From: Occupy
by Nafeez Mosaddeq Ahmed
The U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) is
funding a multimillion dollar university
research program to develop new data mining and analysis
tools for the U.S. military intelligence community to track political
radicalism among British Muslims and other activist groups around the
world.
Leading intelligence experts including
former National Security Agency (NSA) official Thomas Drake – the
whistleblower who inspired Edward Snowden – confirm that the tools
are designed to enhance the intelligence community’s capabilities
to identify potential terrorism suspects that could face a range of
sanctions, from surveillance to no-fly injunctions to, at worst,
being targeted for extrajudicial assassination via the CIA’s "kill
lists."
But, they say, inherent flaws in the
program are instead likely to facilitate the criminalization of
political dissent and the targeting of innocent civilians – and
that such trends are increasingly likely to affect not just "hostile
theatres" abroad, but even domestic populations in the U.S.,
Britain and Europe. MORE
PART II
TUE, 8/19/2014 - BY NAFEEZ MOSADDEQ AHMED
This is the second
installment in a four-part investigative series about U.S.
Defense-funded programs to spy on activists and Muslims worldwide. The
series runs Monday through Thursday this week on Occupy.com. Read the first installment here.
The Pentagon’s multimillion dollar Minerva research program to fund social science research for military applications includes a flagship project established
in 2009 at Arizona State University (ASU) to examine “radical” and
“counter-radical” Muslim movements in Southeast Asia, West Africa and
Western Europe.
The project’s "expert wisdom gathering
tool," used by academics involved in the project to assess and rank the
threat-level from organizations and civil society groups, set its sights
on the UK, Germany, France, Europe generally, Nigeria, Niger, Senegal,
Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and the Philippines.
Although purportedly designed to assess
Islamic movements, among the 36 UK organizations targeted for ranking
on the tool’s "radicalization" scale are several non-Muslim activist
groups critical of US, British and Israeli foreign policy. A deeper
analysis of the criteria used by the project to label organizations
discloses serious deficiencies that tend to cast suspicion of propensity
for violence on any group calling for radical social, political or
religious change. MORE
The U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) is funding a multimillion dollar university research program to
develop new data mining and analysis tools for the U.S. military
intelligence community to track political radicalism among British
Muslims and other activist groups around the world.
Leading intelligence experts including former National Security Agency (NSA) official Thomas Drake – the whistleblower who inspired Edward Snowden – confirm that the tools are designed to enhance the intelligence community’s capabilities to identify potential terrorism suspects that could face a range of sanctions, from surveillance to no-fly injunctions to, at worst, being targeted for extrajudicial assassination via the CIA’s "kill lists."
But, they say, inherent flaws in the program are instead likely to facilitate the criminalization of political dissent and the targeting of innocent civilians – and that such trends are increasingly likely to affect not just "hostile theatres" abroad, but even domestic populations in the U.S., Britain and Europe.
- See more at:
http://www.occupy.com/article/exposed-pentagon-funds-new-data-mining-tools-track-and-kill-activists-part-i#sthash.KHlGIh3A.dpufLeading intelligence experts including former National Security Agency (NSA) official Thomas Drake – the whistleblower who inspired Edward Snowden – confirm that the tools are designed to enhance the intelligence community’s capabilities to identify potential terrorism suspects that could face a range of sanctions, from surveillance to no-fly injunctions to, at worst, being targeted for extrajudicial assassination via the CIA’s "kill lists."
But, they say, inherent flaws in the program are instead likely to facilitate the criminalization of political dissent and the targeting of innocent civilians – and that such trends are increasingly likely to affect not just "hostile theatres" abroad, but even domestic populations in the U.S., Britain and Europe.
by Nafeez Mosaddeq Ahmed
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