UK Detainment Of Activist Fits Right In With CIA's Drone PR War
USAFIt is hardly surprising that Yemen's most vocal activist, Baraa Shiban, was detained and interrogated at a U.K. airport, given the explicit public relations battle over drones being waged by the Western Intelligence Community.
Shiban was quoted in the Guardian as saying an official "had detained me not merely because I was from Yemen, but also because of Reprieve's work investigating and criticizing the efficacy of US drone strikes in my country."
"Reprieve," Shiban said to the organization, "has been working to support the relatives of civilian victims of drone strikes who are seeking legal redress and recently found evidence which, it said, showed the UK supports the US operations through the provision of communications infrastructure and intelligence."
Not exactly the type of PR that Western militaries needs for an already unpopular program.
Despite the prominent activist's pleas to authorities that his subject matter had nothing to do with drone security, he was ignored.
For good reason: in their eyes and the eyes of the state the covert drone war's biggest weakness is not its highly classified internal workings, but its public face.
Another recent NSA story out of the Washington Post and Barton Gellmann detailed the battle between Al Qaeda and militant operatives and the West's drones.
Among other things, it covered jammers and hackers and even model planes as possible mitigating approaches targeted "terrorists" would use.
What we thought was most interesting, though, was the CIA's battle and concern over messaging.
From the Post: