Threatened with Censorship and Ouster by PEN’s Henchmen
Sign the Petition to Remove Suazanne Nossel
In the vast and ever expanding firmament of Western Human Rights NGO’s, PEN, America Center, the writers’ organization, is far from the most luminous and ordinarily barely visible. But a dark side of PEN came clearly into view with the hiring of Suzanne Nossel as its executive director. And the same dark side is becoming all too apparent in organizations like Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, both of which have also employed Nossel in the past.
Nossel is former Undersecretary of State under Hillary Clinton and advocate of “Smart Power,” the title which she gave to an article in Foreign Affairs some years back and which emerged as a catch phrase for State’s policies under the bellicose Clinton. In Nossel’s words, ““To advance from a nuanced dissent to a compelling vision, progressive policymakers should turn to the great mainstay of twentieth-century U.S. foreign policy: liberal internationalism…(which) should offer assertive leadership — diplomatic, economic, and not least, military — to advance a broad array of goals…” (Emphasis, jw)
Nossel’s hiring by PEN was enough to cause Pulitzer Prize winning journalist, Chris Hedges, to resign from PEN and cancel his talk at PEN’s “Festival” in NYC last week, citing Nossel’s “relentless championing of preemptive war—which under international law is illegal—as a State Department official along with her callous disregard for Israeli mistreatment of the Palestinians and her refusal as a government official to denounce the use of torture and use of extra-judicial killings.” Nossel’s appointment also spawned a petition calling for her dismissal at Change.org (Readers are encouraged to sign here.)
Last Monday at the opening of PEN’s “Festival of World Voices” at Cooper Union in NYC, a protestor distributed fliers containing the same the information as above. The flier called on attendees and others to sign the petition calling for Nossel’s dismissal. When the leafleter stood on the steps of Cooper Union so that he was able to reach each person entering, a security guard appeared and told him to go back onto the sidewalks. Upon questioning by a passer by, the security guard stated that the order came from PEN, not Cooper Union. The leafleter stood his ground, and the guard backed down.
Then once the proceedings began, the protester carried in a large sign, “No to War. No to Nossel. Sign the Petition.” Nossel was there in the front row watching what happened next. A swarm of guards tried to stop the protester, but he continued to the front and sat down with his sign. They told him to leave or abandon his sign. He did not. Finally, after some scurrying around by the PEN officials, Nossel’s enforcers departed. It seemed that an arrest would be unseemly publicity for PEN. As Coleen Rowley and Anne Wright have shown us in the case of Amnesty International, America, “free speech” organizations are not very tolerant of speech that points out their blind spots or their service to the U.S. Empire.
In fact Nossel’s appointment is an epiphenomenon, like an unsightly rash or foul odor that warns of a long festering disorder inside. Nossel’s appointment may be seen as the most visible and overt symptom of Western subversion that goes back to the very founding of the “human rights” NGO’s, as James Peck demonstrates in his meticulously researched study, Ideal Illusions: How the U.S. Government Co-opted Human Rights. So like many symptoms that may seem minor at first, it attracts our attention as to its underlying meaning. And if one looks more carefully at PEN’s web site, one finds evidence of the underlying rot. There one finds not one mention of Julian Assange or Bradley Manning but a good deal about Pussy Riot and Ai Weiwei, as well as Cuban and Iranian dissidents. And that is certainly just as the U.S. State Department would want it.
It is time for the human rights movement to return to the ideals of the UN Declaration of Human Rights and to end its succor to the US Empire. And to remember that human rights begins at home.
So what can be done now? For starters we can all sign the petition addressed to the president, officers and trustees to remove Nossel. It is a small first step but a concrete one. Sign here and send to your contacts, high and low, far and wide.
John V. Walsh can be contacted at John.Endwar@gmail.com. Sign the petition to remove Nossel. The concern goes beyond PEN to the entire ideological apparatus of the U.S. Empire.
Read more by John V. Walsh
- Shenzo Abe Does D.C. – February 25th, 2013
- US Goading Japan into Confrontation With China – February 3rd, 2013
- Creepy Nicholas Kristof Rejoices in Murderous Iran Sanctions – June 17th, 2012
- Starve the Beast of Empire: Ax the Income Tax – April 12th, 2012
- Hawk Fights Hawk for Mass. Senate Seat – April 2nd, 2012





mickperry
May 7th, 2013 at 9:52 pm
Without visiting PEN's website it's a fairly safe bet that we wouldn't find any mention of Jeremy Hammond or James Risen either.
It might be a good idea to write them, asking why they consistently ignore what's going on in their own back yard?
Winston Smith
May 8th, 2013 at 2:13 am
I'm sorry but I did try to warn you.
PEN's British original organisation is very far from being squeekey clean and has very close connections to the British government.
It was designed to do naughty things under the cover of creative freedom to advance British foreign policy.
But in America there have been protests.
It as predictable this would be the reaction as they don't want it coming out.
Thoth
May 8th, 2013 at 3:49 pm
Nossel's bizarre and relentless advocacy for her morally corrupt notion of ‘benevolent’ militarized interventionism injects a lethal philosophical malignancy into any NGO organization associated with her. Nossel is a thoroughly discredited lightning rod for well-deserved criticism, and a perfect example of the sociopathic, self-absorbed hubris typical of her ilk. Nossel’s spectacularly wrong-headed support for Washington's illegal, multi-trillions-war on Iraq says all that needs saying concerning her poor ethical instincts and stunning lack of judgment. That she continues to find a home with credulous NGOs says much about that increasingly marginalized and discredited ‘industry,’ and its tenuous grasp on reality.