The image of Uncle Sam is seen behind shattered glass at the military recruitment center in New York’s Times Square.
Syed Fahad Hashmi can tell you about the
dark heart of America. He knows that our First Amendment rights have
become a joke, that habeas corpus no longer exists and that we torture,
not only in black sites such as those at Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan
or at Guantánamo Bay, but also at the federal Metropolitan Correctional
Center (MCC) in Lower Manhattan. Hashmi is a U.S. citizen of Muslim
descent imprisoned on two counts of providing and conspiring to provide
material support and two counts of making and conspiring to make a
contribution of goods or services to al-Qaida. As his case prepares for
trial, his plight illustrates that the gravest threat we face is not
from Islamic extremists, but the codification of draconian procedures
that deny Americans basic civil liberties and due process. Hashmi would
be a better person to tell you this, but he is not allowed to speak.
This corruption of our legal system, if
history is any guide, will not be reserved by the state for suspected
terrorists, or even Muslim Americans. In the coming turmoil and
economic collapse, it will be used to silence all who are branded as
disruptive or subversive. Hashmi endures what many others, who are not
Muslim, will endure later. Radical activists in the environmental,
globalization, anti-nuclear, sustainable agriculture and anarchist
movements—who are already being placed by the state in special
detention facilities with Muslims charged with terrorism—have
discovered that his fate is their fate. Courageous groups have
organized protests, including vigils outside the Manhattan detention
facility. They can be found at www.educatorsforcivilliberties.org or www.freefahad.com.
On Martin Luther King Day, this Jan. 18 at 6 p.m. EST, protesters will
hold a large vigil in front of the MCC on 150 Park Row in Lower
Manhattan to call for a return of our constitutional rights. Join them
if you can.
The case against Hashmi, like most of the
terrorist cases launched by the Bush administration, is appallingly
weak and built on flimsy circumstantial evidence. This may be the
reason the state has set up parallel legal and penal codes to railroad
those it charges with links to terrorism. If it were a matter of
evidence, activists like Hashmi, who is accused of facilitating the
delivery of socks to al-Qaida, would probably never be brought to
trial.
Hashmi, who if convicted could face up to
70 years in prison, has been held in solitary confinement for more than
2½ years. Special administrative measures, known as SAMs, have been
imposed by the attorney general to prevent or severely restrict
communication with other prisoners, attorneys, family, the media and
people outside the jail. He also is denied access to the news and other
reading material. Hashmi is not allowed to attend group prayer. He is
subject to 24-hour electronic monitoring and 23-hour lockdown. He must
shower and go to the bathroom on camera. He can write one letter a week
to a single member of his family, but he cannot use more than three
pieces of paper. He has no access to fresh air and must take his one
hour of daily recreation in a cage. His “proclivity for violence” is
cited as the reason for these measures although he has never been
charged or convicted with committing an act of violence.
“My brother was an activist,” Hashmi’s
brother, Faisal, told me by phone from his home in Queens. “He spoke
out on Muslim issues, especially those dealing with the wars in Iraq
and Afghanistan. His arrest and torture have nothing to do with
providing ponchos and socks to al-Qaida, as has been charged, but the
manipulation of the law to suppress activists and scare the Muslim
American community. My brother is an example. His treatment is meant to
show Muslims what will happen to them if they speak about the plight of
Muslims. We have lost every single motion to preserve my brother’s
humanity and remove the special administrative measures. These measures
are designed solely to break the psyche of prisoners and terrorize the
Muslim community. These measures exemplify the malice towards Muslims
at home and the malice towards the millions of Muslims who are
considered as non-humans in Iraq and Afghanistan.”
The extreme sensory deprivation used on Hashmi is a form of
psychological torture, far more effective in breaking and disorienting
detainees. It is torture as science. In Germany, the Gestapo broke
bones while its successor, the communist East German Stasi, broke
souls. We are like the Stasi. We have refined the art of psychological
disintegration and drag bewildered suspects into secretive courts when
they no longer have the mental and psychological capability to defend
themselves.
“Hashmi’s right to a fair trial has been abridged,” said Michael Ratner, the president of the Center for Constitutional Rights. “Much of the evidence in the case has been classified under CIPA,
and thus Hashmi has not been allowed to review it. The prosecution only
recently turned over a significant portion of evidence to the defense.
Hashmi may not communicate with the news media, either directly or
through his attorneys. The conditions of his detention have impacted
his mental state and ability to participate in his own defense.
“The prosecution’s case against Hashmi, an
outspoken activist within the Muslim community, abridges his First
Amendment rights and threatens the First Amendment rights of others,”
Ratner added. “While Hashmi’s political and religious beliefs, speech
and associations are constitutionally protected, the government has
been given wide latitude by the court to use them as evidence of his
frame of mind and, by extension, intent. The material support charges
against him depend on criminalization of association. This could have a
chilling effect on the First Amendment rights of others, particularly
in activist and Muslim communities.”
Constitutionally protected statements,
beliefs and associations can now become a crime. Dissidents, even those
who break no laws, can be stripped of their rights and imprisoned
without due process. It is the legal equivalent of preemptive war. The
state can detain and prosecute people not for what they have done, or
even for what they are planning to do, but for holding religious or
political beliefs that the state deems seditious. The first of those
targeted have been observant Muslims, but they will not be the last.
“Most of the evidence is classified,”
Jeanne Theoharis, an associate professor of political science at
Brooklyn College who taught Hashmi, told me, “but Hashmi is not allowed
to see it. He is an American citizen. But in America you can now go to
trial and all the evidence collected against you cannot be reviewed.
You can spend 2½ years in solitary confinement before you are convicted
of anything. There has been attention paid to extraordinary rendition,
Guantánamo and Abu Ghraib with this false idea that if people are tried
in the United States things will be fair. But what allowed Guantánamo
to happen was the devolution of the rule of law here at home, and this
is not only happening to Hashmi.”
Hashmi was, like so many of those arrested
during the Bush years, briefly a poster child in the “war on terror.”
He was apprehended in Britain on June 6, 2006, on a U.S. warrant. His
arrest was the top story on the CBS and NBC nightly news programs,
which used graphics that read “Terror Trail” and “Web of Terror.” He
was held for 11 months at Belmarsh Prison in London and then became the
first U.S. citizen to be extradited by Britain. The year before his
arrest, Hashmi, a graduate of Brooklyn College, had completed his
master’s degree in international relations at London Metropolitan
University. His case has no more substance than the one against the
seven men arrested on suspicion of plotting to blow up the Sears Tower,
a case where, even though there were five convictions after two
mistrials, an FBI deputy director acknowledged that the plan was more
“aspirational rather than operational.” And it mirrors the older case
of the Palestinian activist Sami Al-Arian, now under house arrest in
Virginia, who has been hounded by the Justice Department although he
should legally have been freed. Judge Leonie Brinkema, currently
handling the Al-Arian case, in early March, questioned the U.S.
attorney’s actions in Al-Arian’s plea agreement saying curtly: “I think
there’s something more important here, and that’s the integrity of the
Justice Department.”
The case against Hashmi revolves around
the testimony of Junaid Babar, also an American citizen. Babar, in
early 2004, stayed with Hashmi at his London apartment for two weeks.
In his luggage, the government alleges, Babar had raincoats, ponchos
and waterproof socks, which Babar later delivered to a member of
al-Qaida in south Waziristan, Pakistan. It was alleged that Hashmi
allowed Babar to use his cell phone to call conspirators in other
terror plots.
“Hashmi grew up here, was well known here, was very outspoken, very
charismatic and very political,” said Theoharis. “This is really a
message being sent to American Muslims about the cost of being
politically active. It is not about delivering alleged socks and
ponchos and rain gear. Do you think al-Qaida can’t get socks and
ponchos in Pakistan? The government is planning to introduce tapes of
Hashmi’s political talks while he was at Brooklyn College at the trial.
Why are we willing to let this happen? Is it because they are Muslims,
and we think it will not affect us? People who care about First
Amendment rights should be terrified. This is one of the crucial civil
rights issues of our time. We ignore this at our own peril.”
Babar, who was arrested in 2004 and has
pleaded guilty to five counts of material support for al-Qaida, also
faces up to 70 years in prison. But he has agreed to serve as a
government witness and has already testified for the government in
terror trials in Britain and Canada. Babar will receive a reduced
sentence for his services, and many speculate he will be set free after
the Hashmi trial. Since there is very little evidence to link Hashmi to
terrorist activity, the government will rely on Babar to prove intent.
This intent will revolve around alleged conversations and statements
Hashmi made in Babar’s presence. Hashmi, who was a member of the New
York political group Al Muhajiroun as a student at Brooklyn College,
has made provocative statements, including calling America “the biggest
terrorist in the world,” but Al Muhajiroun is not defined by the
government as a terrorist organization. Membership in the group is not
illegal. And our complicity in acts of state terror is a historical
fact.
There will be more Hashmis, and the
Justice Department, planning for future detentions, set up in 2006 a
segregated facility, the Communication Management Unit, at the federal
prison in Terre Haute, Ind. Nearly all the inmates transferred to Terre
Haute are Muslims. A second facility has been set up at Marion, Ill.,
where the inmates again are mostly Muslim but also include a sprinkling
of animal rights and environmental activists, among them Daniel
McGowan, who was charged with two arsons at logging operations in
Oregon. His sentence was given “terrorism enhancements” under the
Patriot Act. Amnesty International has called the Marion prison
facility “inhumane.” All calls and mail—although communication
customarily is off-limits to prison officials—are monitored in these
two Communication Management Units. Communication among prisoners is
required to be only in English. The highest-level terrorists are housed
at the Penitentiary Administrative Maximum Facility, known as Supermax,
in Florence, Colo., where prisoners have almost no human interaction,
physical exercise or mental stimulation, replicating the conditions for
most of those held at Guantánamo. If detainees are transferred from
Guantánamo to the prison in Thomson, Ill., they will find little change. They will endure Guantánamo-like conditions in colder weather.
Our descent is the familiar disease of
decaying empires. The tyranny we impose on others we finally impose on
ourselves. The influx of non-Muslim American activists into these
facilities is another ominous development. It presages the continued
dismantling of the rule of law, the widening of a system where
prisoners are psychologically broken by sensory deprivation, extreme
isolation and secretive kangaroo courts where suspects are sentenced on
rumors and innuendo and denied the right to view the evidence against
them. Dissent is no longer the duty of the engaged citizen but is
becoming an act of terrorism.
Chris Hedges, whose column is published
on Truthdig every Monday, spent two decades as a foreign reporter
covering wars in Latin America, Africa, Europe and the Middle East. He
has written nine books, including “Empire of Illusion: The End of
Literacy and the Triumph of Spectacle” (2009) and “War Is a Force That
Gives Us Meaning” (2003).
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