Friday, October 4, 2019

Join us at the NSA on October 5 for Keep Space for Peace Week/Iraq war whistleblower’s trial ‘was halted due to national security threat



 Each fall the Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space organizes Keep Space for Peace Week where it invites activists around the world to hold local events. And each October Baltimore peace groups participate in Keep Space for Peace Week by going to the National Security Agency at Fort Meade, Maryland.  As part of Keep Space for Peace Week, the Baltimore Nonviolence Center will organize a demonstration on Saturday, October 5 from 11 AM to noon at the NSA at Fort Meade. We will be leaving Baltimore at 10:15 AM.  If interested in joining us, contact Max at 410-323-1607 or mobuszewski2001 at comcast dot net.

 A letter to the director of the NSA and to the NSA Inspector General will be posted soon.  Also don’t miss the film OFFICIAL SECRETS, taken from a true story, in which the NSA is engaged in criminal activity. What Katherine Gun did in 2003 should give us all the courage to speak out. Join us on Saturday if you can.
   
Kagiso,

Max

Iraq war whistleblower’s trial ‘was halted due to national security threat’

Ahead of a new film about Katharine Gun, the director of public prosecutions explains for the first time why he felt a court case would be too risky

Sun 1 Sep 2019 03.00 EDT

Katharine Gun, the GCHQ staff member who exposed a US dirty tricks plot at the UN, at court in 2004.

 Katharine Gun, the GCHQ staff member who exposed a US dirty tricks plot at the UN, at court in 2004. Photograph: Stephen Hird/Reuters

  She was the whistleblower who risked her freedom to try to prevent war. By leaking to the Observer details of a secret American dirty tricks campaign to spy on the UN before the invasion of Iraq, Katharine Gun hoped she could stir the public’s conscience, ratcheting up political pressure to the point that conflict could be avoided.

   It was not, and Gun, then a 28-year-old working for GCHQ, the government’s eavesdropping centre in Cheltenham, was later charged with breaking the Official Secrets Act. The case against her, however, was abruptly and mysteriously dropped.

    Now, before the release of a new film charting one of the most explosive episodes of the run-up to the invasion, the former director of public prosecutions has explained for the first time why he suddenly abandoned the case against Gun.

  Sir Ken Macdonald told the Observer he had realised that it would be impossible to give the whistleblower a fair trial without also risking national security. Gun “could only get a fair trial if we disclosed material to the defence that would compromise national security,” he said.

  Previously the government has said that the decision was taken “solely on legal grounds”, but failed to explain why the prosecution elected to offer no evidence during her trial.

   Macdonald’s reference to secret material prompted calls for the documents to be declassified and the specific reason for dropping the case made public.
On Friday the film Official Secrets, starring Keira Knightley as Gun, opened in Los Angeles and New York, revealing to US audiences how Gun leaked the revelations in March 2003. Her actions prompted an international furore that saw her arrest and sacking. Macdonald then decided that she should face trial.

  The film also strays into controversy by alleging that Macdonald paid a private visit to Ben Emmerson QC, who represented Gun, following the whistleblower’s arrest. During the visit, which according to the film occurred at Emmerson’s coastal Norfolk home, Macdonald is alleged to have told Emmerson that Gun had committed a “deliberate act of betrayal” and “should have kept her mouth shut”. In the film, Emmerson responds: “If you charge her, then I will defend her to the best of my ability.” Macdonald is understood to have denied that such a meeting took place.

The film, directed by Gavin Hood, suggests that the case against the GCHQ whistleblower was dropped in February 2004 because Gun’s defence team had asked for disclosure of the attorney general’s initial legal advice to Tony Blair before the invasion.

Abandoning the prosecution against Gun fuelled speculation that the case was dropped to spare the publication of the legal advice. It also left Gun demanding an explanation of why it took eight months after her arrest for her to be charged with breaching the Official Secrets Act.

But Macdonald has now categorically said that the decision to drop the case did not relate to the attorney general’s Iraq war advice.

He said: “The case against her was subsequently discontinued because it became clear to me that she could only get a fair trial if we disclosed material to the defence that would compromise national security. I concluded that in the absence of this material being disclosed to her, her trial would be unfair, and so I terminated the case. This was my decision, which was notified to the AG [attorney general] in the usual way.”

 The explanation, however, did not satisfy Hood, who spent three years researching and making the film and is known for the Helen Mirren thriller Eye in the Sky and the acclaimed South African crime drama Tsotsi.

  “This obfuscatory statement from Lord Macdonald raises more questions than it answers. At the time, by denying Gun her day in court Macdonald and [attorney general Lord] Goldsmith effectively drew the shutters down over what Goldsmith’s legal advice to Blair had been in the run-up to war.”
Hood added: “But Macdonald now suggests that the case was not dropped because Goldsmith did not want his advice revealed. Rather he says there were other ‘national security’ reasons for doing so. If that is true, then one is compelled to ask when this material might be declassified and the real reasons for dropping the case made known to the public,” he added.

  Martin Bright, the Observer journalist who received the leaked memo from Gun and was part of the team of reporters that broke the story, said: “Official Secrets raises serious questions about the treatment of Katharine Gun at the hands of the legal system. As the director of public prosecutions at the time, Lord Macdonald must take responsibility for this.”

  The film, which opens in the UK next month, has led some critics to point out its relevance, eulogising the bravery of whistleblowers in an era characterised by disinformation and fake news.

Keira Knightley as Gun in the forthcoming film Official Secrets.

 Keira Knightley as Gun in the forthcoming film Official Secrets. Photograph: IFC Films

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