Archive for the ‘Democracy’ Category

Russia’s Attacks on Democracy Aren’t Only a Problem for America – The Nation.

Russian President Vladimir Putin. (AP Photo / Pavel Golovkin)

Virtually all of the debates over the intelligence communitys conclusion that Russia waged a multifaceted campaign to influence the 2016 election look at the issue through a prism of US domestic politics or the bilateral relationship between the United States and Russia. Thats understandable, given what a shocking outcome the election produced. But it also sidesteps the troubling reality that the Kremlins attempts to influence other countries electoral processes have been a problem across Europe for over a decade, and that our intelligence agencies werent alone in sounding the alarm. And thats a serious problem for those who are dismissive of the evidence of Russian intervention. Russias effort in our election may have been its most dramaticand arguably its most fruitfulbut evidence suggests it was hardly an isolated event.

The US intelligence communitys conclusions about how Russia intervened in our elections fits a pattern that European analysts say dates back to 2007, when Vladimir Putin told the Munich Security Conference that American dominance in a unipolar world was pernicious, and that NATOs expansion represents a serious provocation that reduces the level of mutual trust. The Kremlin saw a pressing need to confront a series of anti-Russian color revolutions in the former Soviet states during the early 2000s. Sebastian Rotella reported for ProPublica that Russian leaders believed the United States was using soft power means, such as the media and diplomacy, to cause trouble in Russias domain. The Russians decided to fight fire with fire, as they saw it. USA Today international-affairs correspondent Oren Dorell reported that Russian sabotage of Western computer systems started that same year. It was also in 2007 that Russians began experimenting with information warfare in Estonia, followed soon after by attempts at disruption in Georgia, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Finland, Bosnia and Macedonia, according to The Washington Posts Dana Priest and Michael Birnbaum.

Priest and Birnbaum reported that Russia has not hidden its liking for information warfare. The chief of the general staff, Valery Gerasimov, wrote in 2013 that informational conflict is a key part of war. Actual military strength is only the final tool of a much subtler war-fighting strategy, he said. Earlier this year, Russias Ministry of Defense announced that it had established a new cyberwarfare unit.

Classified documents from Macedonias intelligence agency that were leaked to The Guardian showed that Russian spies and diplomats have been involved in a nearly decade-long effort to spread propaganda and provoke discord in Macedonia. That was just one part of Russian effort to step up its influence all across the countries of the former Yugoslavia. The Kremlins goal is to stop them from joining NATO and to pry them away from western influence, reports The Guardian.

British officials say they believe that in 2015, Russia interfered directly in UK elections with a series of attempted cyber hacks and clandestine online activity, according to The Independent. German intelligence officials say that large amounts of data were seized during a May 2015 cyber attack on the Bundestagwhich has previously been blamed on APT28, a Russian hacking group, according to Reuters. In July, Germanys interior secretary, Thomas de Maiziere, and Hans-Georg Maassen, the countrys spy chief, warned that Russia will start publishing compromising material on German MPsin order to destabilise elections in September, according to Andrew Rettman at EUobserver.

In May, NSA Director Michael Rogers testified under oath before Congress that American officials had found evidence of Russian involvement in the recent French elections, which they shared with their intelligence officers in Paris. We had talked to our French counterparts, he said, and gave them a heads-up: Look, were watching the Russians, were seeing them penetrate some of your infrastructure.

The list of countries targeted by Russia goes on. Earlier this year, Dutch Interior Minister Ronald Plasterk announced that all votes cast in the March election in the Netherlands would be hand-counted because of software problems and fears of Russian hacking, according to Politicos European edition. The Norwegian Police Security Service informed that countrys Labour Party that it had been hacked, and Norwegian media reported that the group behind the cyber-attack was the same one that breached the DNCs computers last year. Russia is believed to have been involved in similar attacks throughout what it views as its sphere of influence.

Some skeptics have seized on reports that French and German intelligence officials were unable to confirm that Russia was behind recent hacks in those countries. But officials in both countries treat Russian attacks as an active and ongoing threat to their democracies. And Mark Galeotti, head of the Centre for European Security at the Institute of International Relations Prague, says that while the intelligence agencies were not able to establish direct ties to Russia, his sources in the French and German intelligence remain confident that they were behind the hacks. In any cyber case its very difficult to be absolutely conclusive, because even if its coming out of a machine thats situated in Russia, it could have been controlled by someone in North Korea or China or Belgium for all we know, and youd really need a forensic examination of the machine where the attack originated. And while people expect the kind of standards of proof that one would expect in a court of lawproof beyond a reasonable doubtthere comes a time when you have to talk about the balance of probabilities. Intelligence agencies very rarely rely on single-point informationa single source. When intelligence agencies say, Were pretty confident its X, its because they have alternative sources, whether its signal intelligence or human intelligence, inclining them in the same direction.

In the case of the recent US election hacks, it wasnt US intelligence agencies that originally picked up the scent. According to The Guardians Luke Harding, Stephanie Kirchgaessner, and Nick Hopkins, it was the GCHQthe UKs version of the National Security Agencythat first became aware in late 2015 of suspicious interactions between figures connected to Trump and known or suspected Russian agents. Then, as the Guardian piece outlines, Over the next six months, until summer 2016, a number of western agencies shared further information on contacts between Trumps inner circle and Russians. That included intelligence officials from Germany, Estonia, Poland, Canada, and Australia. According to one source, French and Dutch spooks also passed on signals intelligence to their American counterparts.

Analysts say that the Kremlins motives are relatively straightforward. As its postCold War hard power declined, Vladimir Putins government has pursued its interests by stepping up its cyber-warfare and disinformation campaigns in order to divide, destabilize, and demoralize its geopolitical opponents.

According to Paul Goble, a former official with the State Department and the CIA who now teaches at the Institute of World Politics in Washington, DC, Putin doesnt believe in democracy, and he wants to send the message to other people that democracy is a system that outside forces can manipulate, and therefore cast doubt on its legitimacy. A related goal is to weaken the transnational political, economic, and military institutions that have been the basis of American foreign policy for a very long time. The weakening or destruction of NATO, the weakening or destruction of the EU, dividing Europe from the United Statesthis has been Russias goal since the creation of NATO.

Galeotti agrees, telling me that when Vladimir Putin looks at these international institutions, what he sees are institutions created by the West, to serve the Wests interests. When Putin talks about sovereignty, his notion is nobody gets to tell us what to do within our own borders. Galeotti doesnt think Putin has a grand agenda, so much as he wants to be able to opt out of the post-1945 world order. With an economy roughly the size of Spains, Russias no longer a superpower, but, says Galeotti, Putin is clearly committed to making Russia great again, and one way to assert Russian power is to get everyone else divided and weakened. If you cant make yourself stronger, at least you can try to make others weaker.

Natasha Kuhrt, a Russia specialist at Kings College, London, is herself skeptical of claims that the Kremlin is pulling the strings of certain groups in certain countries. While she does believe that Russia has tried to influence other countries elections, she says that the media have overstated the impact. But she says the Russians have been very adept at exploiting anxieties about European integrationthe general trend of questioning certain values, lets say, partly for economic reasons and partly for other reasons. As for our election, Kuhrt adds that there is a kind of anti-Western discourse within Russia that is used mainly for domestic purposes. With most Russians living standards flat or in decline, the regimes legitimacy to a large extent rests on that now. So its also about showing what idiots Americans are for electing a buffoon like Trump.

Russia and the United States have attempted, and in many cases succeeded, to influence other countries electoral processes for the past hundred years. But analysts say the scale and sophistication of Russian attacks have taken this practice to a new level. Todays lightning-fast communications and low barriers of entry into online publishing represent a departure from the kind of influence campaigns countries waged in the past. Back in January, Max Fisher argued in a New York Times piece that our media are highly susceptible to being duped by dark PR campaigns, noting that while [r]eporters have always relied on sources who provide critical information for self-interested reasons, in 2016 the source was often Russias military intelligence agency, the G.R.U.operating through shadowy fronts who worked to mask that factand its agenda was to undermine the American presidential election.

US investigators are currently looking into whether Trump supporters and far-right websites coordinated with Moscow over the release of fake news, including stories implicating Clinton in murder or pedophilia, or paid to boost those stories on Facebook, according to Julian Borger at The Guardian. A Pew study released last year found that six in 10 Americans get news from social media, mostly from Facebook.

Here at home, the growing evidence that Russias intervention in our elections was only the most recent, and successful, example of an international campaign that dates back George W. Bushs presidency is a serious problem for those who dismiss or discount the US intelligence communitys findings.

For some on the left, including a number of voices at The Nation, the real story involves one or more of the following: Democrats hyping a story line in order to excuse their embarrassing loss to Donald Trump; Hillary Clinton loyalists defending their candidate from the same charge; rogue elements within our intelligence agencies either fabricating or exaggerating Russian involvement to undermine Trumps legitimacy after he compared them to Nazis, or those same elements of the deep stateinveterate cold warriorssabotaging Trumps efforts to bring about dtente with Moscow.

But these narratives dont hold up when viewed in a larger geopolitical context. Its unlikely that in 2015 British intelligence tipped off US spy agencies about those suspicious contacts because it wanted to absolve Hillary Clinton for her future loss to Donald Trump. The Dutch arent interested in what lessons the Democratic Party took away from their defeat, nor are the Lithuanians invested in the idea that Bernie would have won. And its highly unlikely that Germany, which was torn apart during the Cold War, is chomping on the bit to launch a new one.

In recent months, one intelligence official after another has testified before Congress that the Russians will take the lessons they learned in the US election last year, and in previous campaigns elsewhere, and use them again in the future. Last week, CNN reported that, emboldened by the lack of a significant retaliatory response to its attack on the 2016 election, Russian spies are ramping up their intelligence-gathering efforts in the US, according to current and former US intelligence officials who say they have noticed an increase since the election. According to the report, US intelligence and law enforcement agencies have detected an increase in suspected Russian intelligence officers entering the US under the guise of other business. Former director of national intelligence James Clapper warned on CNN about potential Russian intervention in the 2018 midterm elections. They are going to stretch the envelope as far as they can to collect information and I think largely if I can use the military phrase, prep the battlefield for 2018 elections, he said.

The fact that theres a significant amount of skepticism on both the left and the right is blunting calls to prepare for the next attack. The president has hesitated to even acknowledge that this is a serious issue. And, while a recent analysis by the Brennan Center for Justice found that just $400 million invested in replacing paperless voting machines with machines that read paper ballotsless than the Pentagon spent last year on military bandswould help secure our election infrastructure, no such funding is in the works. In fact, in late June Republicans on the House Appropriations Committee voted to defund the Election Assistance Commission, which Ari Berman says is the only federal agency that helps states make sure their voting machines arent hacked. The level of concern should be even higher now that we have evidence that the Russian military intelligence did target election systems specifically: The Intercept reported last month that leaked NSA documents showed that Russian military intelligence launched cyber-attacks against an election-software vendors internal systems. A subsequent report by Bloomberg said that US investigators had found evidence that Russian hackers hit systems in a total of 39 states.

Compare our lackadaisical response to the seriousness with which Europe is taking the issue. Dana Priest and Michael Birnbaum reported for The Washington Post that European countries are deploying a variety of bold tactics and tools to expose Russian attempts to sway voters and weaken European unity. Across Europe, counterintelligence officials, legislators, researchers and journalists have devoted yearsin some cases, decadesto the development of ways to counter Russian disinformation, hacking and trolling that theyre now trying to use to safeguard their own democratic processes.

France and Germany have pressured Facebook to take down thousands of automated accounts that spread fake news. In Sweden, school children are learning to spot fake news. Fourteen hundred Slovakian companies have agreed to boycott a list of fake-news sites. The EU is employing hundreds of volunteer researchers to expose false stories on the Internet. In Lithuania, write Priest and Birnbaum, 100 citizen cyber-sleuths dubbed elves link up digitally to identify and beat back the people employed on social media to spread Russian disinformation. They call the daily skirmishes Elves vs. Trolls.

While Russian interference in last years election was all about us, Moscows use of asymmetric tactics to undermine multilateral institutions and aid pro-Russia parties in so many other countries is not. The difference is that with some Americans across the political spectrum insisting that we should simply move on, we arent doing much to counter it. Doing so doesnt mean creating an environment of neo-McCarthyite hysteria, escalating hostilities with Moscow or blundering toward a shooting war in Syria. It simply requires that we acknowledge the reality of the problem and work with our allies to address it in a sober and serious way.

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Russia's Attacks on Democracy Aren't Only a Problem for America - The Nation.

Hong Kong democracy leader Joshua Wong back in dock days after being jailed – Reuters

HONG KONG (Reuters) - Less than a week after being jailed for unlawful assembly, Hong Kong democracy leader Joshua Wong was summoned again to court on Tuesday for an ongoing contempt of court charge related to the 2014 "Occupy" pro-democracy protests.

Wong, 20, was jailed on Thursday for six months by Hong Kong's second highest court for a separate incident during the protests, dealing a blow to the youth-led push for universal suffrage in Hong Kong and prompting accusations of political interference.

Wong had been sentenced last year to community service for unlawful assembly, but the Department of Justice in the former British colony applied for a review, seeking imprisonment.

Tuesday's hearing involves a separate, overlapping charge for Wong related to a court-ordered clearance of a large protest site during the 2014 civil disobedience movement that Wong helped lead.

Another student leader, Lester Shum, also faces the same charge alongside 18 other defendants, including Raphael Wong, who is not related to Joshua Wong.

Joshua Wong and 10 others have already "admitted liability" to contempt of court for defying a court injunction to clear away a protest encampment in the Mong Kok district after nearly 79 days of street occupations, that later sparked sporadic violent clashes between police and protesters.

According to Hong Kong law there is no maximum penalty for contempt of court, one defense lawyer told Reuters, and it is up to the discretion of the presiding judge.

On Sunday, tens of thousands of people took to the streets to decry the jailing of Wong, and two other democracy activists - Nathan Law and Alex Chow - for between six and eight months.

Some protesters held up placards during the demonstration, one of the largest in recent years, that said "Shame on Rimsky", referring to Justice Secretary Rimsky Yuen. Reuters reported earlier that Yuen had overruled other senior legal officials when they initially advised against pursuing prison terms for the three activists.

Wong was taken to court in a prison van, and appeared relaxed with a buzz haircut after having spent five nights in jail, pumping his fist in the air at one point.

"Many people protested on Sunday. Thank you so much," he shouted out from the dock.

Shum, another former student leader, told reporters the young democracy activists could stay relaxed and determined, "because Hong Kong people are standing with political prisoners".

He was flanked by a group of clapping supporters who carried banners with the slogans: "Umbrella movement is indomitable. Civil disobedience is fearless."

Hong Kong's leader, Carrie Lam, however, said on Monday the jailed activists aren't "political prisoners", addressing spreading international criticism over the jail terms, including from countries such as the United States and Germany.

Hong Kong's Department of Justice said in a statement that the cases were handled "according to the applicable laws and that there is no question of political persecutions."

Additional reporting by Christine Chan; Writing by James Pomfret; Editing by Michael Perry

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Hong Kong democracy leader Joshua Wong back in dock days after being jailed - Reuters

Both sides of Labour say they stand for party democracy. Both sides are hypocrites – Telegraph.co.uk

There is a Great Divide in the Labour Party. It was there for all to see in September 2015, when Jeremy Corbyn was first elected leader and some of its most talented MPs refused even to countenance serving in his Shadow Cabinet.

It was visible in June 2016 when 80 per cent of Labour MPs declared publicly that they had no confidence in Corbyn as leader. We could see it with every disastrous by-election and local government election result, when the media found it easy to persuade the leaders critics to abandon anonymity and go on the record to condemn him and demand his resignation.

Since the snap 2017 general election, when Theresa May came riding over the hill to Corbyns rescue, we have seen the first serious attempt by recalcitrant MPs to grit their teeth and applaud their leader, a leader who, after all, led an energetic campaign and managed, if nothing else, to persuade voters that...

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Both sides of Labour say they stand for party democracy. Both sides are hypocrites - Telegraph.co.uk

A Modest Proposal for Protecting American Democracy from Americans Or What to Do When Impeachment Seems Too … – HuffPost

1. Introduction Democracy, Influence, and Protection of the State

Arianna Huffington ran a session at the World Economic Forum in Davos in 2009, in which she argued that the net would bring participatory democracy and informed self-government to America, to an extent not seen anywhere on Earth since the Athenian Agora and The Golden Age of Pericles. While this would be an outcome to be greatly welcomed, it was never certain. Indeed, a well-functioning democracy was never certain even in Athens. The Golden Age of Athens lasted less than 25 years. Athens was then sold out by the serial traitor, Alcibiades, who sold Athens out to Sparta, and who later betrayed Sparta to the Persians. Had there been anyone more powerful than the Persians, no doubt Alcibiades would have found a way to betray Persia.

As will be clear below, I now believe that the internet has damaged civil discourse and the role of the Agora, the marketplace for ideas. However, the Greek Agora did have a mechanism for protecting democracy, based on little shards of broken pottery, ostraca. Every year the population of Athens voted. The most popular, powerful people in the city could be banned for a period of 5 years or longer. Citizens wrote the names of dangerously popular, dangerously influential people on shards of pottery, and the winners were sent away, or ostracized. They were not ostracized for crimes they had committed, or even for crimes that they were likely to commit. They were ostracized for their oversized influence and their ability to subvert democracy through the strength of their personality.

2. My Pessimism about Democracy in the Age of the Net

I was more pessimistic than Arianna, believing at the time that there were two alternatives for the impact of the net on American democracy, each equally likely:

Achieving an idealized participatory democracy assumes that the electorate will enjoy fair access to information and that it will gain true comprehension, and that it will not be influenced by the relative ease of preparing soundbites for one position or another. Perhaps the net would make all literate Americans informed, and perhaps the best candidate, with the best platform, with a plan to deliver the greatest good for the country, would be assured election.

Alternatively, candidates with the darkest message, with the simplest delivery, appealing to the basest instincts of their voters, would lead us to fascism.

Still, both Arianna and I accepted the idea that the net would provide fair access to all ideas.

3. With the passage of time, it is clear that I was wrong, and insufficiently pessimistic

The net has not delivered fascism, which was my greatest fear, but it has become the most divisive force in the history of American politics. Traditional journalism still believes in pursuit of facts, and in dissemination of truth. That does not mean that traditional journalism is always neutral, and crusading journalists have been a part of the American tradition since before the revolutionary war. But traditional journalists are forced to work very hard to defend their positions, to ferret out the truth. Yes, the Washington Post led the assault on Richard Nixon after Watergate, and yes, the Washington Post had then, as it does now, a liberal editorial board. But the Post and its investigative reports Woodward and Bernstein, had to work very hard to support everything they wrote.

The alternative to traditional journalism, alt-journalism, believes that words are merely tools, and that facts are merely a matter of personal preference, to be selected, discarded, or fabricated depending on their usefulness. And, indeed, now that Bannon has transitioned back from the White House to his prior role in alt-journalism, his view of his mission clearly has very little to do with the objective pursuit of truth

Ive got my hands back on my weapons. I built a f***ing machine at Breitbart. And now Im about to go back, knowing what I know, and were about to rev that machine up. And rev it up we will do.

Contrast this mission statement with The New York Times motto, To give the news impartially, without fear or favor or that of the Washington Post, Democracy Dies in Darkness.

Clearly, Bannon believes that journalism in pursuit of truth is wasted. And, clearly, the man who did more than anyone else to make the Trump presidency possible is going to do whatever he can to use the net to advance it. And, finally, the Trump presidency does not seem to be based on any vision of health care policy, economic policy, or on any other policy other than preserving its own power.

4. What can be done to preserve American democracy?

The ancient Athenians would have known what to do. The most powerful, influential, disruptive forces in the United States today are clearly Steve Bannon and Donald Trump. The ancient Athenians would have banished them from Athens. Are there authors, playwrights, and editors on both the left and right who would also be considered influential and equally disruptive? Probably. And the ancient Athenians would have banished them as well.

Banishment was not based on being right or wrong. Banishment was not based on having political foes without having enough offsetting political friends. Banishment was not based on expressing any single opinion, and was not considered as limiting the right to speak. Banishment was based on an individuals having strong opposition to what was perceived as excessive influence.

Since it is clear that a majority of Americans believe that President Trumps tweeting and public statements are disruptive, and that he has the distinction of being the most unpopular president in American history, it is clear that he would have the honor of winning an ostraca vote. It is not clear who else would rank in the top 5, or the top 10, or however many winners we might feel the need to select.

Banishment is more than a little extreme. Its not clear that you can banish a sitting president, or the current Senate Majority Leader, or the House Minority Leader, although all three might end up winning an ostraca vote.

A more modern solution would be to take away President Trumps cellphone and ban Steve Bannon from the net if they were ostracized. Perhaps CNN, or MSNBC, or Fox, might lose an anchor as well. We would probably have to leave ostracized politicians in office, but we could limit their access to airtime on radio and television. We would be left with a much more centrist media, and with much more centrist politicians as a direct result.

This doesnt place limits on freedom of speech. It simply muffles the loudest voices.

The Republic, Western Democracy, and the entire planet, would all be better off.

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A Modest Proposal for Protecting American Democracy from Americans Or What to Do When Impeachment Seems Too ... - HuffPost

Tens of thousands protest jailing of Hong Kong pro-democracy leaders – CNN

They were convicted of unlawful assembly after they stormed government property in September 2014, leading to the 79-day sit-in of major roads in the heart of the city's financial district.

On Sunday, demonstrators walked from the district of Wan Chai to the Court of Final Appeal, where the three activists are expected to lodge an appeal against their sentences.

Police told CNN the number of protesters during the peak period Sunday was about 22,000. While the protest organizers did not provide their own count, activist Agnes Chow told CNN it was the biggest protest since the 2014 Occupy movement.

"We were surprised that there were so many people coming out," she told CNN Monday by phone. "Originally we predicted a few thousand (attendees) but there were a lot more."

She said she saw a lot of anger on the streets towards the Hong Kong government over the decision to jail the trio, and that Sunday's turnout was a powerful message rejecting the judicial ruling.

"Yesterday showed the government failed," she said.

In 2014, hundreds of thousands of people crammed city streets to demand a say in the election of Hong Kong's leadership, and greater autonomy from China.

The trio were sentenced to between six and eight months' prison on Thursday. All three were initially given, and completed, community service sentences, but Hong Kong's Department of Justice appealed, arguing that those sentences were insufficient.

In a statement issued on Sunday, the Hong Kong government said the decision to appeal the original sentences was "in accordance with Hong Kong's effective legal system," and had "absolutely no political consideration involved."

Wong, 20, was sentenced to eight months in prison Thursday, reduced to six months on account of previous community service, while fellow defendants Nathan Law, 24, and Alex Chow, 26, were sentenced to 10 months, reduced to eight, and eight months, reduced to seven, respectively.

The government statement added that authorities were "aware that the community has different views on the judgment and notices that the relevant defendants have indicated to lodge appeals.

"The case should be handled in accordance with judicial procedures."

Immediately following the verdict, Wong said on Twitter that the government "can lock up our bodies, but not our minds!"

Chow, who is a standing committee member of Demosisto, the political party founded by Wong in the wake of the Occupy movement, says that as "a person advocating civil disobedience" she is "not afraid to go to jail."

"I would say if they want to stop ... Hong Kong people desire for democracy and participating in a democratic movement it's difficult to stop (them).

"The Hong Kong government and justice department use political ways to try to stop us but they would not succeed in stopping us."

In Hong Kong, people who have served sentences of more than three months are barred from holding political office for five years.

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Tens of thousands protest jailing of Hong Kong pro-democracy leaders - CNN