Latin America is finding its voice and for the first time in its recent history is able to stand up to the Empire. Although the US is acting aggressively against South American politicians, America is showing itself to be a paper tiger. The era of the Munroe Doctine is over.
Bolivian
president to sue US govt for crimes against humanity
Bolivian
President Evo Morales will file a lawsuit against the US government
for crimes against humanity. He has decried the US for its
intimidation tactics and fear-mongering after the Venezuelan
presidential jet was blocked from entering US airspace.
RT,
26
January, 2013
“I
would like to announce that we are preparing a lawsuit against Barack
Obama to condemn him for crimes against humanity,” said President
Morales at a press conference in the Bolivian city of Santa Cruz. He
branded the US president as a “criminal” who violates
international law.
In
solidarity with Venezuela, Bolivia will begin preparing a lawsuit
against the US head of state to be taken to the international court.
Furthermore, Morales has called an emergency meeting of the Community
of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) to discuss what has
been condemned by Venezuela as “an act of intimidation by North
American imperialism.”
The
Bolivian president has suggested that the members of CELAC withdraw
their ambassadors from the US to send a message to the Obama
Administration. As an additional measure he will call on the member
nations of the Bolivarian Alliance for the Americas to boycott the
next meeting of the UN. Members of the Alliance include Antigua and
Barbuda, Cuba, Dominica, Ecuador, Nicaragua, Venezuela and Saint
Lucia.
“The
US cannot be allowed to continue with its policy of intimidation and
blockading presidential flights,” stressed Morales.
The
Venezuelan government announced on Thursday that President Nicolas
Maduro’s plane had been denied entry into Puerto Rican (US)
airspace.
“We
have received the information from American officials that we have
been denied travel over its airspace,” Venezuelan Foreign Minister
Elias Jaua said, speaking to reporters during an official meeting
with his South African counterpart. Jaua decried the move “as yet
another act of aggression on the part of North American imperialism
against the government of the Bolivarian Republic.”
President
Maduro was due to arrive in Beijing this weekend for bilateral talks
with the Chinese government. Jaua was adamant that the Venezuelan
leader would reach his destination, regardless of any perceived
interference.
The
US government has not yet made any statement regarding the closing of
its airspace to the Venezuelan presidential plane. Puerto Rico is an
unincorporated territory of the US.
Relations
on the rocks
Washington’s
relations with Latin America have deteriorated since the beginning of
the year following the aerial blockade that forced Bolivian President
Evo Morales’ plane to land in Austria in July. Several EU countries
closed their airspace to the presidential jet because of suspicions
that former CIA employee Edward Snowden - wanted in the US on
espionage charges - was on board. Bolivia alleged that the US was
behind the aerial blockade.
In
response to the incident, Latin American leaders joined together in
condemnation of what they described as “neo-colonial intimidation.”
Later
in the year, the revelations on the US’ global spy network released
by Edward Snowden did little to improve relations. Leaked wires
revealed that the National Security Agency (NSA) had monitored the
private communications of both the Brazilian and Mexican presidents.
The
Brazilian government denounced the NSA surveillance as “impermissible
and unacceptable,” and a violation of Brazilian sovereignty. As a
result of US spying Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff has postponed
a state visit to Washington in October.
No-Fly
Zone: Venezuelan president denied US airspace
Venezuela's
President has accused the U.S. of refusing to provide visas for a
delegation going to the UN next week. Nicolas Maduro was also
apparently refused permission to fly through American airspace to get
to China. Venezuela's Foreign Ministry said these incidents were an
act of aggression and a violation of international law.
RT's Marina Portnaya reports
Update:
Venezuela’s
Maduro granted permission to fly over US after scandal
RT,
20
September, 2013
The
US granted approval for a last-minute flight plan which allowed
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro to fly over Puerto Rico on his
way to China. Venezuela’s FM earlier told media an aircraft
carrying Maduro was denied a path over the commonwealth.
Washington
told Caracas Thursday night that permission was granted even though
the request had not been properly submitted, Reuters cites State
Department spokeswoman Marie Harf as saying.
Maduro
tweeted at around 10:30 pm local time (0300 GMT) Thursday that he had
left Venezuela for Beijing.
Earlier
in the day, Venezuelan Foreign Minister Elias Jaua told media the
aircraft carrying Maduro to China was forced to find an alternate
flight path. Jaua denounced the act as “an act of
aggression.”
“We
have received the information from American officials that we have
been denied travel over its airspace,”
Jaua said, speaking to reporters during an official meeting with his
South African counterpart.
“We
denounce this as yet another aggression on the part of North American
imperialism against the government of the Bolivarian Republic,”
he added.
"No
one can deny airspace to a plane carrying a president on an
international state visit."
There
is “no valid argument”
for denying travel through American airspace, Jaua said, adding that
he expected the US to rectify the situation.
Harf
said Venezuela did not follow proper steps in its flyover request,
having given just one day’s notice instead of the mandatory three.
"Additionally,
the plane in question was not a state aircraft, which is required for
a diplomatic clearance,"
she said in a statement.
"Although
the request was not properly submitted, US authorities worked with
Venezuelan officials at the Venezuelan Embassy to resolve the issue.
US authorities made an extraordinary effort to work with relevant
authorities to grant overflight approval in a matter of hours,"
Harf said.
President
Maduro is due to arrive in Beijing this weekend for bilateral talks
with the Chinese government. Jaua was adamant that the Venezuelan
leader would reach his destination, regardless of any perceived
interference.
The
incident is the latest diplomatic spat to take place between the
United States and Venezuela, who have clashed regularly since Maduro
took office in April.
In
July, the Venezuelan president announced that his government was
halting attempts to improve relations with the US. The move was in
response to comments made by the newly appointed US Ambassador to the
UN, Samantha Power, who told a Senate committee that her new role
would include challenging the “crackdown
on civil society”
abroad, including in Venezuela.
Relations
under former President Chavez had been acrimonious, as he had long
held suspicions that the US had actively intervened on behalf of an
attempted coup in 2002. Since his election in April, President Maduro
has often made pointed criticisms at alleged US interference in
Venezuelan affairs.
Bolivian
President Evo Morales, whose own plane was grounded this summer
allegedly due to suspicions by US authorities that the aircraft was
transporting whistleblower Edward Snowden, said that ALBA bloc
nations should consider a boycott of the upcoming UN General Assembly
in New York as a response.
"We
cannot accept that the US carries on with politics of intimidation
and the prohibition of flights by presidents,"
said Morales, adding that the latest incident "demonstrates
the country's predisposition to humiliate other governments"
and commit crimes against other nations.
Dispute over
visas ahead of UN summit
The
Venezuelan President also spoke of attempts by the US to set
“conditions”
on a visa issued to General Wilmer Barrientos, one of Maduro’s
ministers who is slated to attend meetings during the UN
General Assembly next week.
"They
want to put conditions, if we decide to go to New York...They
don't want to give a visa to my minister," said
Maduro. "Do we want
to go as tourists? We're going to the United Nations. You're
obligated to give visas to all the delegation."
Appearing
via the television network TeleSUR on Thursday, Maduro
indicated that he had directed his foreign minister, ElĂas Jaua,
and Venezuela’s Ambassador to the UN, Samuel Moncada, to
“activate all mechanisms”
in reference to the visa dispute.
“US,
you are not the UN’s owner. The UN will have to move out of
New York,”
remarked Maduro.
He
warned that if he has to take “measures”
against the government of the US, he would be prepared to take “the
most drastic measures necessary”
to ensure Venezuelan sovereignty.
Brazil
announces plans to leave US-centered internet
18
September, 2013
Brazilian
President Dilma Rousseff is angry at the United States. After
revelations that the NSA has intercepted the president’s
communications, hacked into the state-owned Petrobras oil company’s
network (an act of industrial espionage), and spied on the personal
data of Brazilians held by US tech companies, this leader is ready to
take a stand and demand greater Brazilian online independence and
security.
The NSA program, dubbed Bullrun, took 10 years to crack the web’s encryption technologies, before finally reaching a breakthrough in 2010 that made “vast amounts” of previously unreadable data accessible. Perhaps more worryingly, the NSA has an ongoing program to place backdoors in commercial products (websites, routers, encryption programs, etc.) to enable easy snooping on encrypted communications.
The
documents outline a three-pronged plan to ensure the NSA can access
the bulk of the internet’s encrypted traffic: Influencing the
development of new encryption standards to introduce weaknesses,
using supercomputers to break encryption, and collaborating with ISPs
and tech companies to gain backdoor access. [source]
These
disturbing revelations from Edward Snowden have prompted action from
the Brazilian president: Rouseff cancelled her upcoming high
profile state trip to Washington, described as a “slap
in the face”
to President Obama and a sign of diminished US prestige. Now
Rousseff is ready to push for a whole new way for Brazil to
connect to the Internet, one that excludes the US as much as
possible, while she plans to denounce US cyberespionage in her speech
at the UN this month and push for international
rules on privacy and security
in hardware and software. However, the Associated
Press
report identifies this move as the potentially dangerous first step
towards the political fracturing of the global network of the
Internet…at least according to American experts
President
Rousseff has come out with the
following initiatives
as she seeks to protect Brazilian’s personal data from the
indiscriminate (and discriminating) spying of the NSA:
- US-based
web services will be allowed, but their data must be stored locally;
Rousseff has urged the Brazilian Congress to compel Facebook, Google,
and other US companies to store all data generated by Brazilians on
servers physically located inside Brazil
- lay
fibre optic cables to connect Brazil directly to Europe, thus
bypassing the US for internet traffic
- create
a network of South American nations free of US eavesdropping
- build
more internet exchange points in order to route Brazilians’ traffic
away from potential interception
- push
for international rules on privacy and security in hardware and
software (one of the Snowden
revelations
was the back doors created by the NSA into software and web-based
services)
But
what does all of this mean for the Internet and the tech industry?
Well, according to the AP, many experts are concerned that this could
set the Internet on a course of Balkanization,
where national privacy and sovereignty concerns created bottlenecks
which interfere with the operation of the Internet, especially in the
crucial
areas
of international searching and communication.
“The
global backlash is only beginning and will get far more severe in
coming months,” said Sascha Meinrath, director of the Open
Technology Institute at the Washington-based New America Foundation
think tank. “This notion of national privacy sovereignty is going
to be an increasingly salient issue around the globe.”
While
Brazil isn’t proposing to bar its citizens from U.S.-based Web
services, it wants their data to be stored locally as the nation
assumes greater control over Brazilians’ Internet use to protect
them from NSA snooping.
The
danger of mandating that kind of geographic isolation, Meinrath said,
is that it could render inoperable popular software applications and
services and endanger the Internet’s open, interconnected
structure.
While
these concerns center around the lost of openness and
interconnectivity of the Internet that would happen if every country
had its own servers, its own internet exchange points, and its own
networks, there are also warnings of the impact on individual users,
particularly around their access to information.
U.S.
digital security expert Bruce Schneier says that while Brazil’s
response is a rational reaction to NSA spying, it is likely to
embolden “some of the worst countries out there to seek more
control over their citizens’ Internet. That’s Russia, China, Iran
and Syria.”
Well.
I’m sure that digital security experts are truly concerned about
the plight of people in Russia, China, Iran, Syria….and more,
rather than the bottom line of Silicon Valley if this movement hits
them with lost
business and higher operating costs.
But really, no matter how “free” they declare the Internet to be
in the US, it is…monitored. And not even free. What about the
government censorship that happens every day as YouTube
and Google
are ordered by the US government to remove content…while providing
personal information about the users? The NSA has also
declared
that its goal is “for the US to maintain unrestricted access to and
use of cyberspace,” which means that they are not going to stop
trying to access and surveil systems around the world.
International
spies, not just from the United States, also will adjust, experts
said. Laying cable to Europe won’t make Brazil safer, they say. The
NSA has reportedly tapped into undersea telecoms cables for decades.
Mr.
Meinrath and others argue that what’s needed instead are strong
international laws that hold nations accountable for guaranteeing
online privacy.
“There’s
nothing viable that Brazil can really do to protect its citizenry
without changing what the US is doing,” he said.
It
seems like President Rousseff has exactly the right idea; she’s
going to push for better rules at the United Nations, and hopefully
she succeeds, but UN resolutions are not a clear substitute for
having systems in place that prevent data interception in the first
place. The NSA may soon regret the day that it killed the golden
goose of open internet data communication.
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