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Guantanamo Case Looks Like Wen Ho Lee All Over Again

Date: September 30, 2003 | 3 Shaban 1424 Hijriah
Subjects: hype

From an article1:

All Americans, however, are entitled to the rights guaranteed by the U.S. constitution. Instead of engaging in prejudicial leaks, the government should disclose precisely its charges against Capt. Yee. The Yee leaks are just as bad as the disclosure of the identity of the CIA officer whose husband is former U.S. ambassador Joseph Wilson. Capt. Yee should be given competent legal representation, including civilian lawyers, throughout the investigation and trial. Politicians, especially Sen. Charles Schumer of New York, must stop their political grandstanding. Some are acting as if Capt. Yee has already been tried and pronounced guilty, when in fact he has yet to be charged with any violation of civil, criminal or military law.

Wen Ho Lee was subjected to similar partisan political lynching for two years. He was unjustly smeared by FBI leaks and unproven allegations, and subjected to cruel and unusual punishment without a trial. His case ended with all serious charges against him being dropped and a rare apology from the court. Because Capt. Yee is both a Chinese American and a Muslim American, we need to be vigilant in defending his rights. Like all Americans, he must be considered innocent until proven guilty.
(link)

L. Ling-Chi Wang, Professor of Ethnic and Asian-American Studies at the University of California Berkeley, has got deja vu.

Complete text of the article, Guantanamo Case Looks Like Wen Ho Lee All Over Again, by Professor L. Ling-Chi Wang

Editor's Note: The case against U.S. Army Chaplain James Yee must not go the way of the Los Alamos scientist wrongly convicted of espionage, where FBI leaks to the press powered an unjust prosecution.

As someone who organized Chinese Americans to protest the treatment of Wen Ho Lee -- the Los Alamos scientist accused of spying and who was later exonerated -- I already see parallel patterns emerging in the arrest of Capt. James J. Yee, a Muslim U.S. Army chaplain at Guantanamo Naval Base.

The first similarity is the treatment of both men's families. Yee's surprise arrest by the FBI at the Naval Air Station in Jacksonville, Fla., reportedly on charges of espionage, left his wife completely in the dark. Whoda Yee waited, "extremely worried," for hours at the Seattle-Tacoma airport, and didn't learn of her husband's fate until a few days later. She has yet to speak with him.

Wen Ho Lee and his relatives, friends, and colleagues across the country were kept in the dark for nine months as they endured an intimidating FBI investigation prior to Lee's indictment on Dec. 10, 1999. Then, for nine more months, Lee was kept in solitary confinement in a federal detention facility in Santa Fe, N.M. Such inhumane and unconstitutional treatment is inexcusable.

Second, the order to arrest Capt. Yee, according to the Washington Times, came from "the highest levels" of our government. That suggests a well-planned and calculated move on the part of the government to control and shape public perception of the case. In Lee's case, the decision to indict him was made at a White House meeting that included National Security Advisor Sandy Berger, Attorney General Janet Reno, Energy Secretary Bill Richardson, CIA Director George Tenant and FBI Director Louis Freeh, among others. Exactly who participated in the decision to arrest Capt. Yee remains unknown.

Third, as in the Wen Ho Lee case, the government has chosen to prosecute Yee first through the nation's news media, primarily through leaks. As with Dr. Lee, government sources leaked the story to a newspaper -- this time, the extremely conservative and administration-friendly Washington Times.

The timing of the leak appears to be strategic. Anti-Muslim sentiment still runs high since Sept. 11, 2001, and the Bush administration recently launched a high-profile campaign against China, which it blames for the loss of nearly 3 million jobs since Bush assumed the presidency (China's undervalued currency is held responsible). Yee is both Chinese American and a Muslim. The cases of Yee and two other arrested Americans who worked at Guantanamo provide a clever diversion calculated to heighten Americans' sense of vulnerability and further incite anti-Muslim and anti-Chinese sentiment at a time when many Americans and lawmakers in Congress are beginning to question Bush's costly military occupation of Iraq.

Capt. Yee was caught with "classified documents that may have included sketches or diagrams of Guantanamo's high security prison Camp Delta, along with lists of detainees and their interrogators," according to WABC reporter Cheryl Fiandaca and the Washington Times. But the true nature and contents of these "classified documents" has yet to be disclosed. During the Wen Ho Lee case, anonymous government sources went so far as to say that Lee had in his possession the "crown jewel" of the American nuclear arsenal, information that, if shared with America's enemies, risked the lives of hundreds of millions of Americans. FBI agents later apologized in court for making such false statements to the media and to the court.

So far, most media, perhaps having learned a lesson from the Wen Ho Lee case, are being more cautious. Capt. Yee has been described as a loyal American, a devout Muslim and a caring family man.

We do not yet know precisely what Yee did or did not do in Guantanomo, or whether he did or was asked to do anything beyond his authorized religious duties. Nor do we know if he had uncovered unauthorized or even illegal information or activities at Guantanamo Bay. Either scenario could precipitate the harsh treatment he has been subjected to since Sept. 10.

All Americans, however, are entitled to the rights guaranteed by the U.S. constitution. Instead of engaging in prejudicial leaks, the government should disclose precisely its charges against Capt. Yee. The Yee leaks are just as bad as the disclosure of the identity of the CIA officer whose husband is former U.S. ambassador Joseph Wilson. Capt. Yee should be given competent legal representation, including civilian lawyers, throughout the investigation and trial. Politicians, especially Sen. Charles Schumer of New York, must stop their political grandstanding. Some are acting as if Capt. Yee has already been tried and pronounced guilty, when in fact he has yet to be charged with any violation of civil, criminal or military law.

Wen Ho Lee was subjected to similar partisan political lynching for two years. He was unjustly smeared by FBI leaks and unproven allegations, and subjected to cruel and unusual punishment without a trial. His case ended with all serious charges against him being dropped and a rare apology from the court. Because Capt. Yee is both a Chinese American and a Muslim American, we need to be vigilant in defending his rights. Like all Americans, he must be considered innocent until proven guilty.

reference=http://news.pacificnews.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=c3bd51f8b6e6fa5df40019a05d68c072
~ Posted by Al-Muhajabah, a fair and balanced niqabi, at 08:58 PM

Comments

Um Nur said: Total comments: 9  

Subject: Re: Guantanamo Case Looks Like Wen Ho Lee All Over Again

Assalaamu alaykum, this is from http://www.altmuslim.com/ Re: the arrest of Chaplain Yee. (Aren't clergymen supposed to be exempted from prosecution in cases of religious consciousness?)

The arrest a few weeks ago of US Army Chaplain Yousef Yee, the Muslim chaplain serving the inmates at the US naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, has been fodder for much media hype. While not charged, the press assumed the worst - that he was part of a secret al-Qaida ring that infiltrated the heart of the US armed forces. Front page headlines were filled with tales of shock from fellow officers, questions were raised regarding the process by which Muslim chaplains are trained, and the word "traitor" was used liberally in descriptions of Yee. After weeks of silence, Army investigators are finally revealing their charges against Yee - minor offenses with a "slap-on-the-wrist punishment. No treason, no sedition, no spying - just general "dereliction of duty" charges. "It's very weak," said a military source close to the investigation. "It's nothing compared to espionage or anything like that." This news comes as little comfort to US Muslims, as the damage has been done. General mistrust of Muslims in the military running higher than ever, and even if Yee's name is totally cleared of treason charges, it is unlikely that it will be reported as widely as his arrest was. You can read more about this new turn in Yee's case on the back page - if you're lucky - of your local paper.

~ Posted at October 11, 2003 05:33 PM | Comment Permalink

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