Friday, 26 April 2013

Operation 'Teddy Bear'



Speaking of Cold War last time I thought I should write something on the Teddy Bear incident. In July 2012 Belarus was invaded by parachuting teddy bears. This is not some kind of a metaphor or a joke; it is a fact. 

via OSCE & credit to Studio Total

A Swedish marketing and advertising agency, Studio Total, well-known for its creative ideas decided to take action against Belarus' authoritative regime which is led by Alexander Sukashanko, 'Europe's last dictator'. In an effort to raise awareness for the violations of the freedom of speech in Belarus and in order to show their support to human rights activists Studio Total planned and implemented the Operation TeddyBear Airdrop Minsk 2012 (documented on Wikipedia): they flew from Lithuania to Belarus in their own private plane and dropped 879 teddy bears in Belarusian territory. The teddy bears were holding pro-democracy slogans and messages. You can watch the Youtube video here
As expected Sukashenko did not really appreciate this tender gesture and he surely did not have a good laugh. Instead, he fired two generals and initiated criminal proceedings against a journalist who published online photos of the cute teddy bears (OSCE press release asking Belarusian authorities to drop charges) and against a Belarusian border guard. The guard was convicted recently  (February 2013) to two years imprisonment in a maximum security prison for failing to report the invasion (BBC news). But the teddy bear row did not end here. Belarus effectively expelled Sweden's ambassador even though no tangible evidence seemed to exist between Studio Total's stunt and Sweden. Sweden in its turn reacted by expelling the Belarusian diplomatic authorities from the country and the EU took an official position supporting Sweden in the teddy bear incident. Studio Total's activists were of course summoned by KGB - Belarus security agency - for questioning over illegal crossing into Belarus' airspace. I have no idea if they went to Belarus to testify; if I were in their shoes I would not. 

But I had a feeling that teddy bears' involvement in diplomatic affairs and international law extends well beyond the Belarus incident. Since google did not reveal anything of interest I took the initiative and searched Wikileaks online archives. Teddy bears are implicated in the black market in Saudi Arabia. A cable titled 'Roses are red and blacklisted: Saudi Arabia not feeling the love on Valentine's day' attests the USA preoccupation due to the fact that teddy bears are banned on Valentine's day. However, the cable continues, young lovers travel to other countries to find their teddy bears. The cable worth a read for more details.     
Also, it appears that diplomatic personnel are quite keen on teddy bear terminology. For example, back to 2008 the US states that Russia is a country which is 'more a teddy than an Angry bear'. Or the US embassy in Armenia thought that Turkey exploits its 'harmless, teddy-bear image'. 
There are even more interesting cables if you decide to do the same search providing strong evidence that teddy bear tender has developed invisible threads with international affairs. Last but not least 2 days ago it came to the surface that AA Milne, author of the Winnie the Pooh, was a secret propagandist during World War I working for MI7b, a not very well-known British secret intelligence agency.   
Nothing shall be the same anymore. I will stop here before I destroy everybody's nice childhood memories. Recommended Song: Elvis Presley, Let me be your teddy bear.



Saturday, 6 April 2013

tweet pro quo v.2


♯1


♯2

Submit your application. Really?

♯3
I would discourage you from submitting your application here though

♯4
Financial crisis is everywhere by now.

♯5

♯6
Yep, sounds like a bargain.


♯7
I bet that you will need to read this twice to realise what it says. It's payback time. 

♯8
Expertise

Thursday, 4 April 2013

tweet pro quo


♯1



Things could have been worse; for instance if this were tweeted by @BBCAfrica.

♯2
Oxford may won the annual boat race against Cambridge but don't hold your breath because Cambridge won the annual GOAT race. No, this is not a joke. 



If you do not trust the tweet, you are welcome to look it up online. I am not sure however why they held the two events on the same day..

♯3

No, thanks, I will pass.


♯4

I suppose this is how the British Council defines 'fun' in Doha. 

5

I find so interesting the way he puts it: 
'we (the international community)'.  

♯6

I don't think I can take another tweet by Melinda Gates on positive disruption. I shall unfollow her.  


PS Recommended Song: 


Monday, 1 April 2013

Cold War all over again - Spot the differences


The last couple of months I started reading and working on issues of international law and international human rights law on cyber-space. These issues are coined in the news and in official reports as 'cyber security' but I do not think that this catchy phrase conveys all the relevant questions.   

In any case, the other day I went through the US Administrative Strategy on Mitigating the Theft of U.S. Trade Secrets (Feb 2013, available here). There are 4 reports attached to the Strategy, including the 2011 Office of the National Counterintelligence Executive Report. The first page of this Report is this: 



As I went on reading there was something bothering me about this picture. It was somehow familiar to me which did not make much sense because I had not read this report in the past. After a couple of minutes it hit me. All I did was to look for cold war posters on the Internet. These are some examples of US propaganda posters during the Cold War: 


via this link


via this link

via this link

Have I made my point clear? Do you notice the choice of the colours? It is usually red for the communists and silver/grey for the US. The symbols of power and what it is allegedly at stake - back to the day nuclear power and knowledge; today energy, telecommunications, genomics, information. The Chinese banknote featuring Mao! - the enemy must always have a face, be personified whereas we - us (US), the 'good guys', are represented by a picture appealing to the People - the Wall St. ironically enough. I could not tell what the US Counterintelligence Office had in mind when they designed this picture, but this picture surely looks like a Cold War propaganda poster. Quite impressive. And it was then that I noticed the Report's title Foreign spies stealing our secrets, which is a very cold war thing to say as well. Also the use of the word spies was quite passé until now, don't you think? Well, not anymore. Never underestimate a bunch of bureaucrats in the US Counterintelligence Office; they make policy and they shape our future.