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U S Infiltrators Of Anti-War Resistance Groups Pressured To Produce Evidence Of Terrorism When None Exists

posted Wednesday, 15 March 2006

U S Infiltrators

 

Of Anti-War


Resistance Groups

 

Pressured To


Produce Evidence



Of Terrorism When

 

None Exists




http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=06/03/15/1735258


Newly Released Files Reveal

FBI Spied on PA Peace Group

Because of Antiwar Views


Wednesday, March 15th, 2006
http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=06/03/15/1735258

Newly released files show the FBI has been monitoring and possibly infiltrating a Pittsburgh peace group because of its opposition to the war in Iraq. We speak with the former head of the Thomas Merton Center, who was personally named in the FBI spy files as well as the New York Civil Liberties Union which has filed FOIA requests to determine whether the FBI is spying on the ACLU and other prominent political and religious groups in the city. [includes rush transcript]

Newly released files show the FBI has been monitoring and possibly infiltrating a Pittsburgh peace group because of its opposition to the war in Iraq.

On Tuesday, the American Civil Liberties Union released a series of once secret FBI files that show the FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Force conducted a secret investigation into the activities of the Thomas Merton Center beginning as early as November 2002, and continuing up until at least last March.

According to the ACLU these documents are the first to show conclusively that the rationale for FBI targeting is the group's opposition to the war.

One memo describes the Merton Center as a "left-wing organization advocating, among many political causes, pacifism." It notes that the center hands out leaflets on a daily basis opposing the war in Iraq.

The FBI files also notes that one of the peace activists monitored handling out fliers "appeared to be of Middle Easter descent".

Another file on the peace center is entitled "International Terrorism Matters" and it includes information on a series of anti-war rallies taking place in Pittsburgh and around the country.

The documents raise new questions about the extent of the government's domestic surveillance operations. On Monday Democratic Senator Russell Feingold introduced a resolution to censure President Bush for illegally ordering the National Security Agency to conduct warrantless domestic surveillance.

The White House has insisted

the NSA surveillance is

targeted solely at members

of Al Qaeda and affiliates.

But civil liberties groups

fears that the government

is also spying on political

activists and critics of the

government.




In December, NBC News revealed the existence of a secret Pentagon database to track intelligence gathered inside the United States including information on anti-war protests and rallies particularly actions targeting military recruiting.

Here in New York, the local chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union filed Freedom of Information requests on Tuesday on behalf of itself and fourteen of New York's most prominent political and religious groups to determine whether the FBI is spying on them as well.

In a minute we will be joined by Donna Lieberman, executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union. But first we go to Pittsburgh to speak with Tim Vining, the former head of the Thomas Merton Center. He is personally named in the FBI spy files on the group.

    * Tim Vining, former executive director of the Thomas Merton Center in Pittsburgh.
    * Donna Lieberman, executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union.
      - Click here for more information on the FBI spy files

RUSH TRANSCRIPT

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AMY GOODMAN: In a minute, we'll be joined by Donna Lieberman in our studio, executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union, but first, to Pittsburgh, where we'll speak with Tim Vining, the former head of the Thomas Merton Center, personally named in the F.B.I. spy files on the group. We welcome you to Democracy Now!, Tim.

TIM VINING: Good morning, Amy.

AMY GOODMAN: Can you talk about what you understand these files say, exactly?

TIM VINING: Well, the activity that we were cited for was simply leafleting in Market Square. We went out -- it was Buy Nothing Day, the day after Thanksgiving on November of 2002 -- and we went out just simply to hand out leaflets about a variety of issues -- transit advocacy, antiwar, global justice -- and for that, we were targeted. Also, what's really distressing to me, Amy, is that the Thomas Merton Center has worked very hard to build relationships with members of the local Muslim community, especially after 9/11, as they were targeted and scapegoated. And because of that, because we tried to build relationships that cross the lines of religion that are used to divide people, because of that, we were spied on by our government. Now, at a time when religious misunderstandings and differences lead to so much terrorism and violence in the world today, you would think our government would applaud us for seeking peace and trying to understand one another. Instead, they spied on us.

AMY GOODMAN: Tim Vining, who was Thomas Merton?

TIM VINING: Thomas Merton was a monk, a Trappist monk who spoke out during the Vietnam War in favor of peace, and he was a man who was extremely consistent. He thought that if we had the value of peace and we were truly peacekeepers and peacemakers that we had to put our money where our mouth is. So he dedicated his life and his writing, from the monastery, speaking for peace.

AMY GOODMAN: So, what are your plans? And do you know, for example, whom they were referring to when they say that someone was handing out fliers, who was of Mid-Eastern decent.

TIM VINING: Well, one thing we're not going to allow the F.B.I. to do is to have us spy on one another and not trust one another. You know, so we're not even trying to guess. The fact is the person they identified simply, quote, “looked Middle Eastern”. There was no evidence that any of us, that person or any of us, were advocating any sort of violence. So I'm not quite sure. I know we have many members of the Thomas Merton Center who are Muslim, and we’re proud to have them as members and to stand with them.

AMY GOODMAN: Have you been able to identify people who work with the F.B.I. who are coming to your meetings?

TIM VINING: Yeah. We know, of course, that we're constantly having photographs taken of us. We’ve always suspected people at our meetings and at our large events. You know, this government has a history of spying on its citizens. We're not naive. But I think what's important is that we not allow this to get us to not trust one another or to live in fear and paranoia. You know, for years, since the Thomas Merton Center was formed in 1972, we have always stood with people who have been targeted or have been scapegoated, whether that be African Americans, gays and lesbians, immigrants, workers, youth, and we're not about to stop now. And if that makes us a threat to this government, then so be it. But we're not going be deterred. In fact, this Saturday, we're going back out into the streets of Pittsburgh, and we're going to have another huge protest in the thousands to defend our rights and to speak out against this war.

AMY GOODMAN: We're talking to Tim Vining, former executive director of the Thomas Merton Center in Pittsburgh; in our studio, Donna Lieberman, executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union. Donna, can you talk about the Freedom of Information Act request you have filed?

DONNA LIEBERMAN: Yes, the New York Civil Liberties Union has filed requests on behalf of a wide range of peace, civil rights, immigrant groups, as well as the New York Civil Liberties Union itself, to ascertain what kind of domestic surveillance is going on of us. We’ve filed these requests on behalf of groups that are committed to advocacy through lawful means, who haven't got a hint of illegal activity about them. And the purpose of the request is to find out what's going on and to publicize that, so that the American people can hold our government accountable for this reign of spying on what's really as American as apple pie: political protest and dissent. And we’re hopeful that we’ll get information, and that with this information, we will be able to not just unearth what's going on, but

to build a movement to just

put an end to this

ridiculous policy by our

government that

doesn't bother to or can't

or doesn't want to

differentiate between

lawful political protest

and terrorism.




AMY GOODMAN: And this issue of infiltration, Tim Vining, it’s one thing for an F.B.I. agent to come to a meeting, the question of if they are actively participating, if they are taking notes, have you ever asked people to identify themselves at a meeting, and has anyone ever done that?

TIM VINING: Yes, but of course, if someone is with the F.B.I., they’re not going to identify themselves. They have the right to lie, and they will lie. So we know that, you know, they've been at our meetings and they're taking notes. And sometimes we get asked this, Amy, like the NBC reporter was asking, “Well, you know, it's a public event, what's the big deal where you're just being watched?” What's different is this is our government, undisclosed agents of our government. The group that has the power to arrest us, to detain us, and God knows what else, if we think of Guantánamo Bay, and so then we're concerned with this, that an undisclosed agent of our government with actually the power to execute in this country would be observing us. And so, that puts a chill throughout the activist community. So we need to really stand strong, stand together, and say we're not going to give in to fear, to paranoia, and we're going to go out there and, you know, exercise our rights.

AMY GOODMAN: Are you also on Pentagon lists?

TIM VINING: Well, there was a Pentagon report, a list, and, yes, we’re on that list. I’m sure we’re on a whole bunch of lists that we’re not even aware of. But the Pentagon list that came out -- I think it’s MSNBC had released it -- identified some counter-recruitment. And here, they’re targeting our youth. They’re targeting -- a lot of the strength of the Thomas Merton Center has been the youth, and they’re targeting them, because of their counter-recruitment activities.

AMY GOODMAN: Donna Lieberman, this issue of infiltration and the legality of it?

DONNA LIEBERMAN: Well, there’s a case pending in New York, the Handschu case, which has been pending for twenty years. And it started after the – well, it was resolved temporarily after the revelation that the New York City Police Department had infiltrated the Panther 21, and the

highly publicized, highly

touted trial of 21 members

of the Panther Party back in

the 1980s for allegedly

plotting to blow up

department stores,

turned out to be a total

hype, entire harassment --

entrapment by the

F.B.I., where it was revealed

that F.B.I. agents had

infiltrated the Panthers and

the people behind any ideas

of a plot to blow up anything

were all government agents.



When government agents

infiltrate lawful

political organizations,

they're under pressure to

come back with information,

and what government

hearings have revealed time

and time again is that they

come back initially with

no information, with

information about lawful

activities, and then they're

under pressure to generate

some business. And they

try to entrap people into

and foment illegal activity.

They often fail, because

these are organizations that

are committed to peaceful

protest, not terrorism.

So, we're deeply concerned that when government infiltrates organization, they end up trying to destroy those organizations and get them to do things that they wouldn't otherwise do.

Do we have any doubt that

if Martin Luther King were

alive today, that he would

be bugged by the Bush

administration? Not a doubt

in our minds!

Not the slightest doubt.

And I think that the American people have to understand that the American Friends Service Committee, the Council of Peoples Organizations, the 9/11Families for Peaceful Tomorrows are all under the government's microscope because they dare to criticize this administration.

AMY GOODMAN: The 9/11 Families are those who lost loved ones on 9/11.

DONNA LIEBERMAN: Yes, these are people who lost family members in those terrible attacks.

AMY GOODMAN: Donna Lieberman, last question, we just broadcast from Britain all last week, and a man who is there now, a prominent professor, Muslim professor, Tariq Ramadan, is not allowed to come into this country. You are filing a suit on his behalf? Is it a suit?

DONNA LIEBERMAN: We filed a suit. It’s a suit. Today, we're filing a motion for preliminary injunction against the government to stop the exclusion of Tariq Ramadan from this country. He's being excluded from this country. He's the most prominent European scholar on Islam, and he was supposed to be teaching at Notre Dame. Instead, he's teaching at Oxford, a revolutionary hotbed of terrorism, as I understand, according to the government, and

he's being excluded pursuant

to a provision in

government manuals that

prohibits people or allows

them to exclude people who

engage in irresponsible

expressions of opinion. In

other words, our immigration

policy, our policy on

foreign visas for scholars

is that we don't want

any critics or the government

can bar any critics of the

Bush administration.

 

That's not what a democracy,

the voice of the free world,

is or ought to be about.




AMY GOODMAN: And what would a preliminary injunction mean?

DONNA LIEBERMAN: It would prohibit the government from continuing to exclude him based on his politics, not based on any illegal activity.

AMY GOODMAN: Well, I want to thank you for being with us. We will continue to follow the case and encourage people to go to our website at DemocracyNow.org to hear our conversation with Tariq Ramadan. Donna Lieberman, head of the New York Civil Liberties Union, and Tim Vining the former head of the Thomas Merton Center, joining us from Pittsburgh. The Merton Center has turned up in F.B.I. documents. The F.B.I. is surveilling that peace group.

www.democracynow.org



Americans used to make jokes about the Russian KGB and state how undemocratic, subversive and repressive the KGB was.  Today, the FBI and CIA are the KGB+ under the leadership of George W. Bush.




T.A.B.A.C.C.O.  (Truth About Business And Congressional Crimes Organization)

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