(July
8, rabble.ca)
By Matthew Behrens
The July 1 arrests of BC residents Amanda
Korody and John Nuttall – charged with planning to blow up a pressure cooker
cluster bomb at the BC legislature – raise many disturbing questions about the
nature of the Canadian government’s “counter-terrorism” operations. Equally
troubling has been media coverage playing up hot-button themes that trigger
fears of marginalized people, whether they be drug addiction and reliance on
social assistance to heavy metal music and the popular catch-all description
for anyone who doesn’t quite fit in to a sick society: mental illness.
As
anyone can gather from news reports, the two suspects have not trod the easiest
of paths, and the pair’s friends doubt they would be capable of planning, much
less executing, the alleged acts. Their right to privacy has also been invaded,
with media thumbing through their personal effects in an apartment that,
remarkably, was not taped off as a potential crime scene by the police.
Interestingly,
following a month of revelations about massive spying on the global citizenry, the
attempt by the Mounties to scare up a little self-serving attention by
trumpeting themselves as The Heroes Who Saved Canada Day appears to have fallen
flat, as many are questioning what role undercover operatives may have played
in facilitating the apparent attack. RCMP Assistant Commissioner Wayne Rideout
noted at the press conference announcing the arrests, “We employed a variety of
complex investigative and covert techniques to control any opportunity the
suspects had to commit harm. These devices were completely under our control,
they were inert, and at no time represented a threat to public safety.”
In
other words, they appear to have had someone on the inside with a great deal of
influence over events, either a Mountie or someone from CSIS, the spy agency that
allegedly spoke to the Mounties about
the case in February. As the Vancouver
Province noted in an editorial, “On April 2, police had enough evidence
leading to charges of facilitating a terrorist activity and conspiracy to
commit an indictable offence, but the couple was not arrested. On June 25,
there was enough evidence for Nuttall to be charged with making or possessing
an explosive substance, but again there were no arrests.” Did the RCMP stagemanage
things so that the connection to Canada Day would provide them with a blast of
patriotic coverage?
Sting Operations
The
questions point to practices south of the border, where the great majority of
so-called terrorism arrests are in fact set up by and facilitated by the agents
who then bust them: the FBI. A 2011 investigation by Mother Jones magazine examined the FBI strategy of “pre-emption”
and “disruption” – the latter a term
used by the RCMP in the present case – and found that the agency targets “tens
of thousands of law-abiding people, seeking to identify those disgruntled few
who might participate in a plot given the means and the opportunity. And then,
in case after case, the government provides the plot, the means, and the
opportunity.”
Mother Jones quotes lawyer Martin
Stolar, who defended one man caught in a 2004 FBI sting, as noting that with
many of the terrorism cases, “defendants would not have done anything if not
kicked in the ass by government agents. They’re creating crimes to solve crimes
so they can claim a victory in the war on terror.”
The
magazine points out that with three exceptions, “all of the high-profile
domestic terror plots of the last decade were actually FBI stings,” all of
which tend to target socially marginalized individuals.
Were
the BC arrests part of an RCMP/CSIS sting operation? Some recall that the so-called Toronto 18
case may never have gotten off the ground without the able assistance of
undercover, paid government informants who facilitated key elements of the
case. In the case of Mr. Nuttall, his paintballing friend was quoted as saying,
“Personally, I think he was hanging out with the wrong people and they screwed
with his head a little bit.” Was one of the apparent “wrong people” a
government agent encouraging Mr. Nuttall? And is the RCMP above staging
terrorism arrests?
History of Illegal Acts
If history
is any indication, the answer would be no. Much of the Mounties’ lengthy
history of corruption, illicit activity, and outright lawbreaking was summed up
nicely in a 1970 memo from then RCMP Commissioner W.L. Higgitt. Labeled “RCMP
Protection for Members Engaged in Sensitive or Secret Operations,” the
Commissioner wrote: “Though it has not been the subject of general
conversation, and should not be, it may have been considered necessary in the
past, and may continue to be necessary in the future, to transgress the common,
civil, or criminal law of the Country in order to work effectively or to
achieve the desired results in a given case. More recently it has come to my
attention that some members involved in delicate operations are concerned with
the protection they and their families will receive in the event that an
operation goes sour and they become subject to civil or criminal processes as a
result.”
Later in the
memo, the Commissioner advises that “where the member acts within the scope of
the direction or the expressly approved plan, he will be protected to the
greatest extent possible from criminal, quasi-criminal or civil responsibility.
In the event complete protection cannot be afforded, a solicitor will be
appointed to protect the member’s interests. The Force will accept
responsibility to pay any fine or reward levied against our member. In the
event of incarceration for a period of time, the member will be paid as usual
and on release will be employed again by the Force….Information contained
herein should be disseminated on a ‘need to know’ basis to the members of your
command.”
This
attitude of impunity for crimes committed riddles the RCMP like a cancer. It is
why the RCMP authorized the questioning of Canadian Abdullah Almalki, then detained
in Syria, knowing those questions would lead to his torture, without a thought
for his human rights, much less the complicity in torture provisions of the
Criminal Code of Canada or Canada’s legally binding obligations under the
Convention Against Torture.
Things are
no better at CSIS where, as investigative reporter Andrew Mitrovica pointed
out in his expose Covert Entry,
Canada’s spies have "routinely broken the law, treating the rights and
liberties of Canadians as no more than a nuisance...[it is] riddled by waste,
extravagance, laziness, nepotism, incompetence, corruption and
law-breaking." There is a culture of impunity at CSIS, whose agents often
refer to a Ways and Means Act: "if you have a way to get things done, the
means -- legal or not -- are justified."
Throwing
in Islam
Meanwhile,
less attention has been paid to pathetic attempts to throw Islamic references
into the mix, with desperate efforts to find a landlady or neighbor who can
testify to hearing loud “Islamic” recordings coming from the basement and the
RCMP’s bizarre contention that although there is no international connection,
the two appear to be “Al-Qaeda-inspired” and “self-radicalized,” two canards
that have little connection to reality. (While the Globe and Mail was invading the couple’s privacy, they reported on
finding amongst their books a copy of the Bible, George Orwell’s Animal Farm, and albums by Jethro Tull
and Nine Inch Nails.)
“She
was into the rave scene, and then she became goth, then she was a big activist,
then she was someone who worked out hardcore,” a friend of suspect Amanda Korody was quoted as saying. “Before he was a
proud Canadian,” said a friend of John Nuttall.
“Later he said, ‘All I care about is Allah’ and that Canadians and
Americans shouldn’t even be in Iraq or Afghanistan at all.”
Taken
together, these quotes represent a broad swath of Canadian opinion and
experience, with the underlying brush that now tars as tainted anyone
associated with such activities or beliefs. Yet, unlike some leaders in Canada’s diverse
Muslim community, no one from Canada’s goth or workout scenes has been called
upon to condemn the alleged acts or to engage in RCMP “community consultations”.
Nor is it likely that LA Fitness chains will now be infiltrated by undercover
agents to root out the discontented health nuts pedaling their sweaty way atop
an elliptical while reading rabble.ca columns on their ipads.
Continual
references to the two as apparent “converts” to Islam begs the question: what
religion were they following during previous years of mixed up lives, and why
has that not been part of media reporting? It also plays into the insidious idea
that, regardless of how many times Muslim community leaders plead that they are
loyal and peaceful Canadians, the “influence” of their religion is what is ultimately
dangerous, a powerful subtext that is repeated with each new scare headline
about the growth of Islam in Canada (now estimated at a whopping 3.2% of the
total population). In other words, it is bad enough when people born Muslims
are alleged to be involved in nefarious activities; it appears to be even worse
when “one of ours”, i.e., white Canadians, are sucked into the faith. Such pernicious
thinking underlined much of the Red Scare: it was not so much the danger of
Communists themselves as it was their ability to infect our precious bodily
fluids with their subversive thoughts, and before one knew it, former boy
scouts were marching against the bomb and for civil rights.
Mounties Want You to Like Them
Like
the scandal-plagued CSIS, the RCMP is desperate for good press these days, and
the language in their early July press conference verged on a plea to like them
on Facebook. “These arrests are another
example of the effectiveness of our Integrated National Security Enforcement
Team who worked tenaciously to prevent this plan from being carried out,” said
RCMP Assistant Commissioner James Malizia, perhaps a shout-out to CSIS, still
reeling from revelations in late May that they failed to inform the RCMP about
the Canadian navy’s Jeffrey Delisle selling secrets to the Russians.
But the RCMP love-in that followed the
arrests of two people in the alleged VIA Rail plot in April does not appear to
have been replicated here. (In April, NDP leader Tom Muclair discarded the
niceties of presumption of innocence when he led a standing ovation in the
House of Commons for the Mounties after he said, without offering any proof of
the allegations, that “I’d like to begin by
thanking law enforcement officials, as well as a brave religious leader from
the Toronto Muslim community who, as we learned yesterday, helped to prevent a
potentially devastating attack on Canadian soil.")
In a
final irony, the week before the Mounties rode
to the rescue to save Canadians from folks who allegedly planned to “produce
explosive devices designed to cause injury and death,” those very same weapons,
cluster bombs, were the subject of an ongoing attempt by Ottawa to water down
the Convention on Cluster Munitions in Senate hearings. Rather than
ratifying the convention as is, Ottawa has introduced a range of measures that,
as the Mennonite Central Committee points out, “Creates loopholes and exceptions on the use of cluster munitions
that undermine the Treaty as a comprehensive ban on an inhumane weapon;
omits many of the positive obligations of the Treaty, including the destruction
of stockpiles; the promotion of Treaty norms; the prohibition of investment in
cluster bomb production; and the provision of support for victims.”
Ultimately, a government that seeks to enable
state use of cluster munitions appears possibly involved in an effort to
encourage two hapless souls to build such a bomb, then arrest the couple as a
notch in the war on terror, and convince Canadians that the authorities have
decent human values at their core. Such logic would appear, in the words of a
song in Mr. Nuttall’s Jethro Tull collection, to be thick as a brick.
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