tactic: the offering
of food or drink by demonstrators hoping to sway police to their
side.
With the First Union Center well-protected by
a buffer zone, protesters have been discussing the idea of blockading
delegates at their hotels.
Some activists have hinted at their plans on
the Internet, where groups often publicize and discuss their
events using e-mail systems called listservs. The FBI regularly
reads the listservs, the agents said.
Source: Philadelphia Inquirer
Los Angeles: protests planned
for Democratic Convention
By Lynda Gorov
To the consternation of city officials and convention
planners, the sea turtles are preparing to beach.
The costumed demonstrators, along with thousands
of plainclothes protesters, are expected to descend on Los Angeles
for the Democratic National Convention in August. Emboldened
by the so-called Battle in Seattle during last year’s World
Trade Organization meeting, and this year’s attention-grabbing
tactics in Washington, they intend to march, shout, and tie
up traffic to make their points about economic disparity, environmental
insanity, and a variety of other concerns, from gay rights to
the death penalty. The protesters even have their own shorthand
for the convergence of Democrats, the millennium, and LA: D2KLA.
No one knows quite what to expect. All sides
say they want peace to prevail. But with newly energized protesters
willing to square off against a Los Angeles Police Department
whose integrity is under attack, there is also growing fear
that the confrontations could turn ugly. To further complicate
matters, the homeless have plans to stage a rival convention
for 1,000 of their ‘own’ ‘delegates’’ just blocks from the main
event at the Staples Center sports and concert arena.
Lisa Fithian, a key organizer of the protests
for Direct Action Network, said "we will be there and ww
will be heard. The powers that be want to marginalize us, and
we're not going to let that happen."
In a city where image is everything, this is
hardly the image Los Angeles had in mind when it bid to bring
the Democratic convention here. After riots, earthquakes, and
O.J. Simpson, the aim was to showcase Los Angeles as a world-class
city, one ready for the new millennium rather than one on the
rebound. The convention promised the sort of positive attention
seldom seen since the 1984 Olympics, which the city hosted to
great success.
Many still believe the convention will do just
that. But the gathering also comes at an awkward time for Los
Angeles, now embroiled in its most far-reaching police corruption
scandal in recent history. The smallest misstep by authorities
is likely to make the nightly news. A debacle like the one in
Seattle, where police fired tear gas and rubber bullets into
crowds, would probably overwhelm coverage from the convention
floor and crowd out good-news stories about the city beyond
the convention center’s doors.
“It’s actually a good time for LA,” said Michael
Dear, director of the Southern California Studies Center at
the University of Southern California. “The more exposure it
gets as a serious metropolitan city, the better, because it’s
been too easy for too long for people to look at LA as a flaky
exception to all things American. That image is obsolete.
Police professionalism could be pushed to the
limits by the broad array of protesters expected. Fithian, whose
organization is helping coordinate the activities of more than
150 protest groups, said she expects relatively few of them
to spend time in what has been dubbed “the protest pit” - an
area near Staples Center that will be set aside for demonstrators
who apply for permits.
“It will be an orderly, vocal, noisy week,” said
James Lafferty, executive director of the Los Angeles office
of the National Lawyers Guild, which is recruiting scores of
legal observers to witness the demonstrations and dozens of
lawyers to represent those arrested. “Civil disobedience can
be done peacefully if the police don’t treat it as a military
invasion.”
Added Colin Rajah, director of programs at the
Oakland-based Youth Action for Globe Justice Network, which
plans to send dozens of young protesters to the area, “It’s
been a long time coming, this attention to reforming the social
and economic system, and we want to take advantage of the momentum.
But the idea is to get attention for the issues, not to have
a direct confrontation with police.”
Recalling disruptions during meetings of the World
Trade Organization in Seattle and the World Bank in Washington,
law enforcement officials say they are preparing for any and
all scenarios. The Los Angeles Police Department has canceled
all vacations for both officers and civilian personnel. The
sheriff’s department will provide backup in the event of mass
arrests.
State and federal agencies have mobilized too,
devising plans to cope with everything from unruly protests
to urban terrorism. Few expect the worst, but everyone wants
to be ready for it.
“We’re hoping the designated public demonstration
area will work,” said Lieutenant Horace Frank, a spokesman for
the LAPD. “We want to allow voices to be heard, but in peaceful
areas. ... It’s disconcerting to hear otherwise. We have a responsibility
to ensure the community is not disrupted and, if it is, we will
have to respond in kind.”
Benjamin Austin, a spokesman for the LA Convention
2000 host committee, called the protest area “a phenomenal piece
of real estate,” near enough the convention center for delegates
to take notice and to give journalists easy access. “The location,”
he said, “says a lot about our attitude toward the protesters.
We want them out front. We don’t want them in Siberia.”
The LA convention has faced a host of other obstacles,
including fund-raising and management snags. But, with Los Angeles
Mayor Richard Riordan more personally involved, convention planners
say they expect the week to go smoothly. One reason: Many of
the major groups involved in the previous protests, among them
the AFL-CIO and Friends of the Earth, have endorsed Al Gore,
the presumptive Democratic nominee.
For their part, protest organizers insist they
will not incite, encourage, or condone violence. Instead, they
say they fear that, by taking to the streets, they will become
targets themselves. In mid-July, the Ruckus Society will hold
a training camp for 125 or so nonviolent convention protesters
in Malibu, where they will learn everything from how to unfurl
political banners from great heights to how to chain themselves
together to avoid being dispersed. A smaller training session
is planned for Philadelphia, where protesters also expect to
be out in force for the Republican National Convention, which
begins July 31.
In the city itself, the Los Angeles National Homeless
Convention is preparing for the arrival of 1,000 delegates from
around the country, among them homeless people, political activists,
and others upset by the issues that exacerbate homelessness.
Los Angeles has one of the largest homeless populations in the
country, and the counterconvention is intended to focus attention
on a group that city officials everywhere often try to downplay
during local celebrations.
“We as homeless people are drawing a line in
the sand on homelessness,” said Ted Hayes, a local activist
who had the idea for the convention and who predicted as many
as 10,000 local homeless will participate. “We’re saying, `You
come to LA and we’ll lead the way. ...’ We come in decency and
peace, and we hope everyone will respect that.”
Source: the Boston Globe
San Francisco rally targets
toxic racism
By Bill Hackwell
San Francisco, California, May 25— Scores
of protesters demonstrated in front of the San Francisco Federal
Building May 25 to demand a thorough and extensive clean-up
of a naval toxic dump in a predominantly African American district
of this city.
For decades the Navy has dumped toxic substances
in the Bayview Hunters Point area. It is the only federal superfund
site in San Francisco and the most contaminated property in
the city.
In February the Navy estimated that it would
cost $266 million to clean up the site. Officials are now proposing
allocating just $105 million to simply cover the site with asphalt
— in other words, not clean it up at all, just let the community
continue to be exposed to large levels of toxic poisons.
Meanwhile, on the other side of town near the
rich Marina district, millions of dollars keep pouring in to
clean up and upgrade the former Presidio Army area.
The May 25 protest signifies a growing opposition
to the government’s handling of the clean-up in Bayview Hunters
Point. It was called by the Community 1st Coalition and includes
a number of environmental groups, including Communities for
a Better Environment, Greenaction, and Literacy for Environmental
Justice.
Source: Workers World News Service:
workers.org
Leonard Peltier will be reviewed
for parole
Leonard Peltier will be reviewed for parole Native
American Leonard Peltier will be reviewed for parole on June
12 at Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary. Amnesty International,
which considers Peltier to be a political prisoner, will attend
the hearing in person to ask the Commission to set Leonard Peltier
free. The National Council of Churches, the National Congress
of American Indians, the Assembly of First Nations, and Peltier’s
family will also be asking the Parole Commission for Leonard
Peltier’s release.
On June 12, Peltier’s attorneys will tell the
Commission that there is no justifiable reason to continue Peltier’s
sentence, and the Commission’s original decision to deny him
parole was based on error. The Leonard Peltier Defense Committee
urges concerned citizens to call the White House comments line
at 202-456-1111 to demand justice for Leonard Peltier.
For more information: Leonard Peltier Defense
Committee, 785-842-5774 or www.freepeltier.org
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