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The Miami indictments: Manufacturing terror as
a means of intimidation
By Bill Van Auken
28 June 2006
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Within 48 hours of the US Justice Departments startling
announcement Friday of the round-up of a home-grown
terrorist cell in Miami, the media had all but dropped the story.
Its initial response, particularly that of the broadcast news
outlets, was to amplify the governments lurid charges, warning
of a conspiracy even worse than September 11, including
a supposed plot to blow up the nations tallest building,
the Sears Tower in Chicago. The television news channels carried
live shots of the building, as if hijacked airplanes were about
to plow into it.
As details of the supposed plot and the identity of the alleged
conspirators came more sharply into focus, however, the media
backed away. Not only was the Chicago skyscraper in no danger,
there also existed no plot, much less the means of carrying one
out. The entire government case was so manifestly bogus that not
even the right-wing fabulists at Fox News could sustain it.
Nevertheless, the initial sensationalism and fear-mongering
had an effect. By the time public defenders were appointed for
the seven men indicted in the case, the attorneys protests
that their clients were victims of blatant government entrapment
received a minute fraction of the attention given the governments
terror charges at the outset.
Who are the seven young menNarseal Batiste, 32, Patrick
Abraham, 26, Burson Augustin, 21, Rothschild Augustine, 22, Naudimar
Herrera, 22, Lyglenson Lemorin, 31, and Stanley Grant Phanor,
31whose mug shots were broadcast into millions of American
homes as the supposed new face of terror? They include
a former Federal Express driver, two Haitian immigrantsone
a legal resident and the other undocumentedand several other
individuals from Miamis deeply impoverished and predominantly
black Liberty City neighborhood.
What will happen to them? Despite the transparent attempts
by both the government and the media to lower expectations
in relation to the case, and the near unanimous view of the legal
community that the case is at best thin and at worst
a crude exercise in state provocation and entrapment, the seven
defendants remain in federal lockup. They face the very real threat
of spending the rest of their lives in prison for the sole crime
of having allowed themselves to be drawn into supposedly incriminating
conversations with an undercover FBI informant/agent provocateur.
There was neither criminal action nor a credible plan to commit
a criminal act. No explosives and not a single weapon were found
in the raids carried out by FBI SWAT teams in Miami. As one federal
official put it, the plot was more aspirational
than operational.
The real question is whose aspirations played the
decisive role in this episodethose of the defendants, or
those of the government? There is every indication that by means
of a provocation in Miamithe latest in a long line of similar
casesthe government was pursuing definite political objectives
of the most reactionary sort, with chilling indifference towards
the fate of those it ensnared in its fabrication of a terrorist
threat. As far as the organizers of Bushs global
war on terror are concerned, the seven young men from Liberty
City were utterly disposable people.
If there is anything unique about the Miami case, it is the
fact that the victims of the provocation are non-Muslim African
Americans in the poorest neighborhood in one of Americas
poorest cities, rather than immigrants from Islamic countries.
The modus operandi is not new. It has been employed by the federal
authorities in case after case. In each of them, highly motivated
agent provocateurssome paid hundreds of thousands of dollars,
others offered leniency on criminal chargeswere dispatched
to produce a terrorist threat where none existed.
To cite just a few of the more prominent cases:
* The conviction last month of 24-year-old Shahawar Matin
Siraj, a Pakistani immigrant in New York City, for a supposed
conspiracy to bomb the 34th Street subway station and other targets.
The plot was the handiwork of a paid informant of
the New York City police intelligence division, who earned $100,000
for ensnaring Siraj and another man, both of whom pleaded guilty
before trial. Again, there was neither a criminal act nor any
means of committing oneno weapons, no explosives. The informant
apparently was the one who first suggested the bombing plot,
then offered to obtain explosives and egged on the defendants
by showing them pictures of Iraqis tortured by US guards at Abu
Ghraib.
* In May of last year, two African-American Muslims, Dr. Rafiq
Sabir, a Florida physician, and Tarik Shah, a well-known jazz
musician, were arrested on charges of offering assistance, in
the form of medical care and martial arts training, to Islamists
waging jihad. Once again, the entire case is based
on alleged conversations with a government informant, who, as
in the Miami case, supposedly administered an oath of allegiance
to Al Qaeda. Again, no bombs, no weapons, no acts, merely a paid
informant entrapping two innocent men in allegedly incriminating
conversations.
* In Lodi, California, the FBI obtained the convictions of
an ice cream vendor and his son, both Pakistani immigrants, through
the work of another informant, who was reportedly recruited from
a $7-an-hour job at a convenience store and paid nearly $250,000
to infiltrate the local Muslim community and entrap the pair.
The charge against them of lending material support to terrorism
was based upon telephone conversations in which the informant
urged the younger man to attend an Al Qaeda training camp in
Pakistan, though there was no evidence that he ever did so.
* A local Muslim cleric and a pizzeria owner in Albany, New
York are to go on trial in September in a case involving a convolutedand
fictitiousscheme to purchase a rocket-propelled grenade
launcher, supposedly to assassinate a Pakistani official. The
entire plot was concocted by an FBI informant for
the purpose of ensnaring the pair. He sprung it on them after
the pizzeria owner asked him for a $5,000 loan to bail out his
bankrupt business. The informant offered to let him keep $5,000
if he agreed to hold onto $50,000 that was supposedly to be used
to buy the grenade launcher. Again, there was no act of violence,
no means of carrying out such an act, no ties to terrorist groups
and no plot, outside of the one invented by the FBI.
Each of these terror cases has received the same
treatment from the media as the Miami arrestsscreaming headlines
and sensationalist broadcast claims echoing the government charges,
followed by relative silence as it became clear that the accusations
lacked any substance and that the defendants never posed the slightest
threat to anyone.
What begins to emerge is a picture of a homeland security
police-bureaucratic dictatorship that acts with unspeakable cruelty,
destroying peoplefor the most part poor, hapless immigrantsto
further patently political aims.
The main target of these exercises is not the defendantsthey
are merely collateral damage. It is the American people as a whole.
This is a government of ruthless men that stages provocation after
provocation with the aim of spreading fear and intimidating popular
opposition to policies of aggressive war abroad and social reaction
and attacks on democratic rights at home.
For nearly five years, the Bush administration has implemented
virtually all of its policies in the name of a global war
on terrorism. It has relentlessly invoked the horrific loss
of life in the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 as justification
for a long-planned war to conquer Iraq and its oil wealth, and
the arrogation of unprecedented dictatorial powers by the White
House. The ostensible political opposition in the Democratic Party
has fully embraced the war on terror, while occasionally
arguing that it is being mismanaged by the Bush administration.
The fact remains that every supposed terrorist threat foisted
upon the public by the administration has proven to be a government-orchestrated
provocation. The events of September 11 themselves have never
been seriously investigated. How and why the government in Washington
allowed them to take placedespite ample forewarnings of
impending attacks involving the use of hijacked commercial jets
as bombs, and even surveillance of the hijackers by US intelligencehas
yet to be explained to the American people.
The need to sow fear and intimidate public opinion with supposed
terrorist threats grows in direct proportion to the decline of
popular support for the policies of both major parties, a political
shift that can find no means of expression within the existing
political setup. The way in which these provocations are organized
and executed is evidence of an absolutely ruthless government
that is bound neither by scruples nor serious scrutiny on the
part of Congress, the courts or the media.
To the extent that schemes like the latest indictments in Miami
are so quickly and thoroughly revealeddespite the best efforts
of the mass mediato be shams, the threat grows that the
desperate elements in control of the US government will organize
something more convincing, in the form of an actual terrorist
incident that, like September 11, will claim the lives of innocent
Americans.
See Also:
Miami "terror" arrests-a government
provocation
[24 June 2006]
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