Signal, No Noise

May 24, 2010

Former CIA officer on Iran: Brazil and Turkey are vital checks and balances

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Former CIA on Iran: Brazil and Turkey are vital international checks and balances

Shouldn’t the world welcome the actions of two significant, responsible, democratic, and rational states to intervene and help check the foolishnesses of decades of US policy on Iran?


By Graham E. Fuller
posted May 24, 2010 at 1:14 pm EDT

Washington —If Washington thinks it now faces complications on getting United Nations Security Council sanctions against Iran, that’s not the half of it. A greater obstacle is the subtle change introduced into international power relationships by the actions of Brazil and Turkey that has accompanied it.

These two medium-size powers, Brazil and Turkey, have just challenged the guiding hand of Washington in determining nuclear strategy towards Iran. They undertook their own initiative to persuade Iran to accede to a deal on the handling of nuclear fuel issues. Not only was that initiative entirely independent, it moved ahead in the face of fairly crude American warnings to both states not to contemplate it – even though it closely paralleled one offered to Iran last year that fell through, mainly due to Iranian maneuvering and its fundamental distrust of Washington’s intent and blustering style.

Adding insult to injury, Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan both had the temerity to actually succeed in their negotiations with Iran while Washington was publicly predicting their certain (and hoped for) failure.

Are the Iranians simply engaging in another con game, playing for time – a maneuver at which they excel? Or has something more profound taken place?

First, it is not only the terms of the deal that matter, but the messengers and atmospherics. Washington for decades has dealt with Iran – almost always indirectly – with considerable truculence and belligerence as the background music to “negotiations.” This is business as usual – the world’s sole superpower demanding others to agree to its strategy of the moment.

When Mr. Lula and Mr. Erdogan came to Tehran, the game was entirely different. It wasn’t the content so much as the negotiators, the venue, and the atmospherics. Tehran did not feel this time that it was acceding to superpower pressure, but to a reasoned and respectful request by two significant peer states in the world with no record of imperialism in Iran. In one sense, the deal was almost bound to succeed. What Iran wants as much as anything in this world is to blunt US dominance of the international order, and especially its ability to dictate terms in the Middle East.

If Iran is to yield at all on nuclear policy, what better device than to accede to two respected and successful states that were themselves defying Washington’s wishes in even attempting negotiations? If Tehran had refused that offer, it might have torpedoed the very concept of independent alternative, non-American efforts in international strategy. It made all the sense in the world for Iran to say “yes” this time to this combination of approach.

The same goes for China and Russia. After the Lula-Erdogan success, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton immediately proclaimed her own success at garnering Russian and Chinese support for enhanced sanctions against Iran – a stunningly insulting response to the remarkable accomplishment of Brazilian and Turkish negotiation. These states are, after all, immensely important to US regional and global interests. To blow them off like that was a major blunder, not just in terms of Iran, but in broader global strategy. The rest of the world has surely taken further negative note that Washington’s game remains depressingly familiar.

But do we really believe Clinton has in fact garnered Russian and Chinese support? Just as Tehran had every incentive to accept a proposal from “equals,” offered with respect instead of bluster and threats, so too Russia and China have every reason to welcome this initiative from Brazil and Turkey. Yes, the terms of the agreement do matter somewhat, but what is far more important for them is the slow but inexorable decay of US ability to deliver international diktats and to have its way. This is what Chinese and Russian foreign-policy strategy is all about. Neither of these countries will, in the end, permit the US hard-line approach to win out over the Brazilian-Turkish one in the Security Council, even if the Brazilian-Turkish deal requires a little tweaking. Russia and China champion the emergence of multiple sources of global power and influence that chip away at dying American unipolar power.

China and Russia, of course, represent the alternative polarity in the emerging struggle to end American hegemony in international affairs. But of greater moment, they now witness the political center in international politics shifting away from Washington as well. These two countries that defied American wishes are not just some Third World rabble-rousers scoring cheap points off the US. They are two major countries that are supposedly close friends of the US This makes the affront even crueler.

These events are profound signs of the times. The problem with unipolar power is that without checks and balances it invariably becomes subject to error and foolishness. On occasion, Americans actually believe in checks and balances when it comes to our own Constitution. Microsoft may be a great corporation, but nobody wants it to have a monopoly on IT.

Similarly in the world, international checks and balances are valuable safety valves. When Washington moves into its fourth decade of paralysis and incompetence in handling Iran, still unable even to speak to it – just as it cannot bring itself to talk to Cuba after 50 years – it has exacerbated the problem, strengthened Iran and the forces of radicalism in the Middle East, polarized emotions and, worst, failed in all respects. Shouldn’t the world welcome the actions of two significant, responsible, democratic, and rational states to intervene and help check the foolishnesses of decades of US policy? That is what checks and balances are all about and why the center is shifting.

And, who knows? “Rogue states” – a term beloved in Washington in reference to recalcitrant countries that don’t toe the Washington line – may more readily come to accede to new approaches free of the old imperial techniques of interventionism and ultimatums. Meanwhile, the US is rapidly running the risk of becoming its own “failed state” in terms of being able to exercise competent and effective international leadership since the fall of the Soviet Union.

Graham E. Fuller is the former vice chairman of the National Intelligence Council at the CIA and author of numerous books on international politics, including the forthcoming “A World Without Islam” (August 2010).

© 2010 Global Viewpoint Network/ Tribune Media Services. Hosted online by The Christian Science Monitor.

March 23, 2010

New Brazilian banking Trojans recycle old URL obfuscation tricks

Filed under: Americas,Brazil,Cyberspace,South America — mungurk @ 20:14

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Fabio, our researcher in Brazil, has noticed malware authors using an old trick to mask URLs. The trick involves specifying an IP address such as say, 66.102.13.19 (the IP address of google.com, borrowed from my colleague, Costin) in a numerical base other than base 10. The supported bases are octal (8) and hexadecimal (16), and even a single 32bit number work, thus the following are all valid, and each will take you to google.com:

Now, by itself, this isn’t terribly interesting from a technical perspective; this ‘feature’ of IP specification has been around for quite a while.

However…what is interesting though is that due to the relative obscurity of using such methods to denote an IP or URL, it is quite feasible that existing security products do not correctly identify the URLs as valid or flag them as malicious when they point to existing known bad websites.

In my testing, Firefox on Windows supports all of the above addresses, under Linux however, Marco from our German office says some are unsupported. Based on poor browser support for such features, it’s possible to imagine URL filtering tools having the same lack of support.

In addition to potential weak tool support for such URLs, it is likely that unsuspecting users may be more easily convinced that a particular URL is legitimate, which I think is the obvious goal of using such URL obfuscation techniques.

March 18, 2010

Brazilian president says ready to talk to Hamas

Filed under: Americas,Brazil,Middle East,Palestine,South America,Terrorism — mungurk @ 23:58

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(AFP) – 1 day ago

RAMALLAH, West Bank — Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said on Wednesday his country is prepared to talk with the Islamic Hamas movement, listed by the European Union and the United States as a terror organisation.

Speaking at a press conference with Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas after talks at his Ramallah headquarters, Lula responded to a question by saying he believed nobody, Hamas included, should be ignored in efforts to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

“Brazil is prepared to talk to everybody,” he said. “All the parties involved must be listened to.”

Lula, on the first visit to the region by a Brazilian head of state, was due to travel to Jordan after his West Bank visit.

On Tuesday he met Israeli leaders.

Laying a wreath Wednesday at the Ramallah tomb of iconic Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, Lula welcomed the Palestinian authorities’ decision to name the road leading past the site, “Brazil Street.”

“This shows the affection which the Palestinian people have for the Brazilian people,” he said.

Copyright © 2010 AFP.

December 9, 2009

Brazil’s police accused of routinely killing suspects

Filed under: Americas,Brazil,South America — mungurk @ 10:29

Page last updated at 21:48 GMT, Tuesday, 8 December 2009

Police in Brazil’s two biggest cities, Sao Paulo, and Rio de Janeiro, routinely commit unlawful executions, Human Rights Watch has alleged.

The New York-based group says a two-year investigation found evidence that officers often covered up such killings as justified self-defence.

Authorities in Rio, due to stage the 2014 World Cup and the 2016 Olympics, are under pressure to reduce violence.

But officials argue the police face often well-armed drug gangs.

Human Rights Watch says a detailed study of 51 cases showed there was credible evidence that police in Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro shot alleged criminals and then reported that the victims had died in shootouts while resisting arrest.

Post mortem reports showed that 17 of these victims had been shot at point-blank range, the HRW report said.

“The 51 cases do not represent the totality of potential extrajudicial killings, but are indicative of a much broader problem,” HRW said.

Human Rights Watch says government statistics also indicate the scale of the problem.

Police in Sao Paulo and Rio states have killed more than 11,000 people since 2003, while over the past five years there were more police killings in Sao Paulo (2,176) than in South Africa (1,623), which has a higher murder rate.

‘Armed combat’

Human Rights Watch says that while some police killings are legitimate acts of self-defence, many others amount to “extra-judicial executions”.

The report argues that what is required is more effective policing, not more violence from the police. There was a chronic failure to hold officers to account for murder, it says, and the authorities should set up specialist units that are able to carry out proper investigations.

“There’s a system in place where police in many poor neighbourhoods are completely out of control. It’s a system of toleration that basically relies on the police to police themselves and they don’t do it,” said Daniel Wilkinson, Human Right Watch’s deputy director for the Americas.

Reacting to the report, a Sao Paulo police statement said that every time someone dies following an armed confrontation with their officers an investigation is opened, and the results are sent to the judicial authorities.

They also pointed out that 50% of criminals involved in confrontations with police were arrested without being harmed, 33% escaped, and 17% were killed.

Human Rights Watch says state officials in Rio have promised a considered response to the report.

Authorities there have highlighted a new community-style policing approach which has been adopted in a small number of favelas or shanty towns, but critics says it needs to be much more extensive.

Officials also argue that critics do not take into account how officers must constantly take on violent drug gangs.

“We have to deal with something few others face: armed combat with drug-traffickers who are equipped with heavy weapons coming from abroad,” Rio’s state public security director Jose Beltrame told the Associated Press in October.

He was speaking after three police officers died when their helicopter was shot at and brought down in Rio de Janeiro during clashes involving police and drug gangs.

December 8, 2009

Brazil thieves tunnel to $6M during football final

Filed under: Brazil,South America — mungurk @ 09:46

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By ALAN CLENDENNING, Associated Press Writer Alan Clendenning, Associated Press Writer Mon Dec 7, 5:45 pm ET

SAO PAULO – Thieves who spent months tunneling from a rented house to an armored car company‘s safe made off with nearly $6 million over the weekend, making their getaway as season-ending football matches virtually shut down Brazil, authorities said Monday.

The heist was discovered Sunday night — hours after the games ended. Officers followed the tunnel from the company’s safe some 110 yards (100 meters) underground to a house, Sao Paulo police said in a statement.

Police said the home, abandoned when they arrived, had been occupied for about four months. Its former occupants were considered suspects, but there were no immediate arrests.

Officials with the armored car company — Transnacional Transporte de Valores e Seguranca Patrimonial Ltda — told officers that 10 million reals ($5.9 million) were missing, according to the statement.

Globo TV’s G1 Web site reported that electricity was cut off to the company’s office and some security cameras were not on when the theft happened, but authorities did not immediately confirm that.

The heist occurred on the last weekend of the football season, when the league championship and relegation matches had people nationwide glued to their televisions.

A security guard at the building heard a loud noise about 5 p.m. Sunday as the most important game was under way, but figured it was from fireworks that sports fans had been setting off throughout the afternoon, the newspaper O Estado de S. Paulo reported.

The newspaper said thieves left behind sacks of coins in the tunnel, and police found a map of the tunnel and bags of dirt in the house — presumably from the excavation. A Christmas tree inside the house was visible from outside.

Firefighters who inspected the tunnel Monday said it was about a yard (meter) high and a yard (meter) wide, G1 reported.

Two years ago, thieves used dynamite to blow up a safe and steal nearly $10 million from the office of another money transport company in Sao Paulo, South America’s largest city and Brazil’s hub of finance and commerce.

In 2005, about 10 suspects tunneled under a city street and stole more than $70 million in cash from a central bank branch in the northeastern city of Fortaleza. It was the world’s biggest heist ever until more than $90 million was taken from a security warehouse in London a year later.

November 25, 2009

US President Obama Writes to Brazil’s President About Iran

Filed under: Americas,Brazil,Iran,Middle East,North America,South America,USA — mungurk @ 09:33

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November 25, 2009

Obama Writes to Brazil’s Leader About Iran

By ALEXEI BARRIONUEVO

RIO DE JANEIRO — President Obama sent a letter on Sunday to President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva of Brazil reiterating the American position on Iran’s nuclear program, a day before Iran’s president made his first state visit to Brazil, an aide to Mr. da Silva said Tuesday.

Mr. Obama did not explicitly criticize Mr. da Silva for hosting President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran, implying instead that he hoped Mr. da Silva would use the occasion to express support for the international effort to forge a compromise on Iran’s nuclear ambitions, according to two American officials.

In the three-page letter, Mr. Obama restated his support for a proposal by the International Atomic Energy Agency that would try to steer Iran into developing nuclear energy for peaceful, civilian purposes. The proposed accord calls for Iran to export most of its enriched uranium for additional processing into a form that could be used in a medical reactor in Tehran.

Iran has so far declined to accept the proposal. Mr. da Silva on Monday reiterated his support for Iran’s right to develop its nuclear technology for use in energy production, just as Brazil has been doing.

Mr. Ahmadinejad, the first Iranian leader to visit Brazil in 44 years, came to Brasília on Monday. Mr. da Silva organized the visit as part of a diplomatic effort to help mediate tensions between Israel and the Palestinians. President Shimon Peres of Israel and Mahmoud Abbas, the president of the Palestinian Authority, made separate visits to Brazil this month.

Mr. Obama has discussed Iran with Mr. da Silva before, expressing hopes at a meeting of the Group of 20 in April that Mr. da Silva could engage Mr. Ahmadinejad in a dialogue on the nuclear issue, according to American and Brazilian government officials.

But even before Mr. Ahmadinejad’s visit, there had been tension between the United States and Brazil over an American initiative to place more military personnel in Colombia and over the United States’ handling of the political crisis in Honduras.

Mr. Obama’s letter also discussed Honduras, as well as climate change talks in Copenhagen and the Doha round of trade talks. On Honduras, Mr. Obama justified American support for a presidential election there after the ouster of President Manuel Zelaya in June. Mr. Obama said in his letter that the situation would “start from zero” after the election, the Brazilian official said.

Brazil is opposed to the election, which is scheduled for Sunday, saying that it is inappropriate in light of Mr. Zelaya’s ouster, which Brazil and much of the world have labeled a coup. A Brazilian government spokesman said late Tuesday that Mr. da Silva had not yet responded to Mr. Obama’s letter and was considering telephoning him, rather than replying by letter.

November 8, 2009

Cyber Attacks Caused Brazil Power Outages

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Nov. 6, 2009

(CBS) A series of power outages affecting millions of people in Brazil in 2005 and 2007 were the result of cyber attacks, “60 Minutes” has learned. The two-day event in Espirito Santo State affecting more than three million people in 2007 and another, smaller event in three cities north of Rio de Janeiro in January 2005 were perpetrated by hackers manipulating control systems.

The revelation is part of a Steve Kroft investigation into how computers and the Internet can be used as weapons to be broadcast this Sunday, Nov. 8, at 7 p.m. ET/PT.

Former Chief of U.S. National Intelligence Retired Adm. Mike McConnell believes it could happen in America. “If I were an attacker and wanted to do strategic damage to the United States, I would either take the cold of winter or the heat of summer,” he tells Kroft. “I would probably sack electric power on the U.S. East Coast, maybe the West Coast and attempt to cause a cascading effect.”

If hackers did attack the U.S. power grid, “The United States is not prepared for such an attack.” says McConnell.

Congressman Jim Langevin (D.- R.I.), who chaired a subcommittee on cyber security, agrees. He says that U.S. power companies need to be forced to deal with the issue after they told Congress they would take steps to defend their operations but did not follow up. “They admit that they misled Congress,” says Langevin, and they still haven’t made much progress. “The private sector has different priorities than we do in providing security. Their…bottom line is about profits,” he tells Kroft. “We need to change their motivation so that when see vulnerability like this, we can require them to fix it.”

Computer hackers have struck in the U.S. already. “People talk about cyber Pearl Harbors, …we probably had our electronic Pearl Harbor,” says Jim Lewis, director of the Center for Strategic and International Studies which oversaw a study on cyber security for the Obama Administration. He is referring to a breach of computer security resulting in the downloading of huge amounts of critical information from several governmental departments, including Defense, State and Commerce. “So we probably lost the equivalent of a Library of Congress worth of information in 2007,” he says.

A bigger event than even that, says Lewis, was a breach of the CENTCOM Network, the U.S. command fighting the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. “We know it was a foreign country. We don’t know which one…this was a very sophisticated set of skills,” Lewis tells Kroft.

Banks are also targets; more money has been stolen by cyber thieves than by those walking into banks so far this year in the U.S. – over $100 million says FBI Agent Sean Henry. But you don’t hear much about it. “When there’s a network breach, the owners of the network are not keen to have it known…it might impact their business,” says Henry.

Money being stolen isn’t even the biggest threat says McConnell, because a worse scenario would be if the hackers were to destroy the system that accounts for all the money and its movement. That would create a bank rush and financial pandemonium. McConnell worries it will take some horrific event to get the country focused on shoring up cyber security. “If the power grid was taken off line in the middle of winter and it caused people to suffer and die, that would galvanize the nation. I hope we don’t get there,” he tells Kroft.



Produced by Graham Messick
© MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.

October 29, 2009

Body count rises in Brazil’s drug war

Filed under: Americas,Brazil — mungurk @ 17:13

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Thursday, October 29, 2009

Luis Vieira THE WASHINGTON TIMES
PORTO ALEGRE, Brazil

While U.S. attention has focused on the raging drug war just south of the border in Mexico, the battle to control drugs in Brazil is taking more lives.

Since Mexican President Felipe Calderon declared war on the drug cartels three years ago, 9,500 people have died in drug-related violence, including 5,300 killed last year, according to the Mexican government.

In Brazil, 35,000 people were fatally shot in 2007, and most of the deaths were drug-related. According to the government’s public safety secretariat, there are nearly 23,000 drug-related homicides a year.

The drug war in Brazil is centered in its best-known city, Rio de Janeiro, and its slums, known as favelas, where police sometimes fear to tread, as well as in poor neighborhoods of Sao Paulo, Porto Alegre, Recife, Salvador, Curitiba and Belo Horizonte. Gun battles rage between rival gangs that seek to control the lucrative trade, particularly in cocaine, whose use has doubled in recent years in Brazil, according to the United Nations.

The drug war burst into international headlines earlier this month when traffickers in Rio shot down a police helicopter. The crash and an ensuing battle between the traffickers and police and between rival drug gangs killed 39 persons.

Other such crimes have terrified the country in recent years.Drug traffickers kidnapped and murdered a local television reporter, Tim Lopes, in 2002, and a 6-year-old boy died in a car robbery after being dragged outside the car for several miles in another drug-related crime in 2007.

The crime wave is particularly unsettling as Rio prepares to host the World Cup in 2014 and the Olympics two years later.

Police have tremendous difficulty apprehending the criminals in the favelas, where residents, fearing for their lives, will not divulge information. The cartels in those areas also bolster popular collaboration by providing food, medicine and other necessities to the desperately poor.

The weapons used by the traffickers are often unregistered; some are stolen from the police and the Brazilian army, according to the British magazine the Economist.

Luis Villamarin, a retired colonel in the Colombian army and author of many books about drug trafficking and counterterrorism, said the cocaine sold in Brazil comes largely from the Colombian Marxist guerrilla group FARC, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia.

“The capture of Fernando Beira-Mar in 2002 was the first proof,” he said, referring to the then-drug-kingpin in Brazil whose dealings with FARC were confirmed by Brazilian and Colombian authorities.

Mr. Villamarin also accused some Brazilian government employees of complicity with the Colombian guerrillas. In July 2008, the magazine Cambio asserted that the laptop of the former FARC leader Raul Reyes included messages from top advisers to Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. The press office of Brazil’s presidency as well as the Justice Ministry have refused to comment on the allegations.

Brazilians turn to drugs for the same reasons that people do elsewhere. A recent survey by the Brazilian Institute for Statistics and Opinion found that 35 percent use drugs to escape from family problems, 15 percent to win acceptance from friends and 9 percent to experience something new.

Another study, by UNICEF, suggested that wealthier Brazilians, not the poor, were the main drug users and noted that 27.8 percent of Brazilian students have reported using drugs.

“A crisis in values is leading people to drugs,” said Gilberto Velho, an anthropologist and professor at the federal University of Rio de Janeiro.

Human rights activists say that the use of force against the traffickers treats the symptoms, not the underlying disease. Marcos Rolim, a consultant to UNICEF,says it is better to legalize drugs than fight against them. “Policies of the type ‘war on drugs’ [have] just produced human deaths,” he said. “The legalization of drugs should be considered and tested in Brazil.”

Former Rio police chief Rui Machado disagreed.

“What makes Brazil so violent is the destruction of institutions such as family and authorities like police in our society, creating a lack of punishment,” he said.

He attributed the inefficiency of the police to the failure of the government in the broader sense.

In the U.S. and Britain, “citizens have a lot of responsibilities; in Brazil, the citizens have just rights,” he said.

Mr. Machado, a retired colonel, added that “while the drug traffickers have 21st-century technology to get information, safety authorities have none. It is impossible to make good decisions without information.”

Officials are also asking for more help from the federal government.

“There is a national responsibility; it is not just local authorities,” said Gilmar Mendes, the minister in charge of the Brazilian Supreme Court, to TV Globo last week. The secretary for public safety in Rio, Jose Beltrame, also asked for more assistance. “The state police are doing the job of federal police,” he said. He called the shooting down of the police helicopter Brazil’s “9/11.”

Brazilian Minister of Justice Tarso Genro denied the criticisms and said the federal government is providing intelligence to local authorities to improve public safety. “There is not a lack of action,” he said. “We have a partnership between Ministry of Justice and government of the state of Rio de Janeiro.”

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