
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken meets with Bangladeshi Chief Advisor and Head of the Interim Government Muhammad Yunus on Thursday, Sept. 26, 2024, in New York. Photo: AP.
Orinoco Tribune – News and opinion pieces about Venezuela and beyond
From Venezuela and made by Venezuelan Chavistas
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken meets with Bangladeshi Chief Advisor and Head of the Interim Government Muhammad Yunus on Thursday, Sept. 26, 2024, in New York. Photo: AP.
By Kit Klarenberg – Sept 30, 2024
Leaked docs reveal that prior to the toppling of Bangladeshi PM Sheikh Hasina, the US govt-funded International Republican Institute trained an army of activists including rappers and âLGBTQI people,â even hosting âtransgender dance performances,â to achieve a national âpower shift.â Institute staff said the activists âwould cooperate with IRI to destabilize Bangladeshâs politics.â
On August 5, months of violent street protests finally toppled Bangladeshâs elected Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina. When the military seized power and announced the imposition of a so-called âinterim administration,â video footage showed Hasina fleeing to India aboard a helicopter. As vast swarms of student protesters overran the presidential palace, Western media outlets and many of their progressive-leaning consumers cheered the rebellion, framing it as a decisive defeat of fascism and the restoration of democratic rule.
Hasinaâs replacement, Muhammad Yunus, is a longtime Clinton Global Initiative fellow granted a Nobel Prize for pioneering the dubious practice of micro-lending. While Yunus has hailed the âmeticulously-designedâ protest movement that thrust him into power, Hasina personally accused Washington of working to remove her from power over her alleged refusal to allow a US military base on Bangladeshi territory. The State Department has dismissed allegations of US meddling as âlaughable,â with spokesman Vedant Patel telling reporters that âany implication that the United States was involved in Sheikh Hasinaâs resignation is absolutely false.â
But now, leaked documents reviewed by The Grayzone confirm the State Department was informed of efforts by the International Republican Institute (IRI) to advance an explicitly stated mission to âdestabilize Bangladeshâs politics.â The documents are marked as âconfidential and/or privileged.â
IRI is a Republican Party-run subsidiary of the National Endowment for Democracy, which has fueled an array of regime change operations across the globe since it was conceived in the office of CIA Director William Casey over forty years ago.
The newly-uncovered files reveal how IRI spent millions in the lead-up to Hasinaâs overthrow covertly coaching opposition parties and establishing a regime change network concentrated among the countryâs urban youth. Among the GOP-run Instituteâs front line foot soldiers were rappers, ethnic minority leaders, LGBT activists hosting âtransgender dance performancesâ in the presence of US embassy officials â all groomed to facilitate what the US intelligence cutout called a âpower shiftâ in Bangladesh.
Bangladesh Chief Adviser Professor Muhammad Yunus shares the stage with former U.S. President Bill Clinton at the 2024 Clinton Global Initiative meeting in New York on Tuesday, September 24, 2024. pic.twitter.com/qFwnwC1azP
— Chief Adviser of the Government of Bangladesh (@ChiefAdviserGoB) September 24, 2024
IRI offers Bangladeshi youth âthe knowledge and skills to wield online⌠tools for changeâ
The origins of the protests which toppled Hasina can be traced back to 2018. That summer, thousands of young people took the streets of Dhaka to demand safer roads and stricter traffic laws after an unlicensed bus driver killed two high school students. The demonstrations grew despite heavy repression, eventually prompting the Hasina administration to impose more stringent laws on negligent driving.
Since their victory, scores of Bangladeshi students have honed their protest tactics, shutting down transit points in response to what sometimes seemed like trivial abuses. Against a backdrop of intensifying crackdowns, the opposition Bangladeshi Nationalist Party (BNP) held an escalating series of street protests, which often morphed into riots. The simmering war between student protesters and Hasinaâs government reached a boiling point this August 4, when the military stepped in and seized power.
Following the coup, pundits have pointed to the role of social media in whipping up anti-government sentiment and driving havoc in the streets of Dhaka. Not coincidentally, the recently-leaked IRI files emphasize the importance of online training and message discipline in affecting political change.
IRI seeks âpower shiftâ in Bangladesh
IRI has operated in Dhaka since 2003, ostensibly âto help political parties, government officials, civil society, and marginalized groups in their advocacy for greater rights and representation.â
In reality, as the documents make abundantly clear, IRI has funded and trained a wide-ranging shadow political structure, comprising NGOs, activist groups, politicians, and even musical and visual artists, which can be deployed to stir up unrest if Bangladeshâs government refuses to act as required.
The student protests of 2018, and the overwhelming electoral victory by Hasinaâs Awami League in December of that same year, appear to have inspired the IRIâs regime change aspirations. In 2019, the Institute began conducting research to inform its âbaseline assessmentâ of the country, which consisted of â48 group interviews and 13 individual interviews with 304 key informants.â In the end, âIRI staff⌠identified over 170 democratic activists who would cooperate with IRI to destabilize Bangladeshâs politics,â according to an IRI report which was submitted to the State Department.
The report, which documented the IRIâs activities in the country between March 2019 and December 2020, shows the US governmentâs regime change campaign ramped up significantly after Hasinaâs âlopsided victory.â Her administration, they declared, had become âentrenched,â and their âpolitical positionâ had âsolidified.â
Meanwhile, the IRI concluded that the BNP opposition had âfailed to successfully mobilizeâ its supporters. The partyâs attempts to âfoment street movementsâ had floundered, and it remained âmarginal,â leaving the Awami Leagueâs âpower⌠undiminished.â Nonetheless, IRI considered BNP to be âstill the most possible party to drive a power shift in the future.â
The idea that this political change might be achieved via the ballot box, however, didnât appear to be up for consideration. With BNP apparently too âviolent, insular, rigid, and hierarchicalâ to win an election, IRI instead proposed a âbroad-based social empowerment project that fostered and expanded citizen-centered, local and non-traditional forums for political engagement.â In other words, street mobilizations.
Much of the IRIâs fascination with street protests and online communication is spelled out in a separate internal report titled, âSocial Media, Protest, and Reform in Bangladeshâs Digital Era,â which declared that Bangladeshi students âhave again led the countryâs most vibrant protest movements, with the help of a tool their predecessors didnât have: the internet.â
âMoving forward, IRI intends to expand its work with college students across the country,â the report declared.
The document explains that Bangladeshi protesters successfully used social media to promote videos and âshort documentariesâ of their actions, and compel local and international media to cover the upheaval. For example, Facebook-streamed live videos of police breaking up protests âwent viral and helped spread knowledge of the protests across the country.â
One of the most powerful viral moments arrived in the form of a protest anthem by Kureghor, which the IRI called âthe biggest internet-based Bangladeshi music band.â IRI staff noted they actively worked âto ensure Bangladeshâs young people have the knowledge and skills to wield online and off-line tools for change,â which helped them âto extract concessionsâ from elected officials.
âLGBTI peopleâ as US regime change shock troops
The IRI also supported a variety of âsocially conscious artists,â which it called âan underutilized actorâ for regime change purposes. âWhile traditional [civil society organizations] face constant pressure, individual artists and activists are harder to suppress and can often reach a wider audience with their democratic and reformational messages,â the Institute pointed out.
But Washingtonâs propaganda efforts werenât just left to individual artists. The IRI also wrote that it had identified three âmarginalized communitiesâ to serve as shock troops on wedge issues â âBiharis, plainland ethnic groups and LGBTI people.â
In total, between 2019 and 2020, âIRI issued 11 advocacy grants to artists, musicians, performers or organizations that created 225 art products addressing political and social issues,â which it claimed were âviewed nearly 400,000 times.â Additionally, the Institute bragged that it âsupported three civil society organizations (CSOs) from LGBTI, Bihari and ethnic communities to train 77 activists and engage 326 citizens to develop 43 specific policy demands,â which were apparently âproposed before 65 government officials.â
Between October and December of 2020, the IRI hosted three separate âtransgender dance performancesâ across the country. Per the report, âthe goal of the performance was to build self-esteem in the transgender community and raise awareness on transgender issues among the local community and government officials.â At the final performance, in Dhaka City, the US Embassy sent its âdeputy consul general and deputy director of the Office for Democracy, Rights and Governanceâ to participate.
Finally, the IRI also carried out âcommunity-specific quantitative and qualitative research,â which included âthree focus group reportsâ and what it called âthe largest published survey of LGBTI people in Bangladesh.â
In sum: âIRIâs program raised public awareness on social and political issues in Bangladesh and supported the public to challenge the status quo, which ultimately aims for power shift [sic] inside Bangladesh.â
In the US, Republican Party politicians have traditionally scorned government support for visual artists, transgender dancers, and rappers. But when an opportunity to install a more US-friendly government arose, the GOPâs in-house regime change organ eagerly transformed its domestic cultural enemies into political foot soldiers.
Ex-Bangladeshi Prime Minister Says US Orchestrated Her Ouster to Control Strategic Island
Bangladeshi rappers on the US intelligence payroll
This July, Bangladeshi media celebrated a barrister and Bangla rap artist named Toufique Ahmed as an influential face and voice of the protest movement to topple Hasina, touting his offer of free legal support to protesters arrested during the demonstrations.
IRI documents reveal that Ahmedâs music has been directly subsidized by the US government. According to the Instituteâs files, Ahmed âreleased the first of two music videos under IRIâs small grants program, âTui Parishâ (You Can Do It),â in 2020.
The song explicitly targeted âyouth with a message of perseverance in difficult times,â while encouraging âthose who are committed to strengthen democracy in Bangladesh in every possible way, including protests and street movements.â The lyrics of his second IRI-funded music video addressed âa variety of social issues in Bangladesh including rape, poverty and workersâ rights.â It was explicitly âdesigned to reveal social issues in Bangladesh and build up disappointment and even dissent to [the] government so as to call for social and political reforms.â
IRI was particularly proud of the fact that its Bangladesh âart program⌠contributed to American cultural diplomacy in Bangladesh.â By funding local hip-hop artists, âIRI promoted a uniquely American art form,â the group noted. The US has a long history of weaponizing music for soft power purposes, stretching from the CIAâs co-optation of jazz in the 1950s to USAIDâs deployment of anti-communist rappers as agents against Cubaâs present-day government.
During one of the IRIâs televised cultural programs, the host âintroduced rapper Towfique Ahmedâs music video with a description of rapâs origin in the US.â The Institute boasted that âthis message reached over 79,000 householdsâ across the country.
Elsewhere, IRI noted approvingly that in interviews with Bangladeshis âwho attended public exhibits or watched IRIâs programs on television,â it was clear that âpublic consumers of the media products understood the messages of the art.â These responses were said to demonstrate that IRI had moved close to its goal âto drive [a] power shift in Bangladesh through social and political reformsâ that year. Effusive praise was heaped on the ânon-traditional civic actorsâ it had trained in the country:
âThey are neither solely an artist nor solely an activist; instead, they are functioning as a hybrid agent of change [emphasis added]. While cultural activism in Bangladesh may not directly influence policy change and improve institutional behavior alone, it can certainly shape the political debate, advance social dialogue and raise more public awareness on key issues.â
IRI documents expose the BNP as unpopular, directionless
IRIâs internal documents make clear that the opposition BNPâs lack of popularity necessitated the US governmentâs infiltration of Bangladeshâs civil society. One IRI report suggested that without a multi-million dollar cash injection from the US regime change apparatus, the BNP would remain trapped in a cycle of âvacillation between violence, boycott and participation,â and near-total rejection by voters.
The IRIâs 2020 final report is even more explicit, noting the BNP âhas also failed to successfully mobilize opposition. Since the 2018 election, the BNP political strategy has shifted between boycotting and joining elections while trying to foment street movements against the government. None of these tactics have worked. The BNP remains marginal, and the ALâs power is undiminished. However, the BNP is still the most possible party to drive [a] power shift in the future.â
The Institute wasnât the only DC-based player involved in efforts to oust the Awami League. An IRI writeup of a September 2019 meeting with BNP leadership notes the participation of a Senior Director for Blue Star Strategies, the controversial lobbying outfit which Hunter Biden helped convince to work on behalf of now-dissolved Ukrainian energy conglomerate Burisma. âThe BNP has contracted with Blue Star Strategies,â the report notes, âto manage their communications and advocacy work with US-based policymakers and other key stakeholders.â
US officials have charged that Hasinaâs Awami League relied on autocratic methods like vote rigging to compensate for its lack of public support. However, one leaked file related to a secret meeting between IRI and the BNP noted that the opposition party is âa persistent critic of IRIâs public opinion research,â as the figures âconsistentlyâ show âhigh approval ratings for the Awami League and negative ratings for the BNP.â
Elsewhere, a document outlining IRIâs âBangladesh Strategy 2021-22â acknowledges the BNP âfaces external pressure, internal disarray, and declining popularity.â A party activist was quoted as saying BNP members and supporters were âin confusion about who is leading the party,â as it was âmissing leadership.â
IRI went on to lament that the BNP âappears to be losing popularityâ within an already dwindling base, and that even before COVID-19, its public rallies âwere sparsely attended.â Perhaps this is why âpolitical party strengtheningâ was listed first under a section of an IRI document entitled, âPriority Areas of Work for IRI.â
IRIâs Bangladesh wing would âemphasize the need for support in advance of the next general elections,â while â[steering] away from traditional pre-election activities.â More music videos and art gallery shows were on the way, apparently.
Without any sense of irony, the IRI report concluded by warning of foreign interference in Bangladeshâs internal politics: âpredictably, the [Awami League] and Sheikh Hasina would seek re-election by all means under the support of India.â As if to justify its own meddling in Bangladesh, the IRI insisted it was ânecessary to counterbalance interference from regional powersâ in the vote, which went ahead in January 2024.
The Awami League wound up winning the election in a landslide, while the BNP boycotted the vote, despite overt State Department attempts to compel their participation.
The IRI has not responded to a request from The Grayzone for comment about its activities in Bangladesh.
Pro-US micro-loan maven, Clinton acolyte takes charge in Dhaka
Before the August 2024 coup, Hasina had complained for years about US demands to construct military facilities in the country as part of Washingtonâs broader Indo-Pacific Strategy of âcontainingâ China.
Refusing to acquiesce to Washingtonâs pressure, Hasina remained close with India. In May 2024, just days after meeting with Donald Liu, the Assistant Secretary of State for South Asia and Central Asia, Hasina warned that a âcountry of white-skinned peopleâ had demanded she allow the installation of a military base in the Bay of Bengal. She apparently declined, telling legislators: âI do not want to come to power by leasing out parts of the country or handing it over to someone else.â
Similar obstinance led to the undoing of Imran Khan, the former Prime Minister of neighboring Pakistan, who was removed from power in an April 2022 military coup backed by the US. As economist Jeffrey Sachs noted, âthe very strong evidence of the US role in toppling the government of Imran Khan raises the likelihood that something similar may have occurred in Bangladesh.â
With the pesky Hasina government and her Awami League now out of the picture, Washingtonâs preferred political leaders have taken on the task of dividing up the country and punishing dissidents â like the 150 journalists whoâve been charged since August 4. As Dhaka descends into chaos, with roving BNP gangs engaging in street battles for control of territory, a so-called âinterim governmentâ has emerged. It has already granted sweeping police powers to the military, and while it initially claimed to seek power for just a handful of months, one report in The Guardian estimates the unelected new regime could maintain control of the country for âup to five or six years.â
âHeâs the brain behind the [American] color revolution. But nobody even knew that the student protests were carefully organizedâ
â Bangladeshâs new leader Yunus introduces the US mercenary at the Clinton Global Initiative in the US.
Bill & Hillary Clinton are friends of Yunus⌠pic.twitter.com/Kv9zizQCpl
— S.L. Kanthan (@Kanthan2030) September 30, 2024
Leading the new government is Muhammad Yunus. A close associate of Bill and Hillary Clinton, Yunus received a Nobel Prize in 2006 for pioneering the concept of âmicrolending,â a piratical form of legalized loansharking that has impoverished and immiserated swaths of the Indian subcontinent ever since.
During Hillary Clintonâs tenure as Secretary of State under Obama, Yunus was shielded from prosecution in Bangladesh for corrupt business dealings, and simultaneously showered with millions in US government contracts. Clinton also threatened Hasinaâs son with an IRS audit unless the Bangladeshi leader dropped an official probe into Grameen Bank, a microlender Yunus founded. US diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks confirm multiple covert contacts between Yunus and US officials over the years, and reveal a favorable view of the predatory lender prevailed in American halls of power.
Standing alongside Clinton at the Clinton Global Initiative this September, Yunus boasted that the seemingly spontaneous ârevolutionâ that toppled Hasina had actually been âmeticulously-designed.â
âItâs not just [that it] suddenly came, itâs not like that.â Instead, it was âvery well designed, even the leadership â people donât know who the leaders are, so you canât catch one and say, âitâs over.â Itâs not over.â
Yunus is not the only new Bangladeshi leader with clear ties to Washington. In 2021, his new foreign minister, Touhid Hossain, served as a âfeatured guest presenterâ at a USAID workshop which trained Bangladeshi reporters on âcountering misinformation.â
Within hours of Hasinaâs flight from the country, Bangladeshâs new leaders ordered the release of BNP leader Khaleda Zia, who was serving a 17-year prison sentence for corruption. If Yunus ultimately does decide to cede power, the BNP now appears poised to inherit leadership. Thatâs because, with the Awami League practically banished from Bangladeshi politics, the once-flailing BNP has become the only possible alternative.
Even establishment analysts have begun to acknowledge that the return of the BNP now appears all but inevitable. As the Crisis Group stated days after Hasinaâs ouster, âIf an election were to occur tomorrow, the BNP⌠would probably emerge victorious.â
Now, the stage is set for Dhakaâs return to the US orbit. At a September 26 business luncheon in an upscale New York hotel, Yunus signaled that the country is once again open for business, assuring the assembled foreign investors: âAs the US looks for its supply-chain diversification under its Indo-China Policy, Bangladesh is strategically positioned to become a significant partner in fulfilling that goal.â
Kit Klarenberg is an investigative journalist exploring the role of intelligence services in shaping politics and perceptions.