Friday, October 25, 2013

Sorry Europe, The Second Oldest Profession is Here to Stay, plus France24 video

Sorry Europe, We're Still Spying
by Christopher Dickey October 25, 2013 01:00 PM EDT
European leaders are outraged at the NSA program but the spying will continue, says Christopher Dickey.

France24 Video: The World this Week - 25 October 2013
National dialogue getting underway in Tunisia to head off popular discontent, Obama has some explaining to do as it's revealed the NSA has spied on more than 30 world leaders and French football go on strike against higher taxes, all that and more on this week's show.

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

"Calling Captain Crunch" - Beirut, Bombings, and Memory

I just published a column about the 30-year anniversary of the bombing of the Marine barracks in Lebanon.

A decade ago, just after the invasion of Iraq, I published this column about the 20-year anniversary of the blowing up of the U.S. Embassy in Beirut. I would like to include a link to the piece in the Newsweek archives, but for the moment they appear to have disappeared in the transition from one owner of the magazine to another.



Shadowland: Calling Captain Crunch

How Aftershocks From The Bombing Of The U.S. Embassy In Lebanon 20 Years Ago Are Being Felt In Iraq Today

By Christopher Dickey | Newsweek Web Exclusive

Apr 17, 2003


I'd like to talk to Captain Crunch, if anybody knows where he is. Last I heard, he was on the graveyard shift, working as a cop in California. But I figure he'd have some things to tell us about Iraq as massive victory gives way to messy occupation.

He was in Nam with the Marines. And Central America for the CIA. And Lebanon in 1983, after that adventure turned so bad. The people who call him Crunch, the very few people, are ones who remember him from there.

It will be 20 years ago tomorrow that the U.S. Embassy in Beirut was blown up, a footnote for the public, but a watershed in the secret history of the Middle East. More than 50 people were killed, including 17 Americans. At the time (what sheltered lives we led back then!) it was the worst terrorist attack ever perpetrated against the United States, and the first suicide bombing. Eight of the dead Americans were with the CIA, and Crunch was sent by the Agency to figure out what the hell happened. By the time the investigation was terminated it had cost him his job, his reputation and put him on the road to the graveyard shift.

Some good books have touched on the embassy bombing. David Ignatius's worldly-wise first novel, "Agents of Innocence," ex-CIA agent Bob Baer's best-selling "See No Evil" and Ted Gup's "The Book of Honor," which describes the way a new kind of terror encroached on old illusions. "After that day in April 1983, the term 'diplomatic immunity' had a different, almost anachronistic ring," Gup writes. "The violence of the world would no longer stop at the embassy door or respect the lives of those engaged in representing nations ... No amount of protection could fend off a terrorist willing to sacrifice his own life to take the lives of others. It was often observed that the United States had to be vigilant all the time, but the terrorist only had to get lucky once." (Six months later, another suicide bomber blew up the U.S. Marines barracks near Beirut airport, killing 241. And four months after that, the Americans pulled out of Lebanon for good.)

Yet none of those books told Crunch's story, and from what I know of it, it's a tale with plenty of relevance today. Because the same players who hated us in Lebanon are at work in Iraq--Syrians, Iranians, Muslim zealots and cynical foreign-intelligence services--and they could target us there, too. That's one reason the Bush administration is sending out so many warnings just now, especially to Damascus. Forget the issues you hear about on the news. Everybody out here--at least every old timer who remembers the disintegration of Lebanon, the invasion by Israel, the introduction of American troops and the way they were slaughtered--understands the implicit message behind all these new threats from Washington: "Don't even think about doing to us in Baghdad what you did to us in Beirut."

But who really was the enemy 20 years ago? And who is the enemy now? That's the hardest thing of all things to know, because the Mideast is not a place where you're "either with us or against us." "Your friends are just as unreliable as your enemies," says Robert Dillon, who was the U.S. ambassador when the embassy was blown. Everything is situational, and Bob Baer got it just about right when he said, "The Middle East is a place wired to obscure the truth."

When I first came to the region in 1985, just two years after the bombing, I had this notion that if you gathered enough string on the Beirut bombing you could actually start to make some sense of the Middle East's many violent mysteries. But the more string I've gathered, the more tangled it's become.

My idea was to eventually write a book modeled loosely on Thornton Wilder's novel "The Bridge of San Luis Rey." It would start with one terrible moment and discover how a small group of people came to be in that place at that time. In this case, spies and soldiers, diplomats and terrorists. So I interviewed old Agency hands, and families, and witnesses and survivors, tracing the lives and the careers of the dead. One of those killed was Bob Ames, a former college basketball star who played for the good fathers at LaSalle, converted to Catholicism, married the daughter of a Navy officer and joined the CIA. He was, quite literally, All-American. And yet he was the secret connection between the CIA and the most bloodstained factions of the PLO at a time when, officially, there was no connection at all.

Another was Jim Lewis, a Green Beret who served in Vietnam and joined the Agency there, then stayed behind when the rest of America's troops were pulled out. When the south fell, he was captured and thrown in the notorious "Hanoi Hilton" at Sontay. Because of his cover as a consular officer, he doesn't figure in most histories of the conflict. But he was the last known American prisoner of war to be released by the Vietnamese. When he married, he chose a Vietnamese woman as his wife. And on that same early afternoon in April 1983, she was working in the Beirut Station with him. They are buried now, head to head, in Arlington Cemetery.

I talked to the family of the Marine who was vaporized at the door of the embassy. And to the woman who was taken for dead when she was first dragged from the rubble. I saw, many times, the political officer who survived, and became an ambassador, but who always kept the same Iwo Jima Memorial calendar on his wall that he had in Beirut on the day of the bombing. You can still make out the faint outlines of his splattered blood on the page. He's now working on the New Iraq. I wonder if he has that calendar with him in Baghdad.

And I talked to many, many Lebanese--soldiers, bagmen, spymasters and informers--from that country's infinitely intricate world of shadows. They are the kind of men who will tell you with complete nonchalance that a car bomb is easy to make, the difficult thing is to prepare the driver. Or that torture is a tricky thing, because "if the subject is telling the truth, how do you know?"

But it wasn't until after I learned some of the details of Crunch's case that the death threats were directed at me.

Here are the broad outlines:

There was a suspect who died in a Lebanese prison, tortured to death. Crunch testified he wasn't there when it happened. Wasn't even in Lebanon. But Director of Central Intelligence Bill Casey tried to blame him, and forced him out. Not, of course, because Casey cared about the dead suspect, or the methods used to make him confess, but because Casey wanted to distance himself and his agency from the whole affair. It had gotten too sordid, too complicated, even for the CIA. The threads leading from the blast site incriminated too many governments. Because Elias Nimr, the man who died, was not just another bomber. He appears to have been a double-, a triple-, a geometric-multiple-agent. He was a Christian Lebanese intelligence chief who was trained by the Israelis but allegedly worked secretly for the Syrians as paymaster for agents from Iran. Where did his loyalties really lie? Who knew about the embassy bombing? And did they know in advance? Every answer was a problem. And still is.

"Nobody wants to know about this," said one of Nimr's buddies in the Lebanese Forces. The speaker was one of the men who took part in the 1982 massacres of Palestinian women and children refugees at Sabra and Shatila, a militiaman who waded through blood for years, and made money at it. He owned a little restaurant in Paris when I met him. "If you ask these questions in Lebanon, you will be killed," he said, looking me in the eye. "And nobody will know who did it. And nobody will care."

Wherever I mentioned the name of the dead suspect, whether interviewing an ex-president of Lebanon or one of the State Department's top men or the agent and analyst who handled the Lebanon file for Israel, the name of Elias Nimr put a sudden chill on the conversation. And they would get up and leave the room, then return. Or make a sudden phone call. Or order coffee. They knew who he was. And the name made them nervous.

In July 1985, a Lebanese investigating magistrate blamed Nimr for the embassy bombing. But some of Nimr's old colleagues say he was just a victim of bloody interservice rivalries among Lebanon's covert warlords and had nothing to do with the case. And Bob Baer dismisses the Lebanese investigation as "a dog's breakfast of unsupported and politically motivated accusations." He says "no one paid any attention to it." Baer himself concluded, in his last months at the Agency, that "Iran ordered it and a Fatah network [part of Yasir Arafat's organization] carried it out," letting the Syrians off the hook.

The most difficult questions, however, are not just about who ordered the operation, but about who knew what, and when. Those have never been answered with any certainty, and now they probably never will be. The lingering mystery around the bombing implicated everyone, so no one really wants to clear it up. Of the six men who were arrested by the Lebanese, Nimr died under interrogation and the five others eventually were released by the Syrians, who've run all of Lebanon since 1990 with tacit U.S. approval.

In a sense, Crunch was lucky he was forced out of the Agency when he was. The CIA station chief who oversaw the investigation when he left was William Buckley, who was kidnapped and tortured to death by some of the same men who may have been linked to the bombing. At least Crunch got out alive.

Maybe it's still true that "nobody wants to know about this." Certainly it's a complicated past. But then, we've just entered a very complicated future. So Crunch, if you're out there, give me a call. I think we've got a lot to talk about.


----

Post Script: 

I have indeed been in touch with Crunch since this column was written. His name is Keith Hall and he came out of the shadows to participate in various projects, among them a video called "Heroes Under Fire: Captain Crunch," for which this is a trailer.


In the meantime, Pulitzer-Prize-winning biographer Kai Bird has written a book about Bob Ames, The Good Spy, to be published next Spring. I am sure it will be worth reading.

What We Didn't Learn from the Beirut Bombing 30 Years Ago

We Learned Nothing
by Christopher Dickey October 23, 2013 06:27 AM EDT
30 years after the Beirut bombing killed 241 members of the U.S. military, Christopher Dickey says we have learned nothing.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/10/23/30-years-after-the-beirut-bombing-we-have-learned-nothing.html

Terrorism Is the Enemy of God
by Christopher Dickey October 22, 2013 05:45 AM EDT
Could the death of two Christian schoolgirls stem the tide of violence in Egypt? Christopher Dickey reports on the killings and a hopeful precedent from Egypt's past.

Also:

Audio: Does the US spy on all its friends? Now, it's France's turn to complain
An interview with PRI's The World, 21 October 2013
http://pri.org/stories/2013-10-21/does-us-spy-all-its-friends-now-its-frances-turn-complain


Of Interest: Wolves at Westgate - a stunning special report by KTN TV in Kenya about the attack on the Nairobi mall in September.
http://christopherdickey.blogspot.fr/2013/10/wolves-at-westgate-stunning-special.html?spref=tw

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Wolves at Westgate: A stunning special report on Nairobi mall attack from KTN TV in Kenya



This special hour-long report that aired over the weekend makes a compelling case that the four terrorists who carried out the attack on the Westgate Mall in Nairobi a month ago may well have escaped that same night, and the so-called "siege" of the following days was, first, the result of conflicts between the Kenyan police and military -- including a shootout -- and then cover for looting by Kenyan troops. All this is corroborated circumstantially but persuasively by analysis of the surveillance videos.

The footage shows the way scores of bystanders were evacuated through a store room at the Nakumatt supermarket. Then, hours later, it shows the four killers calmly drinking water, chatting and saying prayers. One exits through the same door. Then one tilts the surveillance camera toward the ceiling. And that's the last that's seen of them.

The terrorists themselves are identified in this report citing "security sources." But the IDs conflict with other recent reports, including those focusing on a Norwegian of Somali descent named Hassan Abdi Dhuhulow. The KTN documentary names the man seen in the videos wearing a  black shirt or jacket, the presumed leader of the operation, as a supposed Sudanese national called Abu Bara al-Sudani.  Another killer is named as Omar Naban, a Somali national. The third is said to be Kataab al Qeni, an "Al-Qaeda trained Somali national." And finally, Omer al-Mogadish, a United States citizen of Somali descent. (Spellings are phonetic, based on the video. Al-Sudani and Al-Mogadish both sound like noms de guerre.)

CCTV from a branch of Barclay's Bank in Nairobi, taken earlier in September, shows a man identified as Abdikadir Haret Mohamed, who withdrew money to buy a car for the terrorists and purchased telephone SIM cards that they used, and which they left in the car when they went into the mall. One of Abdikadir's phones was linked to a woman named Suleika Hussein, who was arrested on her way to Mombasa after the attack. But there is no sign that any woman was involved in the actual assault.

Sunday, October 20, 2013

The Norway Connection to the Nairobi Mall Attack, and a short video clip of a surreal interview with a former hostage in Syria.

Nairobi Mall Attack: Al Shabaab's Scandinavian Connection
By Christopher Dickey, Oct 19, 2013 3:30 PM EDT
The first suspect in last month's terror attack at a Nairobi shopping mall comes from Norway – and may be linked to Al-Qaeda. Christopher Dickey reports.
A brief video clip from my 10 October 2013 interview
Photographer Jonathan Alpeyrie, who was recently held captive in Syria for 81 days, recounts the surreal story of being forced to teach a Hawaiian-swimsuit-clad local militia leader how to swim. 'I was holding him like a baby for an hour,' says Alpeyrie, 'but by the end he could swim.'
http://thebea.st/16UybQq

Teaching a Syrian Warlord to Swim ... Literally

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Recent stories on Murder, Prizes, Heroes, Hostages, Mullahs, and Monarchies

Murder Most Rare
by Christopher Dickey October 16, 2013 11:59 AM EDT
New York's homicide rate is at a record low. So why are the cops being treated as villains? Christopher Dickey talks to police chief Ray Kelly.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/10/16/murder-most-rare-an-exclusive-interview-with-nypd-commissioner-ray-kelly.html

The Nobel Prize Goes to Who?
by Christopher Dickey October 11, 2013 08:33 AM EDT
The Nobel committee unexpectedly handed the award to an anti–chemical weapons group....
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/10/11/the-novel-peace-prize-goes-to-who.html

What Makes a Hero?
by Christopher Dickey October 10, 2013 07:45 PM EDT
Is heroism defined on the battlefield, the home front—or in everyday life? Christopher Dickey reports from the Hero Summit on three different leaders' definitions of a hero.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/the-hero-project/articles/2013/10/10/what-makes-a-hero-gen-john-allen-anchee-min-and-david-brooks-discuss.html

Abducted in Syria: My conversation with Jonathan Alpeyrie about 81 days as a hostage, the rebels he met, and swimming lessons ... October 10, 2013

Khamenei Eyes U.S. Shutdown
by Christopher Dickey October 06, 2013 09:22 AM EDT
Hardline Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei may be a problem for Obama's nuclear negotiations with Iran, but Congress is an even bigger one, saysChristopher Dickey.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/10/06/iran-s-supreme-leader-ali-khamenei-eyes-u-s-shutdown-expresses-doubt-over-nuclear-negotiations.html

The Last Arab Safe Haven
by Christopher Dickey October 05, 2013 12:05 AM EDT
The kingdom is the safest place in a dangerous neighborhood—but for how long?

Monday, October 14, 2013

Reading from The Complete Poems of James Dickey

Christopher Dickey (photo), Ward Briggs and Ron Rash read from The Complete Poems of James Dickeyat the Southern Festival of Books over the weekend.

Humanities Tennessee made an audio recording of the reading, which we hope to share with you soon.

Monday, October 07, 2013

For Lewis King: The Last of the Deliverance Generation

These lines may not have been written about Edward Lewis King, Jr., nor for him, but they are of him, I think. Without him, James Dickey might never have found the river, might never have gone on the night hunt:

I stand in my own coming sleep,
A tall spirit ready to wind
LIke a ball of bright thread the wild river
All night around the still form
That shall lie exposed in the open,
Sustained at the heart of the danger
I have passed in the thickets this night
Which shall keep me safe till I wake
   And rise, and fall away.

Rest in peace, Lewis, the last of the generation of Deliverance, who died on September 12, in Sautee, Georgia.

http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poetrymagazine/browse/99/4#!/20588644/1

Recent articles: Khamenei and Congress--Which is the biggest obstacle to nuke negotiations?; Jordan -- The Last Safe Haven; Roma Worries in France; Obama Policy -- Make Threats, Not War

Khamenei Eyes U.S. Shutdown
by Christopher Dickey October 06, 2013 09:22 AM EDT
Hardline Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei may be a problem for Obama's nuclear negotiations with Iran, but Congress is an even bigger one, says Christopher Dickey.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/10/06/iran-s-supreme-leader-ali-khamenei-eyes-u-s-shutdown-expresses-doubt-over-nuclear-negotiations.html

The Last Arab Safe Haven
by Christopher Dickey October 05, 2013 12:05 AM EDT
The kingdom is the safest place in a dangerous neighborhood—but for how long?
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/10/05/jordan-the-last-arab-safe-haven.html

Gypsies: Tramps and Thieves?
by Christopher Dickey, Alice Guilhamon October 04, 2013 05:45 AM EDT
The ugly debate over what to do about these transplants from Eastern Europe has divided a nation still grappling with its behavior during the Holocaust.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/10/04/roma-immigrants-have-set-france-on-edge.html

Obama's War By Other Means
by Christopher Dickey September 28, 2013 11:09 AM EDT
The historic phone call with Iran's president shows the threat of military action accomplishes a lot – as long as you don't use it.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/09/28/how-to-stop-iran-obama-s-war-by-other-means.html


Wednesday, October 02, 2013

Better Angels and Killer Angels: The Tea Party's Secessionist Roots


The Tea Party's "rule or ruin" fanaticism is remarkably familiar to those of us who've studied the years leading up to the American Civil War. Lloyd Green has written an informative piece about the secessionist roots of today's demagogues on The Daily Beast. I first touched on it in a column I wrote for Newsweek Online three years ago, which still seems relevant. I am posting the text here because Newsweek's archives are in transition. But it should also be available here.

Better Angels and Killer Angels 
By Christopher Dickey
President Barack Obama loves to quote the lyrical closing lines of Abraham Lincoln’s First Inaugural Address, calling on “the better angels of our nature” to overcome partisan hatreds and political divisions. Obama cited those words in his own inaugural proclamationand rested his hand on Lincoln’s Bible when he took the oath of office. He has come back to those angels again and again ever since. A search of Google and the White House Web site turns up half a dozen examples. He used the phrase to eulogize Ted Kennedy, to chide a would-be Quran burner in Florida, and to say goodbye to chief of staff Rahm Emanuel. Obama, it seems, sees better angels just about everywhere. Even as he traveled in India this week he talked about his efforts to live up to the example of Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King Jr., and, yes, Abraham Lincoln.
But in light of today’s real-world politics, Obama should think a little harder about the context in which Lincoln summoned those better angels on March 4, 1861. Led by South Carolina (now home to Sen. Jim DeMint), seven of 33 states had already seceded from the Union to form the Confederacy at that point. Only days before Lincoln took office, he had to sneak into Washington in the lonely hours before dawn because of an assassination plot. The month after his inauguration, the South fired on the federal garrison at Fort Sumter to begin the Civil War in earnest.
If, in the end, Lincoln did manage to hold the Union together, it was not because of the better angels of human nature, but because he finally found the killer angels among his generals who could, and did, and at enormous cost, crush the secessionists.
These basic facts about a moment of history that Obama obviously holds dear are worth going over again right now because, in fact, the secessionists of 1860 are the ideological forebears of the Tea Party movement today. No, the United States is not on the verge of another violent breakup, not close at all, even if Tea Party icons like Gov. Rick Perry in Texas or some of Sarah Palin’s friends and relatives in Alaskamay toy with the notion of secession. But there is in American politics today a discourse of such cupidity, bigotry, and self-delusion about the role of government that it would have been familiar to anyone following the rhetoric of the Southern “fire-eaters” pushing the country toward a conflagration 150 years ago.
As Douglas R. Egerton points out in his fascinating new history, Year of Meteors: Stephen Douglas, Abraham Lincoln, and the Election That Brought on the Civil War, the radical secessionists were willing to do just about anything, including destroy their own national party, in order to get their way. “They planned to ruin so they could rule,” writes Egerton.
The rhetoric in 1860, as now, was essentially about throwing off the burden of federal authority, getting rid of the tariffs and taxes Washington imposed, and protecting private property from the depredations of central government. There was one essential difference back then, of course: the private property in question in 1860 was human. But the fire-eaters of the Old South never put the emphasis on “human,” they always put it on “property,” and they pointed to their (white man’s) rights enshrined in Article I, Article IV, and the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution, which declared no person can be “deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.” If this meant, perversely, that human chattel who were not considered persons could be torn away from their families, beaten, raped, and killed at the whim of their owners, and often were, that was less important to the secessionists than a strict interpretation of America’s founding document. They might have talked about states’ rights and the right to liberty, and many did then, as many do now, but the core freedom defended by those activists of 1860 was the freedom to enslave black people and to spread their racist system of forced labor across the continent.
What is striking about Lincoln’s First Inaugural Address is that he actually accepted much of this argument. While appealing to the better angels of human nature, he openly compromised with the worst instincts of society and reached out to offer reconciliation with the most violent political currents in American life. He did not speak out against slavery where it existed, only against its spread. Then he called on those better angels to hold the Union together. It didn’t work.
But Lincoln had an ally then of a kind that Obama could use now. Lincoln’s old rival from Illinois, Stephen Douglas, whose party had been split by the fire-eaters and whom Lincoln defeated at the polls, became a wise and vital friend. In the months between the inauguration and Douglas’s early death in June 1861, the “little giant,” as he was known, spent many long hours talking to Lincoln about how best to preserve the Union—and compromise wasn’t part of the picture.
When word of the attack on Sumter reached Washington, Douglas immediately went to the White House, where he found Lincoln alone at his desk. As Egerton writes, Lincoln confided that he planned to call up 75,000 volunteers to fight for the Union. “Make it 200,000,” Douglas shot back. He spent the few remaining weeks of his life rallying his supporters to back the federal government, calling for the recapture of Sumter and the earliest possible invasion of the Confederate states. “You do not know the dishonest purposes of those men as I do,” he told Lincoln.
What both of those great politicians understood by then was that there may be better angels in the nature of some people, but there are others who are willing to weaken, even destroy a nation to serve their own self-righteous self-interest, and they will do it in the name of the Constitution. If Obama hasn’t learned that yet, perhaps it’s time he did.
--
Christopher Dickey’s history of diplomacy and espionage in the Civil War era will be published in 2015. He is also the author most recently of Securing the City: Inside America's Best Counterterror Force—The NYPDchosen by The New York Times as a notable book of 2009. 

Monday, September 30, 2013

My latest: Obama's War by Other Means

Obama's War By Other Means
Sep 28, 2013 11:09 AM EDT
The historic phone call with Iran's president and the breakthrough deal on Syria show the threat of military action accomplishes a lot – as long as you don't go through with it.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/09/28/how-to-stop-iran-obama-s-war-by-other-means.html

Friday, September 27, 2013

My latest articles for the Beast about the UN, Iran, and Obama; and my last column for Newsweek

Beginning next week, Newsweek will be run by its new owners at International Business Times. I am sure that under the leadership of editor James Impoco they will turn out a brilliant magazine on the Web and on news stands in many languages in many parts of the world.

Over the last two years, I have had a great time working for both Newsweek and The Daily Beast. With its terrific mix of serious news, sharp analysis and wicked fun, the Beast is not only a vibrant publication to read, it's a very exciting place to write and report. Tina Brown may be moving on, but she did a wonderful job creating the site and infusing it with her energetic, ever-inquisitive spirit. John Avlon and Deidre Depke, who've taken the reins, are solid pros with their own brilliance. So the Beast is where I'll stay.

I'll continue to live and work in Paris and to cover a large swathe of the globe. I hope you will continue to follow me on our site -- www.thedailybeast.com -- and on social media. I will also continue to send out links to my stories, my television appearances and other publications on my personal mailing list.

My latest for the Beast:

Iran-U.S.: Great Expectations
by Christopher Dickey September 27, 2013 12:24 AM EDT
Diplomatic breakthroughs with Russia and Iran mark a turning point in the Mideast. By Christopher Dickey.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/09/27/suddenly-great-expectations-for-iran-u-s-relations.html

Obama's American Exceptionalism
by Christopher Dickey September 24, 2013 01:11 PM EDT
In a speech at the United Nations, the president said America is 'exceptional' and must 'stand up for the interests of all.' By Christopher Dickey.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/09/24/obama-america-is-special.html

Up to Speed on 'Hell Week'
by Christopher Dickey September 23, 2013 12:45 PM EDT
As world leaders descend on New York for the U.N. summit, three major storylines to watch.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/09/23/up-to-speed-3-things-to-know-about-new-york-s-hell-week.html

and

My last Better World column for Newsweek:
Internet Troll Wars; Our Inner Geometry; Nanotube Revolution; Grade Inflation Iniquities; and Subversive Soaps

Most of my recent television appearances talking about Syria and about the Nairobi shopping mall siege are viewable at www.christopherdickey.blogspot.com

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Tunisia's in Trouble: My Conversation w/ President Moncef Marzouki at the Council on Foreign Relations Today



There are 13 minutes of empty chairs on the stage, then the conversation begins. This is an excerpt of the transcript, the entirety of which will be posted soon on CFR.org.


            DICKEY: … What we want to talk about today is a little bit about the Arab Spring, which was launched in Tunisia, and where things are going now, that the Arab Spring looks like -- well, looks like Hell in a lot of countries.  Sometimes when I look at what happened in Tunisia, it's a little bit like --  -- I think most of you remember Slovenia in the Balkans, they broke away from Yugoslavia, came away more or less safe and sound, and everything else fell apart and went to Hell.

            Is Tunisia going to remain safe and sound, given all the turmoil that exists now? 

            MARZOUKI:  Of course, this is what I hope.  But, you know, Tunisia is not an island.  And when you have -- on your border, you have a country like Libya, where, you know, the level of violence is extremely high and when you have what -- the situation in Egypt, and when you have also the situation in Syria.  Syria is becoming an internal problem, because we have a lot of young people going to Syria, more than 500 jihadis, Tunisian, 500 Tunisian jihadis are in Syria and we're very afraid that, when they come back to Tunisia, it will be the same thing that happened with Algeria.  You probably know that in the '80s, a lot of Algerians went to Afghanistan and then they come back to Algeria, and this was the beginning of Hell in Algeria, too.

            So we are doing in best in Tunisia, you know, to control the situation.  We think -- we think that we have -- we think that we have a wise population.  We think that we have, you know -- of course, we do have disciplined and professional army.  We think that we are a middle-class society, et cetera, et cetera.  But, you know, nobody can be sure of what could happen.

            Last year, I was here, and I remember that I was -- I was asked many, many questions about the outcome of the Arab Spring.  I was very optimistic at that time.  I wouldn't say that I am now pessimistic.  I would say like I said yesterday that I am pessi-optimistic, because...

            (LAUGHTER)

            ... because (inaudible) the situation is much more complex and much more difficult than I thought.  Yes, we can -- we will probably -- we can achieve the transition in Tunisia, but, once again, we are not alone, and when we see what's happening in Libya, in Egypt, in Syria, we can be a little bit upset.

            But, once again, I have to say, have to repeat that you cannot say, well, it's a failure or it's a success.  We need time.  You know, you cannot say that the revolution is a success or a failure before, let's say, a decade.  When you think that French revolution, for instance, they had to wait more than 70 years before having the Third Republic, which was probably the success of the French revolution, so you cannot accept Arab -- or any country, you know, to achieve the goals of revolution in just two or three years.

            So we had to be -- we had to be very careful.  I'm very careful, but I think that the outcome would be quite different from a country to another.  And that Tunisia -- I wouldn't say you -- you can bet on Tunisia, but I'm still confident that we could -- we could succeed.  But, of course, nobody knows.

            DICKEY:  Wow.  



Talking Nairobi and the Methodology of Terror with Tamron Hall on MSNBC

Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Monday, September 23, 2013

The UN Brings Hell Week to New York (and a Saudi Prince blasts the US-Russia Deal on Syria)

Up to Speed: 3 Things to Know About New York's 'Hell Week'Sep 23, 2013 12:45 PM EDT
Taxi drivers dread it. Diplomats depend on it. As world leaders descend on New York for the U.N. summit, Christopher Dickey on three major storylines to watch.

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Alleged Gunmen in Nairobi Siege Come from USA, UK, Finland, Kenya and Somalia

These names have not been confirmed independently and may be part of a disinformation campaign by Al-Shabaab or others. But the hometowns are particularly interesting:

According to HSM_Press2 twitter:

sayid nuh 25 y.o from kismayu somalia. #westgate #AlShabaab
Expand
HSM_PRESS OFFICE @HSM_PRESS2 12m
ismael guled 23 y.o from helsinki finland. #westgate #AlShabaab
Expand
HSM_PRESS OFFICE @HSM_PRESS2 16m

zaki jama caraale 20 y.o from hargeisa somalia. #westgate #AlShabaab
Expand
HSM_PRESS OFFICE @HSM_PRESS2 17m

ahmed nasir shirdoon 24 y.o from london UK. #westgate #AlShabaab
Expand
HSM_PRESS OFFICE @HSM_PRESS2 18m

qasim said mussa 22 y.o garissa KE. #westgate #AlShabaab
Expand
HSM_PRESS OFFICE @HSM_PRESS2 21m

gen mustafe noorudiin. 27 y.o from kansas city. MO. #westgate #alshabaab
Expand
HSM_PRESS OFFICE @HSM_PRESS2 25m

abdifatah osman keenadiid. 24 y.o from minneapolis. #westgate #alshabaab #names
Expand
HSM_PRESS OFFICE @HSM_PRESS2 26m

ahmed mohamed isse 22 y.o native, from saint paul minnesota, #alshabaab #Westgate

My latest on: Nairobi and The Return of Terror; Better World Ideas; Syria developments; and ... Toddlers in Tiaras

The Daily Beast: The Return of Terror September 22, 2013 10:30 AM EDT
The Nairobi shopping mall siege holds lessons for America, but who will listen?
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/09/22/the-return-of-terror-lessons-of-the-nairobi-shopping-mall-siege.html

The Daily Beast: He Did It. Now What? by Christopher Dickey September 16, 2013 12:41 PM EDT
A new United Nations report confirms a chemical-weapons attack in Syria.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/09/16/u-n-s-syria-report-reveals-what-we-already-knew.html

"Better World" ideas:

NEWSWEEK Slow Motion by Christopher Dickey September 20, 2013 05:45 AM EDT
What chipmunk vision can teach us about our own eyesight.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2013/09/20/with-chipmunk-vision-there-s-more-than-meets-the-eye.html

NEWSWEEK
BRIC-ing Bad by Christopher Dickey September 20, 2013 05:45 AM EDT
Are the BRIC nations not all they're cracked up to be?
http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2013/09/20/the-disappointing-performance-of-the-bric-countries.html

NEWSWEEK
The Decline of Violence by Christopher Dickey September 20, 2013 05:45 AM EDT
The world is becoming safer. But why?
http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2013/09/20/steven-pinker-and-the-global-decline-of-violence.html

NEWSWEEK
Got Rhythm? by Christopher Dickey September 20, 2013 05:45 AM EDT
How music could help kids be stronger readers.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2013/09/20/the-surprising-connection-between-rhythm-and-reading.html

NEWSWEEK
It's Electric! by Christopher Dickey September 20, 2013 05:45 AM EDT
Muck-dwelling microbes can actually be a source of power.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2013/09/20/microbial-batteries-use-microbes-to-create-electricity.html

and, for a change of pace:

The Daily Beast: Toddlers Denied Tiaras by Christopher Dickey September 19, 2013 01:10 PM EDT