23 Worst Tyrants/Dictators (Yes, there’s more than 23) and Oops, there’s Saudi Arabia..

01 Poverty, 02 China, 04 Inter-State Conflict, 05 Civil War, 05 Iran, 06 Genocide, 07 Other Atrocities, 07 Venezuela, 09 Terrorism, 10 Transnational Crime, Civil Society, Corruption, Government, Law Enforcement, Military

The Worst of the Worst

BY GEORGE B.N. AYITTEY | JULY/AUGUST 2010

Foreign Policy link

Millions of lives have been lost, economies have collapsed, and whole states have failed under brutal repression. And what has made it worse is that the world is in denial. The end of the Cold War was also supposed to be the “End of History” — when democracy swept the world and repression went the way of the dinosaurs. Instead, Freedom House reports that only 60 percent of the world's countries are democratic — far more than the 28 percent in 1950, but still not much more than a majority. And many of those aren't real democracies at all, ruled instead by despots in disguise while the world takes their freedom for granted. As for the rest, they're just left to languish. Although all dictators are bad in their own way, there's one insidious aspect of despotism that is most infuriating and galling to me: the disturbing frequency with which many despots, as in Kyrgyzstan, began their careers as erstwhile “freedom fighters” who were supposed to have liberated their people. Back in 2005, Bakiyev rode the crest of the so-called Tulip Revolution to oust the previous dictator. So familiar are Africans with this phenomenon that we have another saying: “We struggle very hard to remove one cockroach from power, and the next rat comes to do the same thing.

1. KIM JONG IL of North Korea (yrs in power: 16) Visa says no info
2. ROBERT MUGABE of Zimbabwe (yrs in power: 30) US embassy
3. THAN SHWE of Burma (yrs in power: 18) US embassy
4. OMAR HASSAN AL-BASHIR of Sudan (yrs in power: 21) US embassy
5. GURBANGULY BERDIMUHAMEDOV of Turkmenistan (yrs in power: 4) US embassy
6. ISAIAS AFWERKI of Eritrea (yrs in power: 17) US embassy
7. ISLAM KARIMOV of Uzbekistan (yrs in power: 20) US embassy
8. MAHMOUD AHMADINEJAD of Iran (yrs in power: 5) Iran c/o embassy of Pakistan + Canadian embassy
9. MELES ZENAWI of Ethiopia (yrs in power: 19) US embassy
10. HU JINTAO of China (yrs in power: 7) US embassy
11. MUAMMAR AL-QADDAFI of Libya (yrs in power: 41) US rep
12. BASHAR AL-ASSAD of Syria (yrs in power: 10) US embassy
13. IDRISS DÉBY of Chad (yrs in power: 20) US embassy
14. TEODORO OBIANG NGUEMA MBASOGO of Equatorial Guinea (yrs in power: 31)
15. HOSNI MUBARAK of Egypt (yrs in power: 29) US embassy
16. YAHYA JAMMEH of Gambia (yrs in power: 16) US embassy
17. HUGO CHÁVEZ of Venezuela (yrs in power: 11) US embassy
18. BLAISE COMPAORÉ of Burkina Faso (yrs in power: 23) US embassy
19. YOWERI MUSEVENI of Uganda (yrs in power: 24) US embassy
20. PAUL KAGAME of Rwanda (yrs in power: 10) US embassy
21. RAÚL CASTRO of Cuba (yrs in power: 2) “Cuba interests section”
22. ALEKSANDR LUKASHENKO of Belarus (yrs in power: 16) US embassy
23. PAUL BIYA of Cameroon (yrs in power: 28) US embassy

Comment: We are uncertain why FP stopped at 23, why they list Hugo Chavez over Blaise Compaore' (who they claim murdered an opponent, while Chavez' gov was the 1st to respond to the Haiti crisis), and what their view is of Saudi Arabia whose known to fund the notorious Pakistani Intelligence Service (ISI) who are connected to terrorist operations, and Saudi Arabia was well-known to be pro-Taliban and they were recently revealed to be funding terrorism in Iraq. Also check out the History Commons timeline associated with the Saudis and Taliban connection.

Non-genius idea for FP: link information sources that backup your list.

UPDATE: Jan 31, 2011 they added this article America's Other Most Embarrassing Allies

Related:
+
Handbook: Democide–Internal Murder by Regimes
+ 2004 Palmer (US) Achieving Universal Democracy by Eliminating All Dictators within the Decade
+ Review: Breaking the Real Axis of Evil–How to Oust the World’s Last Dictators by 2025
+ Postcard from Hell: The Failed States Index 2010 (Foreign Policy)

Event: 30 June – 1 July, New York City, ICSR Peace and Security Summit

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(A report on this event has been uploaded as of July 7, 2010)

The ICSR Peace and Security Summit will bring together 400 leading policymakers, diplomats, senior officials and experts from across the globe, encouraging them to share their experiences and approaches in a number of working groups and high-level panels.

Held at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York, the Summit will explore the greatest security challenges of our time, ranging from domestic radicalization and violent extremism to ongoing conflicts and the struggle for peace in places such as Afghanistan, Somalia, Iraq, and the Middle East.

Among the many keynote speakers and panellists are:

HRH Princess Aisha Bint Al Hussein, Jordan
·         Dr. Abdulkarim Al-Eryani, former Prime Minister of Yemen
·         Amb. Daniel Benjamin, Counterterrorism Coordinator, State Department
·         Amb. Cofer Black, former Director of the CIA’s Counterterrorism Center
·         Noman Benotman, former leader of the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group
·         Amb. Peter Galbraith, former UN Deputy Special Representative
·         Christopher Hitchens, Vanity Fair
·         Hekmat Karzai, director of Centre for Conflict and Peace Studies, Kabul
·         Tsipi Livni, leader of the Israeli opposition
·         Fran Townsend, Homeland Security Advisor to President George W. Bush
·         Lord David Trimble, Nobel Peace Prize Laureate

The ICSR Peace and Security Summit is organised in partnership with the Near East South Asia Center for Strategic Studies at the National Defense University, and receives support from The Rockefeller Foundation, Public Safety Canada, as well as Rena and Sami David.

Thanks to our supporters, there will be no attendance fee. However, places are strictly limited and will not be allocated on a first come first serve basis. If you would like to attend, write to Katie Rothman at katie.rothman@icsr.info before June 25th. Make sure you include your full name, title, affiliation, and current position.

Program as of 21 June 2010

ICSR Conference Page

EVENT REPORT Uploaded July 7, 2010

Secrecy News: FBI FOUND 14 INTEL LEAK SUSPECTS IN PAST 5 YEARS

Ethics, Government, Media

SECRECY NEWS
from the FAS Project on Government Secrecy
Volume 2010, Issue No. 50
June 21, 2010

The Federal Bureau of Investigation identified 14 suspected “leakers” of classified U.S. intelligence information during the past five years, according to newly disclosed statistics (pdf).

Between 2005 and 2009, U.S. intelligence agencies submitted 183 “referrals” to the Department of Justice reporting unauthorized disclosures of classified intelligence.  Based on those referrals or on its own initiative, the FBI opened 26 leak investigations, and the investigations led to the identification of 14 suspects.

“While DOJ and the FBI receive numerous media leak referrals each year, the FBI opens only a limited number of investigations based on these referrals,” the FBI explained in a written response to a question from Senator Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI).

“In most cases, the information included in the referral is not adequate to initiate an investigation. The most typical information gap is a failure to identify all those with authorized access to the information, which is the necessary starting point for any leak investigation. When this information is sufficient to open an investigation, the FBI has been able to identify suspects in approximately 50% of these cases over the past 5 years.  Even when a suspect is identified, though, prosecution is extremely rare (none of the 14 suspects identified in the past 5 years has been prosecuted),” the FBI said.

The FBI report to Congress predated the indictment of suspected NSA leaker Thomas A. Drake, who was presumably one of the 14 suspects that the FBI identified.  The case of Shamai Leibowitz, the FBI contract linguist who pled guilty to unauthorized disclosures in December 2009, is not reflected in the new report and may be outside the scope of intelligence agency leaks that were the subject of the congressional inquiry.

The FBI recommended that agencies continue to report unauthorized disclosures of classified information to the Department of Justice for possible criminal investigation, but it said they should also consider imposing their own administrative penalties.  “Because indictments in media leak cases are so difficult to obtain, administrative action may be more suitable and may provide a better deterrent to leaks of classified information,” the FBI said.

The previously unreported statistical information on unauthorized disclosures of classified intelligence information was transmitted to Congress on April 8, 2010 and was published this month in the record of a September 16, 2009 Senate Judiciary Committee hearing (pdf).

“As a matter of national security and employment discipline, it is important that leakers face repercussions for improper disclosure of classified information,” Sen. Whitehouse said.  This formulation notably implies that a leaker should be subject to punishment even if no damage to national security results from the unauthorized disclosure, so as to bolster an agency's authority over its employees.

The Obama Administration has adopted an increasingly hard line toward leaks of classified information with multiple prosecutions pending or underway, as noted recently in Politico (May 25) and the New York Times (June 11).  A recent memorandum from the Director of National Intelligence will “streamline” the processing of leak investigations, Newsweek reported June 11.

Event: 20-22 Oct 2010, Miami FL, Sustainable Shipping Conference: From the Cradle to the Grave

Corporations, Policy, Technologies

Event page
  • How can the industry work with build yards and refit facilities to enable the building of a viable sustainable modern fleet?
  • How do we dispose of our ships in an environmentally responsible and sustainable way?
  • How can the current world fleet comply with upcoming legislation?
  • What will the next wave of legislation concentrate on?
  • What can be achieved in environmental improvements on today's fleet?
  • What can concept ships offer?
  • What are the practical initiatives for change?

The conference will be held in the beautiful destination city of Miami bringing the industry together to collaborate on what the current issues are, what solutions are available and how they can be leveraged for competitive advantage.

Conference speakers to date include:

  • Sarah Flagg, Seaport Air Quality Program Manager, Port of Seattle
  • T.L Garrett, Vice President, Pacific Merchant Shipping Association
  • Stephen Gumpel, Vice President, North and Central America, Germanisher Lloyd
  • James Hunn, Senior Vice President, Maritime Policy and Compliance, Carnival Corporation & plc
  • Jackie Savitz, Senior Campaign Director, Oceana
  • Thiabaut Tincelin, Stirling Design International
  • Bill Williams, Vice President, Health, Safety & Environment, Maersk Inc.
For more information please visit http://www.sustainableshipping.com/miami2010 Or call +44 (0) 1753 272253 / email: events@sustainableshipping.com

New Card Ready to Print of 10 Global Threats, 12 Policies, 8 Major Players, 8 Humanities

Communities of Practice, Key Players, Policies, Threats

Freely print and use:

384 KB at 300 DPI (CMYK color) at 2 inch X 3.5 inch business card size. After clicking on the image below, the image will display, then right click the image and choose “save as.” From a Linux based laptop using an old Firefox browser, an error occurred. If you need another way to download, it is posted at this Flickr URL.

Click here to download the 384 KB .JPG file

Phi Beta Iota Twitter Feed Widget Code to Copy/Paste to Existing Websites

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Copy & paste the code below if you have a website where you want to display a feed from this Public Intelligence Blog + other links posted to our Twitter feed that we are unable to post to this blog due to time constraints.

Result:

Copy/Paste the code below:

<script src=”http://widgets.twimg.com/j/2/widget.js”></script>
<script>
new TWTR.Widget({
version: 2,
type: ‘profile',
rpp: 30,
interval: 6000,
width: 250,
height: 300,
theme: {
shell: {
background: ‘#00179c',
color: ‘#ffffff'
},
tweets: {
background: ‘#ffffff',
color: ‘#000000',
links: ‘#1c36fc'
}
},
features: {
scrollbar: true,
loop: false,
live: false,
hashtags: true,
timestamp: false,
avatars: false,
behavior: ‘all'
}
}).render().setUser(‘earthintelnet').start();
</script>

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