Saturday, November 23

Kerry Kennedy’s Naive Line In The Sand In Our Ongoing War On Terror

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FORBES MAGAZINE

Richard Miniter, Contributor

I am a bestselling author and award-winning investigative journalist.

OP/ED

Kerry Kennedy (R), the president of the Robert...Kerry Kennedy (R), the president of the Robert Kennedy Foundation arrives with a delegation at the Moroccan National Council for Human Rights in Rabat, on August 28, 2012. Kerry Kennedy and her delegation were set to meet Driss EL Yazami, the president of the Moroccan National Council for Human Rights, after having toured Western Sahara, meeting with various tribesmen and local officials to promote human rights in the region. The Western Sahara region has been disputed and been the scene of violent clashes between Morocco and the Algerian supported ‘Polisario Front’. (Image credit: AFP/Getty Images via @daylife)

From the murder of the U.S. ambassador in Benghazi to the tragic hostage crisis at a gas plant in Southern Algeria, al Qaeda’s affiliates have now opened a new African front against America and her allies.

And al Qaeda has a new and unwitting ally: the West’s all too trusting B-list celebrities.

Sadly, this includes Kerry Kennedy, the daughter of late senator Robert F. Kennedy. Kennedy, a Huffington Post blogger and president of the RFK Center for Justice and Human Rights, was skillfully manipulated by shadowy groups linked to terrorism. She was become a spokeswoman for a cause whose real agenda would terrify her, if she knew it.

She believes that she is standing up for the human rights of a dispossessed indigenous people (the Saharans) who are represented by a paramilitary force known as the Polisario Front. They live in a string of refugee camps near Tindouf, a settlement in Southern Algeria. On their behalf, she produces videos like this one.

I’ve been to several Polisario camps in Algeria that Kennedy visited and I have heard their grievances. I’ve met and interviewed Mohammed Abdelazziz, the man who has ruled the Polisario since 1976. He has won a series of one-candidate elections ever since. He talks about “democracy” and “human rights,” as African dictators usually do—as an ideal that always remains firmly in the future.

The reality in Polisario camps is far from ideal: political opposition is not tolerated in its one-party elections, dissenters are forced to flee and their relatives lose their jobs. Poverty, except for lifestyles of its leaders, is total. The homes of ordinary residents are one-story, mud-brick structures with no running water. Often a radio will be powered by jumper cables hooked to a car battery. Young women dream of marrying Mauritanian traders and herders, who can actually offer them a better life, and young men, at least with ones without good connections to the Polisario leadership, talk about earning money by helping drug smugglers and militant groups.

In their custom, men must pay a very specific dowry in order to wed and one told me that his girlfriend has waited 8 years for him to earn enough to marry her. This poverty and oppression drives thousands of Saharans every year to risk their lives in the trackless desert, hoping to find a better life in another country.

Meanwhile, Abdelazziz lives in a walled concrete compound with thundering diesel generators providing 24-hour electricity. His staff ushered me into a large meeting room to await the leader. After several cups of tea, I was directed to a large tiled bathroom with flush toilet and working sink—unthinkable luxuries for the people living just outside his palace gates. Of course, he doesn’t live there full time, he admits. He has sumptuous places to stay in Spain and elsewhere in Europe.

Kennedy saw these same things and must have had many of the same conversations. Perhaps her “guides” wouldn’t let her have honest conversations with ordinary Saharans, but she should have been able to see Abdelazziz for what he is—a strongman in search of a shill.

Why didn’t she ask him why there will no opposition parties or critical media? Or why so many people flee the camps to live in the lands of their “oppressors”? Has she talked to any of those who have fled the Polisario camps, as I have? In Dakhla, in Southern Morocco, I met refugees who were surprised at the freedom and opportunity—and bitter about the hardships in the Polisario camps.

Did Kennedy ever hear of Moustapha Salim Ould Sidi Moulid, a brave Polisario official who publicly proposed opening talks to end the conflict between the Polisario and Morocco? The Polisario locked him up in 2010, declared him a traitor, and threatened his family. I spoke privately with his brother, who works in a Polisario camp. He said that he lost his job as a schoolteacher because he was related to a dissenter. Why doesn’t Kennedy ask to speak to him or to Sidi Moulid, who has been imprisoned without trial for almost two years?

Through her writings and statements, Kennedy has effectively become an advocate for the Polisario.  She embraces the Polisario’s political vocabulary, referring to Southern Morocco as “Moroccan-occupied Sahara,” and trumpets their narrative of the conflict.

Kennedy was feted by the group last year during her visit to the Polisario stronghold near Tindouf.  Kennedy routinely paints a black-and-white picture of the conflict, casting Moroccan soldiers as “thugs” and Polisario stalwarts as freedom fighters. She is taking sides in a conflict that she doesn’t seem to understand.

All of this would be a story as old as Jane Fonda visiting North Vietnam, a credulous celebrity falling for an extremist group promising liberation—except that the Polisario has been repeatedly and credibly linked to al Qaeda affiliates.

Al Qaeda is turning the Sahara into the next Afghanistan—a dry vastness that Arab governments cannot effectively patrol, let alone control.  In that wasteland, al Qaeda in the Islamic Magreb (known as AQIM) and other terror groups have married or bought their way into predominantly Muslim tribes who will shelter and scout for them. AQIM has pared its ruthless ideology with a cynical pragmatism.

And the Polisario definitely plays a part in AQIM’s welter of North African alliances. Certainly, Polisario fighters have often been seen fighting and dying alongside AQIM terrorists.

Just last week, French forces raided a mountain hideout in northern Mali, near Tigharghar. Among the dead was the leader of an important al Qaeda faction and a Polisario fighter, according to the Paris-based newspaper Le Figaro.

This is part of a larger trend. In 2011, the Polisario provided fighters to Libyan strongman Moammar al-Gadhafi, in support of his bloody campaign against his own people and NATO forces.  Last week in Mali, foreign affairs minister Tieman Coulibaly gained that Polisario forces were also identified among the al Qaeda militants who gained control of northern Mali.

To be sure, Kennedy’s perspective on the conflict is informed by her concern about the human rights of Saharans.  She has cited reports of abusive practices by Moroccan security forces.  Yet the current reformer king has compensated the victims of police brutality and punished the police who violated the law. More importantly, the kingdom of Morocco has made a series of democratic constitutional reforms over the past decade. Opposition parties now control the government, Moroccan newspapers freely criticize the police and the new constitution has the strongest protections for women and religious minorities (including Jews) in the region. To pretend that Morocco is perfect would be a mistake, but so would pretending that there has no been significant progress.

Kennedy ignores such progress and, more tellingly, ignores the human rights abuses of the Polisario. This disturbing videodocuments what Kennedy would prefer not to see. It shows a young Polisario activist who has killed a Moroccan soldier, one of six slain in violent demonstrations by Polisario partisans in November 2010.  Not content to have murdered the young private, the Polisario fighter urinates on his dead body. Are you proud of your new friends, Ms. Kennedy?

If the Polisario were to succeed in its territorial ambitions, its al Qaeda allies would have a safe haven on Africa’s Atlantic shores.  Kennedy could play a constructive role in forging peace and forestalling a terrorist takeover, but re-enacting Jane Fonda’s role for this generation isn’t it.

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